Price v. Dime Savings Bank

15 N.E. 754, 124 Ill. 317
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 15 N.E. 754 (Price v. Dime Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Dime Savings Bank, 15 N.E. 754, 124 Ill. 317 (Ill. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

There can be no question that the certificate of fifty shares ■of stock in the Dime Savings Bank was the property of William K. Beed,' and that Kelsey had notice of that fact when he accepted the same as collateral security for the payment of Henry C. Seed’s note of November 30, 1872, in lieu of the Buehler note and mortgage. When a third person pledges his property as a security for the payment of a debt or obligation of another, such property will stand in the position of a surety of the debtor, and any change in the contract of surety-ship which would discharge a surety, will release and discharge the property so held as collateral. This rule also applies to mortgages made by one person to secure the debt of another. Burnap v. National Bank of Potsdam, 96 N. Y. 125; Rowan v. Sharpe Rifle Manufacturing Co. 33 Conn. 18; White v. Ault, 19 Ga. 551; Barnes v. Mott, 64 N. Y. 397; Christner v. Brown, 16 Iowa, 130; Ryan v. Town of Shawneetown, 14 Ill. 20; Crawford v. Richeson, 101 id. 351; Bank of Albion v. Burns, 46 N. Y. 170; Colebrook on Collateral Securities, sec. 239.

The rule is well settled in this State, that if a creditor, by a valid and binding agreement, without the assent of a surety, gives further time for payment to the principal debtor, the surety will be discharged. Dodgson v. Henderson, 113 Ill. 360; Davis v. People, 1 Gilm. 409; Waters v. Simpson, 2 id. 570; Crossman v. Wohlleben, 90 Ill. 537; Myers v. Bank, 78 id. 257; Danforth v. Semple, 73 id. 170; Montague v. Mitchell, 28 id. 481; Kennedy v. Evans, 31 id. 258. See, also, Brandt on Suretyship, secs. 301, 304, 307; Bayliss on Sureties and-Guarantors, 240, et seq.

The. surrender of the old notes, and their cancellation, was a sufficient consideration for the new notes given, and the holder, by such surrender and cancellation, put it out of his power to sue on the indebtedness or enforce its collection until the maturity of the new notes. After the pledging of the certificate of the bank stock in October, 1874, as collateral security, Kelsey, the creditor, on December 1, 1876, had a settlement with Henry C. Beed, the debtor, on which it was found there was a balance of $4600 due from the latter to the former upon the original indebtedness, and new notes, extending the time of payment for five years, were taken by Kelsey for such balance, and the note for the payment of which this collateral was pledged, was cancelled and surrendered. To this, William K. Beed is not shown to have consented, or that he had any knowledge of it, or notice that his stock was pledged for the payment of the new notes. It is not shown that he authorized Henry 0. Beed, or any one else, to make such new pledge of his property. But if he had made or authorized the making of said pledge of his property in October, 1879, it appears that two years before the maturity of the last of these notes, Kelsey-surrendered them to the maker, and again extended the time-, of payment to his debtor by accepting in lieu four other notes,, the first for $300, due on demand, and the other three for $1000 each, due in one, two and three years, respectively,, from their date, the last of which did not fall due until im October, 1882. This material change in the terms of the contract, without the consent of William K. Beed, was sufficient .to release the undertaking that his property should stand as security. As before said, the record fails to show that he had any knowledge of, or assented to, any of these extensions, or authorized Henry. C. Beed or any other person to use his bank stock as a pledge for the performance of such new contract.

It is, however, urged, that the pledge of the bank stock was made by William K.- Beed on a valuable consideration moving from Henry C. Beed; that it was substituted for the Buehler note and mortgage of $1000, the property of Henry C. Beed, and therefore the bank stock is to be treated as the property of the latter, and therefore the various extensions given to him. would not operate to release the collateral. It is true, that if a debtor pledges collaterals of his own as security for his note or bill, the extension of the time of payment will not extinguish his creditor’s lien on the collaterals. If Henry C. Beed owned the Buehler note and mortgage, and consented to its exchange for the bank stock, this rule might be invoked, and become decisive of the question being considered. Did he own such note and mortgage? In October, 1874, Kelsey held in his hands various collaterals to secure the payment of the Henry C. Beed note of $7331, among which was the Buehler note and mortgage for $1000, payable to Walter Lister, dated July 11, 1873, payable two years after the date thereof. This note was indorsed by Lister, and its payment guaranteed by him. The record fails to show how it came into the hands of Kelsey, but it is fairly inferrable, from the evidence, that Henry C. Beed procured the note and mortgage from or through his brother, William K., and pledged the same to Kelsey. It appears from the testimony of George W. Beed and that of L. B. Shattuck, that this note and mortgage were, on February 2, 1874, taken by the Illinois Land and Loan Company in part payment of a debt due from Walter Lister, the payee, and that this com-” pany, on May 16, 1874, sold the same to the Dime Savings Bank, with which bank William K. Beed was connected, and of which he was an officer.

On August 2, 1874, as appears by the correspondence, Henry C. Beed requested William K. Beed to send to him (Henry) the mortgage he had spoken of, and $200 in money. That this was the Buehler mortgage, is apparent from the letter of Henry C. Beed acknowledging its receipt, and the subsequent correspondence between William K. and Kelsey, and the letter of the latter to Henry G. Beed. William K. Beed wrote to Levi Kelsey of the date of October 16,1874: “Michael Buehler, whose note and mortgage you hold as collateral to H. C. Beed’s agreement, wishes to take up his note of $1000, and have the mortgage released. I send you certificate No. 12 of the Dime Savings Bank, for fifty shares stock belonging to me.” This shows that its hypothecation was known to William K. Beecl, and tends to strengthen the view that it had originally come from him to Kelsey. This letter was received by Kelsey, for in his letter of October 17, 1874, to Henry 0. Beed, he says: “Henry, I have just received a letter from William K. Beed, asking me to send him the last mortgage that you left with me, etc. William sends me fifty shares Dime Savings Bank, to hold in lieu of it. Shall I do it?” The note and mortgage were sent October 23, 1874, to William K. Beed, by Kelsey. It also appears from the note, duly proved, that it was paid to “William K. Beed, cashier,” and that on the same day of its payment Buehler procured a loan bn the same property from the Dime Savings Bank. The record nowhere shows that William K. Beed or the bank was ever called upon to account for the money received on this Buehler note and mortgage. If, as shown, this note and mortgage belonged to William K. Beed, no accounting would be expected, but if it belonged to Henry 0. Beed or to some other person, and had been accounted for, it could have, in some way, been made apparent.

It does not appear that Kelsey, when this note and mortgage were pledged to him, had notice that they belonged to William K. Beed. Henry G.

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15 N.E. 754, 124 Ill. 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-dime-savings-bank-ill-1888.