Woods v. Woods

127 Mass. 141, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 37
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 Mass. 141 (Woods v. Woods) 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
Woods v. Woods, 127 Mass. 141, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 37 (Mass. 1878).

Opinion

Colt, J.

The plaintiff, for the accommodation of the firm of Woods & Wallace, indorsed a note for $5000, signed by them and the defendant Parkinson on the face, and by the defendant Tarbell on the back, and made payable to the plaintiff’s order. This note was discounted by the bank, and was paid when due by two notes of $2500 each, payable to the plaintiff’s order and indorsed by him and others, the note in suit being then delivered to the plaintiff. There was no question at the trial but that the note in suit had been paid; the question was by whom. The plaintiff contended that it was paid by him. The defendants contended that the payment was by Robert P. Woods, one of the defendants, and one of the firm of Woods & Wallace,- [146]*146and that it was made from the avails of the two $2500 notes-There was some conflict in the evidence upon this point. The real character of. the transaction depends largely upon the intent of the parties, to be ascertained by the jury from all the evidence in the case. If the payment was by Robert P. Woods, then the parties to the original $5000 note are discharged; if by the plaintiff, he may as payee enforce his claim in this suit against all the makers. We think there was evidence in the case which would justify a finding either way. " But the judge ruled that there was no question for the jury, and ordered a verdict for the plaintiff against all the defendants.

New trial granted.

At the second trial of the case in the Superior Court, before Aldrich, J., the plaintiff put in the same evidence as at the previous trial; and also put in evidence tending to show that the note in suit had been paid by him by the two notes of $2500 each, and the subsequent payment by him of these notes. The plaintiff did not, however, contend that he advanced or paid any money on the note in suit; but that he was an accommodation indorser for all the other parties to the note, and put in evidence tending to prove this.

The defendants’ evidence was in substance the same as that put in by them at the former trial; and, for the purpose of raising the question of the liability of Tarbell as a joint promisor, the defendants proposed to ask him the following questions: “ Did you receive any money on the note in suit ? For what purpose was this note made? Did you receive anything on account of this note ? ” The judge refused to allow these questions to be put.

For the purpose of showing that Parkinson and Tarbell were, at most, only accommodation indorsers of the note in suit, the defendants proposed to ask Wallace the following questions: “ Was any money passed on the note in suit by or between any of the parties to it ? Was any money passed on this note before it was discounted at the bank?” There was no evidence to show that the plaintiff knew that Parkinson and Tarbell were accommodation makers for Robert P. Woods and Wallace, and the judge refused to allow the questions to be put.

[147]*147The defendants requested the judge to instruct the jury as follows: “ 1. If any of the joint promisors on the note in suit, about the time it became due, gave his note as promisor to the plaintiff as payee, with indorsers thereon, for the sole purpose of having it discounted at a bank to raise money to take up the note in suit, and the note was accordingly discounted and the proceeds applied towards taking up the note in suit, then the note in suit would be so far paid, and the plaintiff cannot recover on said note in this action without an allowance towards the payment thereof of the money so raised and applied. 2. If Robert P. Woods, one of the promisors, made the two notes for $2500 each payable to the plaintiff, and they were made for the purpose of raising money to take up the note in suit, and were discounted at a bank and the proceeds applied to the taking up of the note in suit, that would be a payment of so much of the note in suit as was so applied, in the absence of any agreement between the parties varying their obligations as they appear on the said notes. 3. If the note in suit was made solely for the purpose of raising money, by having it discounted at a bank, i<. take up a previous note, then the note would not be a binding contract between the parties until so discounted by the bank, and the order of time in which the parties put their names on the back of the note would be of no importance in construing the obligations of the parties; and if Tarbell’s name was put on the back of the note before the name of Henry A. Woods, the payee, yet if, when it was completed and presented to the bank for discount and actually discounted, the payee’s and Tarbell’s names were both on the back of the note, Tarbell can only be held as an indorser on the note, and not as a promisor. 4. If an accommodation note is made, without any consideration bétween the parties, for the purpose of raising money at a bank to take up a previous note, any person who shall put his name on the back, before the payee indorses his name thereon, must be held as an indorser, provided, when the note was received and discounted by the bank, the payee’s name was then indorsed thereon. 5. Such a note is to be construed, not in the order of time in which the parties put their names thereto, but the liabilities of the several parties on the note are to be determined by the note as it existed when discounted and made a valid con[148]*148tract by the passing of the consideration, provided the note was made solely for the purpose of raising money by a discount thereof at a bank. 6. If the note of one joint promisor for the amount of the old note, on time, with other indorsers, is taken for the old note, the law presumes that such new note is a payment of the old note, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary. 7. If Robert P. Woods made the two $2500 notes for the sole and only purpose of raising money with which to pay the note in suit, and procured them to be indorsed by Alfred Page, and then delivered them to Henry A. Woods, who was made payee, and he then indorsed them for the same purpose, and used the money obtained on the two notes for the purpose of taking up the note in suit, the note in suit was so far paid by Robert, in the absence of any contrary agreement, notwithstanding Henry may have supposed, while the note was in his hands, he could collect its full amount.’)

D. S. Richardson, (W. H. Atwood with him,) for the defendants. T. H. Sweetser, (F. A. Worcester with him,) for the plaintiff.

But the judge declined so to rule; and directed the jury, with other full and appropriate instructions not excepted to, as follows : “ If Tarbell, not being the payee, wrote his name in blank on the back of the note in suit, before it was delivered to take effect as a promissory note, he would be liable as one of. the joint makers and original promisors, in the absence of all evidence that it was the intention of himself and Henry A. Woods, the payee, that he, Tarbell, should assume the liability only of an indorser. The two $2500 notes not having been signed by all the parties to the note in suit, the law does not presume, in the absence of any agreement to that effect between the plaintiff and the other parties to the note in suit, that he received the two $2500 notes in payment of the note in suit.”

The "jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff; and the defendants, alleged exceptions.

Lord, J. The bill of exceptions states that, beside the instructions reported and excepted to, “full and appropriate instructions not excepted to ” were given.

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

Related

Pearson v. O'Connell
197 N.E. 486 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1935)
Stebbins v. North Adams Trust Co.
136 N.E. 880 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1922)
Cherry v. Sprague
187 Mass. 113 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1901)
Agawam National Bank v. Downing
47 N.E. 1016 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1897)
Moore v. Cushing
39 N.E. 177 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 Mass. 141, 1879 Mass. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-woods-mass-1878.