Peoples' Bank v. Legrand

103 Pa. 309, 1883 Pa. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 25, 1883
DocketNo. 371
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 103 Pa. 309 (Peoples' Bank v. Legrand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples' Bank v. Legrand, 103 Pa. 309, 1883 Pa. LEXIS 159 (Pa. 1883).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

.delivered the opinion of the court,

We assume that the matters contained in the fifth clause of the agreement of facts signed by the parties, constituted an actual agreement, though it is not so stated. The sixth clause, however, refers-to the subject of the fifth as “the agreement, aforesaid,” and it has been so treated, both in the printed and oral arguments. As there stated, the agreement between the bank and Lowenstein, extending the time for the payment of the note in suit, was indefinite, as “ no particular time was specified or agreed upon.” The learned court below held that the extension of the time of payment was sufficiently definite to meet the requirements of the law, and that it was founded upon a valid consideration, and, therefore, the endorser was discharged., We. are.not able to concur, with the court as to [313]*313the character of the agreement for extension of the time of payment. Nothing is said about it in any other part of the paper except the fifth clause, and there it is distinctly stated that no particular time was specified or agreed upon. The remainder of the clause speaks only of a proposition for more time to pay the noté, an increase in the rate of interest to be paid, and a continuation of business by Lowenstein with the bank. W e see no element of certainty in this as to the time when the note was to be paid. On the contrary, that time is essentially indefinite and uncertain, and there was nothing to prevent the bank from bringing suit on the note the next day after the agreement to extend was made. This being so, the indorser could, by paying off the note, demand its surrender and commence an action immediately. This consideration brings the case clearly within the operation of the rule as stated in Miller v. Stem, 2 Barr 286, and the line of eases which have followed and never questioned it. All the elements of the rule are thus presented in Henderson’s Adm’r v. Ardery’s Adm’r, 12 Cas. on p. 451. “ That a creditor having a principal debtor and a surety, discharges the surety by entering into an agreement with the principal, which can be enforced at law or in equity, whereby he extends the time of payment for any definite period beyond that mentioned in the original contract, is proved abundantly by our authorities.” In Miller v. Stem, the case turned upon this very question, together witli an absence of consideration. On p. 288 we said : “ But mere consent to forbear for a loose and uncertain period does not tie up the creditor’s hands and also, “ To take away from the plaintiff a just debt in order to relieve a surety, justice requires there should be a clear, distinct agreement by the creditor, placed beyond reasonable doubt for a time certain, or total forbearance, or forbearance for a reasonable time.” In Brubaker v. Okeson, in 12 Cas. on p. 522, Strong, J. said, “ nothing short of an agreement to give time, which binds the creditor and prevents his bringing suit, will discharge the surety.” As we have observed, there was no agreement to extend the payment of the note in suit for any definite time, and therefore the bank was not prevented from bringing suit at any time, and the judgment of the court below must be reversed for this reason.

Another point was made, however, though not determined by the court, notwithstanding it was reserved, which, if sound, would still defeat the plaintiff’s right of recovery. It grew out of the fact that Lowenstein continued" to do business with the bank, and had at various times sums on deposit with the plaintiff sufficient to pay the note. It is contended that these funds being within the power [314]*314of the plaintiff, an obligation arose to appropriate them to the payment of the note, as in favor of the indorser, and. this not being done, the latter was discharged. We do not think so. While it is true that1 a bank is a mere debtor to its depositor for the amount of his deposit, and, therefore, in an action by the bank against the depositor, on a note upon which he is liable, the latter may set-off his deposit, yet we do not think the bank is bound to hold a deposit for the protection of an endorser of the depositor. A bank deposit is different from an ordinary debt in this, that from its very nature it is constantly subject to the check of the depositor, and is always payable on demand. The convenience of the commercial world, the enormous amount of transactions by means of bank checks, occurring on every business day in all parts of the country, require that the greatest facilities should be afforded for the use of bank deposits by means of checks drawn against them. The free use of checks for commercial purposes would be greatly impaired, if the banks could only honor them on perii of relieving indorsers, without an investigation of the state of the depositor’s liabilities upon discounted paper. This question does not seem to have frequently arisen in the courts, but in three cases out of four, to which we have been referred, the right of the bank to pay out the deposit of the party in default on his paper, without relieving the indorser, has been affirmed.

■ Thus in Maryland, in the case of Martin v. Mechanics’ Bank, 6 Harr. & Johns. 235, in an action on an inland bill of exchange, by an incorporated bank, as the holder of the bill which they had discounted before it became due, against the payee, evidence was given that the acceptors of the bill, on the day it became due and for a long time before, and for several months thereafter, kept an account at the said bank, by depositing, and from time to time checking out money, and that on the day the bill became due they had no money in bank, but that about a month afterwards a balance was struck between the bank and the acceptors, when they had a sum of money sufficient to have discharged the bill, Held, that the bank was entitled to recover the amount of the bill from the payee, that the conduct of the holders of the bill with regard to the acceptors, was not a waiver'of their right against the indorsers, nor a release as to them. And as between the holders and the acceptors, there was no payment. The case was elaborately argued by counsel and fully considered by the court. It was held that a deposit of money in a bank by a regular depositor is not to be regardéd ás an appropriation by him of the money deposited, to the payment of an existing indebtedness of his, but rather for the mutual benefit and convenience of the bank and the depositor, “ according to the common course of business in our moneyed [315]*315institutions.” On p. 247, the chief justice said, “ The mere placing money in bank on deposit by the Messrs. Woods, had not of itself the effect to discharge the appellant from his liability as indorser of the bill : and the not diverting, by the plaintiffs, the money, from the purpose for which it was so placed and received by them in bank, and applying it to the payment of the bill, was not more to the prejudice of the indorsers than their forbearing to sue the acceptors, and did not amount in law to a waiver of their right of action against either of the parties.” In Voss v. The German American Bank, 83 Ill. 599, it was held that where the principal on a note payable to a bank, has funds on deposit in the bank after maturity, more than sufficient to pay it, the omission of the bank to appropriate the deposit to the payment of the note will not discharge the surety. In New York, in the case of The National Bank of Newburgh v. Smith, 66 N. Y.

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103 Pa. 309, 1883 Pa. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-legrand-pa-1883.