State Bank v. McGuire

14 Ark. 530
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 Ark. 530 (State Bank v. McGuire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bank v. McGuire, 14 Ark. 530 (Ark. 1854).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Watkins

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted on the 22d of March, 1849, by the Bank against the defendants upon a promissory note for $6,430, purporting to have been executed by them, on the 1st of July, 1843, in favor of the Bank, due twelve months after date, and negotiable and payable at the Branch of the Bank at Batesville. The only material enquiry arises under two of the pleas interposed by the defendants; 1st. Nil clebet sworn to, being the same in effect, under our statutory practice, as non est factum ; 2d that the note in question was given by them without any consideration whatever therefor.

The history of the transaction, according to the undisputed facts appearing in the record, would seem tobe as follows: That on the 10th of February, 1843, when the act to place the Bank of the State of Arkansas in liquidation took effect, the Bank at Batesville held five notes of William L. McGuire, amounting in the aggregate to $6,850, all either then due or falling due shortly after that period. Under the liquidation act passed at the session of 1842, Daniel J. Chapman had been elected Executive Receiver, and Thomas S. Drew as Financial Receiver of the Branch at Batesville, the especial duties of the former being to turn his. attention to the situation and circumstances of the debtors to the Bank, to enquire into the sufficiency of all security offered, &c.; and of the latter to attend to the keeping of the books, accounts, notes and moneys of the Bank, to receiving the calls and interest on the debts due her, and to the making out of reports, statements, &c. And they constituted a board for the management and control of the business of the Bank or Branch under their immediate charge. There were also attorneys elected for the principal Bank and each of the branches, who were authorized, though not required to preside at the respective boards, and in case of a disagreement between the Receivers, should decide between them. The sufficiency of any security offered upon the renewal of any note was to be approved by both Receivers, and such approval entered upon the minutes of their proceedings, and if not so approved, such security should not be deemed sufficient. Acts of 1842, p. 79. The debtors of the Bank were required, under penalty of forfeiting all claim to further indulgence, to come forward within ninety days after public notice, directed to be given by the respective Receivers of the principal Bank and branches, and pay all arrearages of interest and costs, and upon doing so were privileged to renew their notes for one year by giving satisfactory security, to be approved by the Receivers, and paying interest at seven per cent, in advance, and as such renewal notes became due, the subsequent calls upon them were to be so regulated as that the whole debt should be called in within ten years in regular annual calls. Ib. p. 80. Various persons were securities of McGuire upon the five notes of his referred to, Chapman, the Executive Receiver, being on one of them. On or about the 1st of July, 1848, McGuire offered to the Receivers the large note here sued upon, in consolidation of his five notes, the securities upon it being Edwin R. McGuire and Thomas Hughes, who were also securities upon some of the other notes. The arrears of interest on the old notes over due, and discount upon the new one, amounted to $849 96, the curtail to be paid under the liquidation act was $420, making in all $1,269 96, which W. L. McGuire had to pay in cash in order for his notes to be renewed as proposed.

We may anticipate here the material enquiry of fact in the case for-the jury to determine, which was, whether the new note for $6,430 was accepted in substitution for the old ones, by way of renewal, and if so, it would operate to discharge the old notes as a payment of them, the transaction being the same in effect, as if the debtor, according to Bank usage, obtaining a new dis-. count, had applied the proceeds of it for that purpose. And a fair test of this would be to enquire whether in case the Bank had sued the principal and securities upon the old notes, they could Jraim sustained a plea of payment upon the same state of proof as to the acceptanceof the consolidated note in rene w.al. Because,, so far as the principal debtor is concerned, it would not be possible in law that he should be liable upon two different sets of notes or securities ofequal grade for the payment of the same debt; but oneorthe otherofthem must be without consideration, no new or further consideration appearing, nor anything from which it could be inferred that the latter note was intended to be collateral to the former. The result would be the same if according to the shape of the transaction, the old note had been discharged by a release or any valid agreement in the nature of one, or satisfied by an accord executed.

The deposition of Drew, taken in Louisiana, in August, 1852, makes out the case fully in favor of the Bank. He goes into a detail of the whole matter and states that his recollection has been refreshed by an inspection of the books of the Batesville branch, made by him in 1850, at Little Rock (where they had been removed pursuant to the act of January 9th, 1849, Acts of 1848, p. 71, withdrawing the branches and concentrating the assets and papers of the Bank at Little Rock,) and that it is more distinct, from the fact that the debt of McGuire was perhaps the, largest due by any one individual to the Batesville branch. His version of the transaction is that at the time of offering the new note, on 1st of July, 1843, W. L. McGuire deposited with him $1,000, towards the cash payment required to be made, and McGuire being unable to raise any more money, the following arrangement was agreed upon and closed between him and witness, Drew, on the 29th of August, 1843, the same being entered on the books of the branch Bank. Among the five old notes of McGuire was one for $300. A credit of $30 was entered upon this note, so as to reduce it to $270, the amount of cash for which McGuire was short on the proposed renewal, and this note thus reduced, was retained as security for that cash balance. The new note for $6,-430 was then passed and acceptedin renewal ofthe other four notes of McGuire and his various securities. And at the trial the Bank produced these four notes cancelled, and the fifth note for $300 unpaid and having a credit endorsed of $30, as stated by Drew. He deposes that the Receivers at the Batesville branch, being entirely satisfied with the sufficiency of the securities on the note for $6,430, and with the note itself then offered, received, accepted and approved the same, and he thinks it was properly entered on the books of the Bank, and thenceforward held as the note of the Bank. The substance of his deposition may be expressed in his own language, that “said note was received and accepted in renewal of the four notes before mentioned, on which W. L. McGuire was principal, and those four notes were extinguished, discharged and cancelled, and no longer kept on the books of the Bank or considered as assets.” Magruder, who succeeded Drew, as Financial Receiver, in October, 1844, testified that the new note here sued upon and the one for $300 with the credit of $30 on it, were turned over to him by Drew as assets, and he received them as such, not passing upon or questioning the sufficiency of the security, which he supposed to be good, and so, on going out of office-, he turned over the notes in question to his successor. He had no recollection of ever before seeing the four cancelled notes that were produced on the trial.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stewart v. Key Co.
590 S.W.2d 872 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1979)
Missouri Pacific Railroad v. Ward
477 S.W.2d 835 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1972)
Harkrider v. Cox
321 S.W.2d 226 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1959)
Terry v. Clark
92 S.W. 788 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1906)
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Hitt
88 S.W. 908 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1905)
Gatlin v. Wilcox
26 Ark. 309 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1870)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Ark. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-v-mcguire-ark-1854.