United Beef Co. v. Childs

27 N.E.2d 962, 306 Mass. 187, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 896
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 3, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 27 N.E.2d 962 (United Beef Co. v. Childs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Beef Co. v. Childs, 27 N.E.2d 962, 306 Mass. 187, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 896 (Mass. 1940).

Opinion

Qua, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note for $5,000, dated November 8, 1935, made by the defendant, payable to the order of the plaintiff at the Webster and Atlas National Bank of Boston on January 21, 1936, and indorsed in blank. A second count upon an account annexed has been waived. The defendant contends that he gave this note for the accommodation of the plaintiff and therefore is not hable to the plaintiff upon it. Leonard v. Woodward, 305 Mass. 332, 334, and cases cited. The plaintiff not only denies that the note could be found to be an accommodation note, but further contends that the evidence of an oral understanding upon which the defendant relies contradicts the express terms of this and previous notes signed by the defendant and therefore violates the paroi evidence rule.

The defendant himself testified to the following effect: The defendant had been in the "wholesale food business.” In 1934 and 1935 the plaintiff was the defendant’s largest creditor for "beef and products” purchased by the defendant. Early in 1935 the plaintiff’s president and treasurer began pressing the defendant for payment. The defendant spoke of going into bankruptcy. They told the defendant that the plaintiff was opening a building in Omaha and needed the money. The plaintiff’s treasurer said he had "borrowed up to the limit” at his own bank, but that the defendant had a credit standing at the Webster and Atlas. The plaintiff’s officers urged the defendant to give the plaintiff a note for $7,500 payable at the Webster and Atlas National Bank and promised the defendant that if he paid all he owed to the plaintiff except $5,000 the plaintiff would make him a present of that sum and would never call upon him to pay it; that if the defendant paid $2,500 to the [189]*189bank on the note the plaintiff would pay the rest and take up the note, and the defendant would “never hear about it again.” Thereupon, on March 6, 1935, the defendant gave the plaintiff a note for $7,500 payable at the Webster and Atlas National Bank and the plaintiff discounted it at the bank. At about the same time the defendant paid to the plaintiff a small balance in cash which, with the $7,500 note, made up the full amount of his indebtedness to the plaintiff. Between March and July, 1935, the defendant paid the bank $1,500, reducing the $7,500 note to $6,000. On July 9 a new note for $6,000, due November 8, was given by way of renewal, upon which the defendant paid $1,000, leaving the unpaid balance $5,000. Before the last mentioned note became due the plaintiff’s president asked the defendant to renew it again, as the plaintiff was still needing money. The defendant objected and stated that he had fulfilled his part of the agreement and had “paid it down to $5,000” and saw no reason why he should sign again. The plaintiff’s president replied that the defendant could get credit at this bank; that “We are borrowed up to the hilt”; and that “By signing this note it can’t possibly hurt you and it can help us and relieve us.” The defendant then, without any talk at the bank, signed the $5,000 note now in suit, payable January 21, 1936. The defendant heard nothing further about this note until January, 1938, when a treasurer of the plaintiff who had succeeded the former treasurer “walked into the plaintiff’s [defendant’s?! office.”

The former treasurer of the plaintiff testified that the plaintiff had done business with the defendant for about seventeen years, and that the defendant’s account was the plaintiff’s largest account. He corroborated the defendant’s testimony that before the making of the $7,500 note the plaintiff’s president and treasurer agreed that if the plaintiff would pay all but $5,000 they “would give him, a present of the account and call the bill square.”

In answer to a question the jury found that when the defendant signed the $7,500 note there was an agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant that when the [190]*190defendant had reduced the note to $5,000 he was to be relieved from further liability.

It does not appear in the evidence how the plaintiff became the holder of the note in suit, after having discounted it, although the defendant in his answer says that the plaintiff paid it.

By G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107, § 52 (negotiable instruments law, § 29), an accommodation party is defined as “one who has signed the instrument as maker, drawer, acceptor or endorser, without receiving value therefor, and for the purpose of lending his name to some other person.” Upon the evidence hereinbefore narrated a finding would have been warranted that the defendant was an accommodation maker of the $5,000 note upon which this action is brought. The jury could have found that when that note was signed the defendant had paid down his indebtedness to $5,000 as agreed; that both the plaintiff and the defendant understood that as between them the plaintiff and not the defendant was to pay the remaining $5,000 to the bank; that the defendant signed merely to lend his name to the plaintiff in order that the plaintiff might get the advantage of the defendant’s credit at the bank; and that the defendant did not receive “value therefor.” They could find that as between these parties the note in suit was not a simple renewal of the former note with the usual implications of liability according to the tenor of the note, but that since the parties had mutually understood for some time before this note was given that, no indebtedness longer existed between them, the transaction was intended as a pure accommodation of the plaintiff. Salem Trust Co. v. Deery, 289 Mass. 431, 435, 436. Doubtless the defendant would have been liable to the bank as a holder in due course of the note in suit, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107, § 52, but it does not necessarily follow that by the substitution of the last note for the preceding one the defendant received “value therefor” so that he could not be an accommodation party as to the plaintiff, even though the due date was extended thereby. Consideration consists only of that which the contracting parties offer and accept as such. French v. [191]*191Boston National Bank, 179 Mass. 404, 408. McGovern v. New York, 234 N. Y. 377, 388. Fire Ins. Association, Ltd. v. Wickham, 141 U. S. 564, 579. Banning Co. v. California, 240 U. S. 142, 153. The jury could find that when the $6,000 note had been reduced to $5,000 it had become in substance as between the plaintiff and the defendant a mere accommodation by which the defendant’s credit was extended to the plaintiff, and that by the understanding of the parties that relation continued when the note in suit was given, as is commonly the case where an accommodation note is renewed. Commonwealth Ins. Co. v. Whitney, 1 Met. 21, 23, 24. Hooker v. Hubbard, 102 Mass. 239, 245. Quincy Trust Co. v. Woodbury, 299 Mass. 565, 567-568. First National Bank of Morris v. Stephen, 291 Ill. App. 373, 378, 379. Warner v. Fallon Coal Mines Co. 246 Mich. 493. Nebraska State Bank of Republican City v. Walker, 111 Neb. 203, 206. Taylor v. Nissen, 58 S. D. 299, 302. King v. Doane, 139 U. S. 166, 172, 173. Daniel, Negotiable Instruments (7th ed.) §§ 194, 234.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.E.2d 962, 306 Mass. 187, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-beef-co-v-childs-mass-1940.