White Mountain National Bank v. Malloy

37 A.2d 785, 93 N.H. 197, 1944 N.H. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 6, 1944
DocketNo. 3469.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 785 (White Mountain National Bank v. Malloy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White Mountain National Bank v. Malloy, 37 A.2d 785, 93 N.H. 197, 1944 N.H. LEXIS 123 (N.H. 1944).

Opinion

Page, J.

The note upon which the plaintiff seeks to hold the defendant was given by her on June 1, 1939, with the estate of her husband, Thomas E. Malloy, as nominal surety. The note was a several-times-removed renewal of one given in exchange for, or in *198 payment of, an earlier note given in 1938 by the defendant to the plaintiff, in form as principal, and endorsed by the estate. This earlier note was findably a consolidation of four notes given to the plaintiff by the defendant. Of these four notes, two. were given in payment of notes of 1931 upon which Thomas E. Malloy was the maker and the defendant was endorser. The other two originated in notes of 1937 signed by the defendant in form as maker, with Thomas E. Malloy in form as endorser. It is not explained why the formal status of the parties was changed between 1931 and 1937. It could be found that the original, proceeds of all four of the notes were credited by the bank to Thomas E. Malloy and were used by him in his business, in which the defendant had no legal interest.

As to none of the notes on which the defendant’s name appeared did the bank deal directly with Mrs. Malloy at any time prior to Mr. Malloy’s death in 1938. Mr. Malloy brought in the notes, bearing her signature, and had the benefit of any cash or credit produced by them. He also paid the interest and some reductions of principal during his lifetime, and Mrs. Malloy paid nothing. Prior to Mr. Malloy’s death, if the jury believed Mrs. Malloy, she never received from the bank any notice to pay interest or principal on any of the notes on which she was in form principal. No such notice was sent to her until after her husband’s death, and not until after that time did she make any payment of either principal or interest. After Mr. Malloy’s death, his administrators made one payment of interest. Thereafter Mrs. Malloy gave the plaintiff a note consolidating the former notes, in form as maker, with the estate as endorser, and from time to time renewed the note. She also made one or more payments, findably in the mistaken belief that her husband’s estate was solvent and that she would be reimbursed, and, if the jury believed her, she thereby made no unexplained admission that she was principal rather than surety.

The statute provides that a married woman shall be liable upon her contracts except (1) when made with her husband, (2) when made as surety or guarantor for her husband, or (3) when the undertaking is made by her for or in behalf of her husband. R. L., c. 340, s. 2; First National Bank v. Hunton, 69 N. H. 509. The statute does not, however, prevent recovery from her where the contract is made by her as principal, even though she makes it with the aim of benefiting her husband. White Mountain National Bank v. Noyes, 81 N. H. 285, and cases cited.

The case last referred to illustrates, if it does not make clear, the *199 issue of fact presented where the question is raised as to the liability of the wife upon a note given by her to raise funds for her husband’s use. That case was tried and submitted to the jury solely upon the question of fact whether Mrs. Noyes gave the notes as principal or surety. 367 Briefs and Cases, 195, 199, 203, 209. When the question came to this Court on the denial of motions for a nonsuit and for a directed verdict, the only question for decision was whether there was any evidence upon which reasonable men could find that Mrs. Noyes was principal rather than surety.

The fact that the wife is principal on the face of the instrument, while some evidence of the capacity in which she contracts, is not conclusive. She is not precluded, by her apparent position, from showing what her real position is. The trier of fact, if the apparent maker of the note claims to be only a surety, must upon a consideration of all the evidence, determine whether she is one or the other. Farmington National Bank v. Buzzell, 60 N. H. 189; Parsons v. Rolfe, 66 N. H. 620. The finding, if based on evidence, controls the result. Jones v. Holt, 64 N. H. 546; Wells v. Foster, 64 N. H. 585; Jona Savings Bank v. Boynton, 69 N. H. 77.

The exceptions to the denial of the plaintiff’s motions to set aside the verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict raise only the question whether there is any evidence that the defendant contracted with the plaintiff as surety for her husband or made a contract in his behalf. Upon the facts heretofore stated, we think that reasonable men could find in favor of the defendant, as to her liability to pay any of the notes given during her husband’s lifetime. The abrupt exchange of the formal positions of the wife in 1937 and 1938, from that as surety (in which, on the face of things, the bank could not hold the wife) to that as principal being wholly unexplained, the plaintiff is left in the doubtful position of combatting the theory that the first formal position represented the reality, while the later one did not. The situation is emphasized by the fact that the bank could be found to have relied at every moment during Mr. Malloy’s lifetime upon his credit and not at all upon the credit of Mrs. Malloy. Among the bank’s papers was found and introduced a statement filed by Mr. Malloy in 1936, indicating an ample basis for credit, while the bank appears never to have investigated the credit of Mrs. Malloy, who in fact never had assets upon which to base credit. In this respect we have a situation that is the precise reverse of the Noyes case, where the husband had no property, while the wife did, and the contract with her as *200 maker could be found to have been in fact made with her as principal and not as surety.

The plaintiff excepted to the admission of evidence as to the transactions of the defendant’s husband with the bank. The stated objection to this testimony was that when the defendant gave her note to the bank after her husband’s death she impliedly agreed with the bank that this was her own undertaking. The objection is unavailing. <' If she gave the note after coverture was ended in consideration of the cancellation of the notes upon which she was not liable, the consideration was moral only, and not legal. Only in the few states that recognize moral consideration could she be held upon the note in suit, provided, as the jury has found, she was not liable on those given during her husband’s lifetime. The great weight of authority is against recovery in such case. Williston and Thompson, Contracts (Rev. ed.), ss. 147-149, 156. Moral consideration is not recognized here, Kent v. Rand, 64 N. H. 45, 47. If the defendant could, after coverture ceased, have made a good contract with the bank to pay an existing debt of her husband’s, rather than to pay a non-existent obligation of her own, it does not appear that she in fact did. Certainly the consolidated note given in 1938 is as explainable on the renewal theory as upon the theory / of a new and different contract; it is not conclusively the latter/ Findably the defendant was always surety, both before and after her husband’s death.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 785, 93 N.H. 197, 1944 N.H. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-mountain-national-bank-v-malloy-nh-1944.