State Savings & Trust Co. v. Grady

153 N.E. 238, 20 Ohio App. 385, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 503, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 246
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 N.E. 238 (State Savings & Trust Co. v. Grady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Savings & Trust Co. v. Grady, 153 N.E. 238, 20 Ohio App. 385, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 503, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 246 (Ohio Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mauck, J.

On October '24, 1921, the State Savings & Trust Company, the payee of a cognovit note in the sum of $20,195.73, took a judgment thereon by confession against the makers in the Court of Common Pleas of Summit county. Thereafter Ernest G. Grady, Stephen T. Plancsak and I. F. Pox filed motions .to open up said judgment that they might be permitted to make their defenses to such note. These motions were sustained and answers filed by the parties mentioned.

*386 Grady and Planusak in their answer pleaded, first, that the note was wholly without consideration. As a second defense they pleaded that prior to March 10, 1021, the date upon which the note was signed, Ben H. Pryor, the principal debtor on the note, had made and delivered to Christopher E. Albright a large number of notes secured by chattel mortgages on automobiles; that Albright endorsed those notes and assigned them to the plaintiff; that Pryor had sold some of said mortgaged automobiles in violation of Section 12476, General Code; that the plaintiff, having knowledge of these criminal acts, had threatened Pryor with criminal prosecution therefor unless Pryor would furnish satisfactory signers as accommodation makers upon the note in controversy; that Pryor, proceeding under said threats, and being coerced thereby, procured the signatures of the answering defendants to said note by false and fraudulent representations; and that these false and fraudulent representations were made with the knowledge of the plaintiff. The third defense was an elaboration of the second defense, alleging somewhat more specifically the alleged fraudulent representations made to the answering defendants, the knowledge and consent of the bank thereto, and some other matters not necessary now to be referred to.

The answer of the defendant Pox was substantially the same.

Upon the issues so drawn trial was had to a jury, resulting in a verdict for the defendants. To the judgment following this verdict the plaintiff prosecutes error to this court.

"We have examined the very extensive record in *387 the case and find that there is testimony tending to show that Pryor and Albright were engaged in selling automobiles, Pryor being am employe or sub-agent of Albright. In selling the automobiles the exigencies of the trade required the vendors to take over many second-hand cars. Pryor opened up a separate establishment in which he was handling these, and perhaps other, used automobiles. Pryor would make his note to Albright, secured by a chattel mortgage on a given machine, and Albright would discount the note with the plaintiff bank. The bank seemed to have no knowledge of Pryor’s financial responsibility and seemed to make no effort to ascertain the value of the chattels thus mortgaged or even the title of Pryor to the cars he was mortgaging. The bank seemed to be satisfied with Albright’s endorsement and the fact that it was getting seven per cent, straight discount with a three per cent, commission or bonus upon each renewal, the several notes running for ninety days. It was probably early in March, 1921, that the officers of the bank, then holding forty-one notes, aggregating more than $30,000, undertook to check up the mortgaged automobiles. The officers of the bank then discovered that Pryor had sold a number of the mortgaged automobiles upon which the bank was supposed to have liens aggregating about $12,000. The testimony sharply differs from this time on, but it is shown that the officers of the bank at that time insisted not only that Pryor make good the notes whose security had been impaired by sale of the mortgaged machines, but also that he gj/ve other security for that part of his indebted *388 ness for which the security had not been impaired. Pryor thereupon gave a second mortgage upon his real estate in the sum of $12,000, which was acceptable to the bank and covered that part of the indebtedness that had been left unsecured by Pryor disposing of the mortgaged machines. The testimony tends to show that the officers of the bank were threatening Pryor with prosecution unless he gave personal security for the rest of the indebtedness. The bank thereupon prepared the note in question, having first carefully calculated the interest up to March 10, added thereto six months interest, and with a sang-froid that excites our wonder added $631 commission or bonus for making the loan. Pryor testifies that he went to Grady, Plancsak and Fox and made the false representations set up in the answer in order to induce these •parties to sign this obligation to the bank, and the record beyond any dispute shows that these parties were induced to sign the note by these false representations. As between Pryor and these accommodation makers of the note there can be no doubt that they were defrauded as charged.

Pryor testifies that he made the representations complained of at the instance of and with the knowledge of the officers of the bank. These officers denied it. Pryor, it is true, is discredited by the circumstances. He was brought from jail to testify before the jury. On the other hand, the officers of the bank are contradicted in minor, but important, matters by a number of witnesses. We would not be inclined to disturb the verdict of the jury if that verdict were necessarily predicated upon the connivance of the officers of the bank in the undoubtedly false representations that Pryor *389 made to Ms friends, the defendants in error. If the bank consented to Pryor’s conduct, the sureties, of course, are not bound.

“It is a well settled rule of law that if a creditor induces Ms surety or guarantor to enter into the contract of suretysMp or guaranty by any fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation of material facts that the surety or guarantor will be released.”

Above is the language of Mr. Freeman in his note to Fassnacht v. Emsing-Gagen Co., 63 Am. St. Rep., 327.

We think that in the instant case the rule might go further. Taking into consideration the fact that contemporaneously with the making of the note sued upon the bank was taking a mortgage for all the equity that Pryor had in his real estate, and that the bank knew that at least some of the signers of the new note could have no knowledge of that mortgage, either actual or constructive, and that the bank was padding Pryor’s indebtedness with an unearned and unconscionable commission, the bank might have been held to even a Mgher duty. Such higher duty has thus been explained in 21 Ruling Case Law, at page 989:

“Whether he (the payee) is bound before accepting the undertaking of the surety voluntarily to inform him of facts within his knowledge which increase the risk of the undertaking depends on the circumstances of the case. The rule seems to be that if he knows or has good grounds for believing that the surety is being deceived or misled, or that he was induced to enter into the contract in ignorance of facts materially increasing the risk, of which he has knowledge, and he has an *390

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.E. 238, 20 Ohio App. 385, 1 Ohio Law. Abs. 503, 1923 Ohio App. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-savings-trust-co-v-grady-ohioctapp-1923.