Rochester First National Bk. v. Fry

144 A. 416, 294 Pa. 425, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 3, 1928
DocketAppeal, 157
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 A. 416 (Rochester First National Bk. v. Fry) 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
Rochester First National Bk. v. Fry, 144 A. 416, 294 Pa. 425, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 400 (Pa. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Plaintiff bank recovered a verdict against H. C. Fry on what it claimed tó be a contract of suretyship; judgment was entered accordingly and defendant has appealed.

From the evidence presented at trial, facts sustaining the verdict could be found as follows: On July 9, 1915, *428 Fry, then the president of plaintiff hank, requested from his institution a loan for one John M. Patterson, on a note executed by the latter, dated the same day, payable at the end of four months. He said that the proposed borrower, who was not a customer of the bank, was worthy of credit for the amount of the note. At the same time, Fry handed the bank’s cashier a memorandum which stated defendant’s willingness to sign a separate undertaking that the note would be paid, and offered as additional collateral two hundred shares of the stock of the Craven Tool Company, standing in the name of Patterson, producing the certificate therefor, with a signed power of attorney authorizing transfer. He also gave information, including a printed circular describing the product and character of the tool company, for use of the bank’s board of directors in passing on the desired loan.

Fry was acquainted with Patterson, but the latter was a stranger to the other officers of the bank, and was not present when negotiations for the loan were being made on his account, or later when it was granted by plaintiff. When the note was discounted, John H. Mellor, cashier of the bank, prepared a paper, dated July 9, 1915, and addressed to the First National Bank, Rochester, Penna., as follows: “For value received I hereby guarantee payment of John M. Patterson’s Five Thousand Dollar note, dated July 9th with Two Hundred (200) shares of Craven Tool Company stock as collateral. This guarantee to extend to any renewals of the same.” This paper was signed by Fry, whereupon, at his direction, credit for $5,000 was given to the Craven Tool Company, the designatee of Patterson. The written undertaking of Fry to be responsible for payment of Patterson’s debt, the collateral, and the other papers connected with the application for the loan, were put by Mellor in an envelope, which was placed in the safe deposit vault of plaintiff bank.

*429 The original note was reduced and renewed from time to time until July 3, 1922, when it was finally renewed at $3,500 for a period of two months. This last note was not paid, and in 1924 was marked off the books by plaintiff bank, as a bad loan. At that time, the bank credited on the note $125, deposited with it by the tool company; and, in this way, the obligation was reduced to $3,375, irrespective of interest.

Fry's written agreement to be responsible for Patterson’s debt to the bank seems to have been overlooked by the officials of that institution until the fall of 1926, when it was discovered by a bank examiner, who called the cashier’s attention to it. Plaintiff immediately made demand on defendant for payment of the amount remaining due; and, when this was refused, the present suit was instituted to recover against Fry, as surety, on his above quoted undertaking of July 9,1915.

Two affidavits of defense were filed. In the first, Fry denied that he had executed the undertaking in question or that he had ever assumed responsibility for the payment of Patterson’s note. Further, he averred that, owing to lapse of time before bringing suit, “any claim based on the said alleged guaranty, if any the plaintiff ever had, [was] barred by the statute of limitations.” The second affidavit of defense averred that the full-amount of the original note and “all proper renewals thereof” had been paid by Patterson, and that the note “attached to the statement of claim” was “the renewal of part of another note for $5,000 given by the said John M. Patterson to the plaintiff a short time after the execution and delivery of the original note mentioned in the statement of claim.”

The defense of payment does not seem to have been urged at trial, and no question with reference to it arises at this time. Aside from the statute of limitations, which is not pressed on this appeal, the defenses insisted upon at trial were, first, that the paper of July 9, 1915, assuming responsibility for the payment of Patterson’s *430 note and renewals thereof, had not been signed by Fry, and that the signature which appeared thereon was a forgery; next, if the jury rejected this defense, then, that the court should rule as a matter of law that the paper in question was a guaranty, not a suretyship, and, there being no evidence of plaintiff’s having pursued the principal debtor with due diligence or of the latter’s insolvency, Fry could not be held responsible as guarantor. In connection with these defenses, appellant specifies that the court below erred in not directing a verdict in his favor or subsequently entering judgment for him n. o. v.; he also alleges numerous trial errors, each of which we shall briefly consider in the order of their assignment.

As to appellant’s first assignment of error, covering his claim for judgment n. o. v., it is necessary to say only that the evidence presented at the trial under review was of a character which required the case to be passed upon by a jury.

The second assignment complains because the cashier of plaintiff bank was allowed to testify to the fact that demand had been made on defendant for payment of the note; in this we see no error.

The third and fourth assignments complain because the court below admitted in evidence the memorandum stating defendant’s willingness to sign “a separate guaranty,” the descriptive circular of the Craven Tool Company, the certificate of stock of that corporation pledged as collateral, and the power of attorney to transfer the latter. In passing on these assignments, it must be kept in mind that Fry’s principal defense was that he had never assumed any responsibility for payment of the loan to Patterson; that the so-called guaranty, on which he was being sued, had not been signed by him, — that it was a forgery. When on the stand, he admitted that the memorandum promising the guaranty was in his handwriting, and he made no allegation that it did not refer to the original note for the Patterson loan, but *431 stated it had been given to the cashier of the bank either several days prior to the day of the loan or sometime thereafter. In other words, he contended that the memorandum under objection constituted no part of the res gestae of the discounting of the note by plaintiff; whereas Mellor, the bank’s cashier, testified to facts which made this memorandum, leading to the guaranty, a very important part of the loan transaction. Moreover, it appeared that the memorandum in question was written on the reverse side of a letter addressed by a third party to defendant, and this letter bore a date which tended to sustain Mellor’s testimony, and discredit defendant’s denial that the memorandum had been given to the bank on July 9, 1915, when Fry applied for the Patterson loan.

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Bluebook (online)
144 A. 416, 294 Pa. 425, 1928 Pa. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochester-first-national-bk-v-fry-pa-1928.