Wakonda State Bank v. Fairfield

220 N.W. 515, 53 S.D. 268, 1928 S.D. LEXIS 87
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1928
DocketFile No. 5941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 515 (Wakonda State Bank v. Fairfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wakonda State Bank v. Fairfield, 220 N.W. 515, 53 S.D. 268, 1928 S.D. LEXIS 87 (S.D. 1928).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

This is an action on a note for $4,500 signed by L. D. Fairfield, Louise Fairfield, PI. C. Fairfield, and W. H. Morrison. Morrison alone defends, and he sets up as defenses that the note was delivered 'Conditionally, was without consideration as to him, and that his signature was procured by fraudulent suppression of facts, which, had 'he known, he would not have signed the note. L. D. Fairfield was cashier of plaintiff bank, and a few days before the execution of the note in suit he had executed a note to the bank for $3,500, which appellant had signed as surety. This note was never accepted by the bank, and, while it was in the possession of either the bank or Fairfield, the amount was raised to $4,500. It is not shown who made the alteration, but the appearance of the note after the change led the bank officers to think that the bank examiner would look upon the note with suspicion, and they therefore set out to procure a new note for $4,500. The consideration for the $3,500 note 'was a $2,000 note signed by L. D. Fairfield, and on which the' name of his brother, H. C. Fairfield, also appeared as a maker, but there was some question as to whether the H. 'C. Fairfield signature was not a forgery. There was about $1,900 owing on that note, and the balance of the $3,500 was made up of defalcation or shortage in L. D. Fairfieldt’s accounts with the bank. The bank knew that this was the entire consideration for the $3,500 note, and that Morrison signed that note only in the capacity of surety for L. D. Fairfield. The bank encountered a good deal of difficulty in getting Morrison to> sign the $4,500 note. F. M. Thrane, who was vice president, and had been cashier, of the bank, appears to have taken -sick just before appellant’s signature was procured, and Charles I. Danforth, a banker in Yankton, and a director of plaintiff bank, as an inducement to appellant to sign the -note, told him that Thrane’s illness [271]*271was due to worry over this Fairfield) note, and asked appellant to sign so as to take this burden from Thrane’s mind, whereupon appellant, who had an intimate acquaintance with Thrane, said he would sign with the understanding’ that, if Thrane died, he would pay the note, but, if Thrane got well, his name was to be taken off the note, and- with that understanding he signed it. This is the basis of appellant’s claim that the note was delivered conditionally, and that, Thrane having got well, the condition on which appellant was to be bound has not happened, and therefore he is not liable on the note.

The trial court eliminated the third defense, that appellant’s signature was procured -by fraud, and submitted the case to thé jury on the issues raised by the -defenses of conditional delivery and want of consideration. The jury found for appellant on those issues, but the court granted plaintiff’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

We think the judgment must be reversed on account of the court’s ruling on the third! defense, and other alleged errors need not be considered.

Appellant’s testimony to the effect that, had -he been informed of the delinquency of b. D. Fairfield, he would not have signed the note, was stricken out on motion of plaintiff; the court, in sustaining the motion, saying to- the jury:

“Gentlemen of- the jury, the court has ruled in this case- that, at the time the 'bank officers took the signature of Mir. Morrison to this note, there was no legal obligation resting upon them to- state anything to him with reference to Mr. Fairfield’s relation, debtor, creditor, or whatever he- had done there in the bank — they were not obliged to disclose anything to him — 'and that, while we -might have impressions in regard to that subject as individuals, the law imposed) no obligation of disclosure in this case, so- this evidence you have heard of Mr. Morrison that he would not have done so- and so if 'he had known such and such-things should he disregarded by yo-u in your consideration and decision of the case.”

As has -been pointed out, plaintiff knew that Morrison signed this note as surety for b. D. Fairfield, and fraud on the part of the obligee suc-h as will avoid a contract of suretyship- is not confined to positive affirmations which- are untrue, but may consist in the -concealment or withholding by him from the surety, [272]*272at the time the contract of suretyship is executed, of material facts affecting the risk, which the obligee has the opportunity, and which it is his duty, to disclose. Copper Process Co. v. Chicago Bonding & Ins. Co. (C. C. A.) 262 F. 66, 8 A. L. R. 1477, and annotation to this case as reported in 8 A. L. R., beginning at page 1485. In the instant case, according to the testimony which was excluded by the comí:, plaintiff not only withheld from appellant information which, if given, would probably have led him to withhold his signature, but took active steps to prevent appellant from acquiring such information, and even made positive statements in regard to the matter which were untrue. From the excluded, testimony, the jury might have justifiably found that the whole $3,500 of F. D. Fairfield’s liability to the bank was the result of his embezzlements and possible forgery; that, when this was discovered, he was relieved of his job as cashier, but that the bank officers, while trying to persuade appellant to sign the $4,500 note, in response to his inquiries as to how it happened that Fairfield was out of the bank, told him that he had resigned, and, when asked if Fairfield had ¡been “fired,” they said “No” — that he had resigned. The testimony shows that, after a private interview ¡with the directors and some of the officers of the bank in the back room of the 'bank one evening, Fairfield left the employment of the bank, and that the shortage in his accounts was the reason for this. The jury would have been justified in concluding that the denial that he had been discharg-ed was an untruth. Appellant testifies that the officers of the bank in their conversations with him talked as if the note was for money which Fairfield had borrowed to pay on his house; that they talked all the time as though there was nothing against Fair-field. Among other inducements to get appellant to sign the note, Dianforth told him that it would not be so bad to pay, since so many had signed it, and that they would put F. D. back in the bank, and he would work part of it out. It is perfectly plain that they had no intention whatever of putting- F. D. back in the bank, and it is equally plain that Danforth was trying- to lead appellant to believe that F. D. Fairfield and the other signers were solvent, when he had good reason to believe that nothing could be collected from- any of them.

In their effort to get appellant’s signature to the note, Thrane, the vice president of the bank, and H. C. Fail-field drove out to [273]*273interview appellant at his farm, and, from the evidence excluded', the jury, could' have believed that on the way out Thrane enjoined upon H. C. Fairfield to say nothing that might arouse Morrison’s suspicion as to L. D. Fairfield’s defalcation in the bank, because, if Morrison should know about that, he never would sign the note. In 8 A. L. R. 1488, it is said that:

“Very little said by the obligee which ought not to have been said, and very little left unsaid which ought to have been said to a surety, are sufficient to discharge the latter, especially where there is no consideration for the contract of suretyship.”

In the case before us there was.

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 515, 53 S.D. 268, 1928 S.D. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wakonda-state-bank-v-fairfield-sd-1928.