Peoples Bank of Glasgow v. Yager

288 S.W. 954, 221 Mo. App. 955, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 200
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 954 (Peoples Bank of Glasgow v. Yager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Bank of Glasgow v. Yager, 288 S.W. 954, 221 Mo. App. 955, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 200 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note in the sum of $2900, dated July '5, 1925, due one hundred and eighty days after date, payable to plaintiff and executed by Leo Wells, Josephine Wells and Mrs. W. B. Yager. Plaintiff introduced the note and rested, thereupon defendant, Ann Yager, who is the same person as Mrs. W. B. Yager and who signed the note as one of its makers, introduced testimony tending to show that she signed the note as an accommodation to plaintiff. At the conclusion of the evidence introduced in her behalf, the court, at the instance of plaintiff, directed the jury to find for plaintiff, which resulted.in a verdict and judgment in the sum of $3069.10 against the defendants. Defendant, Ann Yager, has appealed.

The petition is in the usual form. Defendant, Josephine Wells, filed no answer and made no defense to the suit. The answer of the defendant, Ann Yager, pleads that there was no consideration passing from plaintiff to the defendant for the execution of the original note signed by her and that the note sued upon was one of a series of renewal notes; that the original note was signed by defendant for the accommodation of plaintiff and upon the representation by plaintiff that she would not be liable thereon and would not be required to pay the same. The reply was a general denial.

The evidence shows that defendant, Ann Yager, is the mother of defendant, Josephine Wells, and that Leo Wells, one of the makers of the note, is the husband of Josephine; that in the year 1922 and prior thereto Leo Wells was indebted to plaintiff in an amount between $4500' and $4600; that this indebtedness was evidenced by a number of notes executed by said Wells to plaintiff, a part of which indebtedness was secured by a chattel mortgage.

*957 Leo Wells, testifying for defendant, stated that in November, 1922, when one of the witnesses was due he had a conversation with' plaintiff's cashier who told him (in the words of the witness) — •

“He said the bank examiner wouldn’t let the note stay at the bank no longer that way — it would be getting him ‘in bad’ if he did, and he had stayed with me and didn’t want to; and I told him there was nobody else I could get to go on the note for security, and he asked how Mrs. Yager was fixed, and I said I didn’t know much more about her than he did only she was a widow woman and didn’t have much to depend on for a living; and he asked if she would sign it, the note, and I said, ‘I don’t know.’ He told me to ask her, and to tell Mrs. Yager it would be a big accommodation for him if she would do it, and he didn’t intend to make her pay the note if she went on it, and it would make the note show up good for the bank examiner.”

That the cashier then made out a. note in the sum of $2900 and the witness signed it and took it to Mrs. Yager for her signature. The witness further testified — ■

“I told her (Mrs. Yager) what Mr. Turner told me — that it would be a gw>"t accommodation for her to sign that note; that it would not <■' .,c her anything and help him get it by the bank examiner. She said she wouldn’t sign it unless Mr. Turner had said that.”

He further testified that Mrs. Wells would not sign the note for him (the witness) because she knew that he would not be able to pay it; that when Mrs. Yager signed it he took it and delivered it to the cashier; that no money changed hands between the parties at this time. The witness testified that he had no money at that time with which to pay his note; that “I didn’t have very much security to go any further.” The court refused to permit the witness to testify that he had security with the bank for other money he owed it, which security was not sufficient to insure the full payment of that indebtedness, and that the witness was insolvent at the time the defendant signed the note.

Mrs. Yager testified that the -witness Leo Wells brought the note to her house in November, 1922, where she signed it; that Leo Wells told her that he owed the plaintiff the sum of $2900 and that the cashier had said the bank examiner “had required more security and he asked me to sign the note for the bank;” that Leo stated that the cashier had said, “ ‘If I would sign the note I would never have to pay it.’ ” The court refused to permit the witness to testify that she knew what Leo’s financial condition was at the time and that she would not have signed the note for him at that time.

*958 It is insisted that the court erred in directing the jury to find for plaintiff, for the. reason that defendant’s evidence was sufficien¡t to go to the jury upon the question as to whether defendant signed the note as accommodation maker for the bank and without any consideration moving to her. We think this point is well taken. There is no question but that if the evidence introduced on the part of defendant is true, the note was signed by her as an accommodation for'the bank and it is .always competent to show a lack of consideration as between the accommodating person and the person accommodated.

"The party for whose benefit accommodation paper has been made acquires no rights against the accommodation party who may set up the want of consideration as a defense to an action by the accommodated party, since as between them there is no consideration, a fact which is always .a defense to a suit on negotiable paper between the immediate parties. He is not liable to the party accommodated, although he also signed for the accommodation of another party, or although a co-maker received value from the party accommodated, or although he signed for the accommodation of two other parties and a valuable consideration passed between the parties accommodated. If an .acceptance is for the accommodation of the payee, the acceptor will not be liable to him.” [8 C. J. 259, 260.]

The law as laid down by Corpus Juris is fully sustained by the authorities in. this State. [Cox v. Heagy, 184 S. W. 495, 497; St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Laughlin, 254 S. W. 844; Farmers’ Bank v. Harris, 250 S. W. 946; Bank of Commerce v. Laughlin, 264 S. W. 706; Central National Bank v. Waterscheid, 204 Mo. App. 179.] As was said in Walfinbarger v. Metcalf, 282 S. W. 749, 750—

"While it is the settled law that a promissory note may not be contradicted by parol evidence of a contemporaneous agreement that it is not to be paid according to its face, yet this rule does not prevent proof of want or failure of consideration between the original parties. [Holmes v. Farris, 71 S. W. 116, 97 Mo. App. 305; Bank of Dexter v. Simmons (Mo. App.), 204 S. W. 837.] ”

Of course where it appears that the party accommodated is not the payee in the note but the primary maker thereof, the accommodating party cannot, under the guise of showing a failure of consideration, seek to violate the parpl evidence rule by offering to prove that a promissory note absolute on its face is to be paid only on the happening of some contingency or is not to be paid by the accommodating maker in any event. [Walfinbarger v. Metcalf, supra; 22 C. J., pp. 1169, 1170; Wells v. Klepper, decided at this term.] We have examined the authorities .cited by plaintiff and find that thejr are all cases in which the person accommodated was *959

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Related

Peoples Bank v. Yager
46 S.W.2d 585 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
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2 S.W.2d 815 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 954, 221 Mo. App. 955, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-of-glasgow-v-yager-moctapp-1926.