290 Mass. 224 | Mass. | 1935
The question here presented is whether there was evidence which would warrant the finding by a jury that the plaintiff, the payee and holder of a note for $58,500, at some time after the note was delivered made
The evidence introduced by the indorsers at the jury trial is here summarized. At the time of the indorsement of the note by them the indorsers signed collateral loan agreements and delivered to the payee three hundred fifty shares of Warner Bros. Pictures Inc. stock, which stock was apparently owned and at any rate was controlled by them. An accompanying letter stated that the stock was delivered “to secure our endorsements.” The terms of the note required an instalment payment of $7,312.50 to be made every three months. When the third instalment became due in March, 1930, a check for its amount was delivered to the president of the plaintiff bank, whose
There was evidence that on March 12 one of the indorsers dictated, signed and mailed at Boston a letter to the plaintiff which said: “In regard to the note which you are carrying for us, will you kindly sell all of the Warner Bros, stock which you hold as collateral security for said note, and apply the proceeds toward the liquidation of said loan.” The letter was signed with the name of the maker, “Thomson & Kelly Co.” It did not bear the signature of either indorser. There was no evidence that thereafter there was any communication, oral or written, between the indorsers or the maker and the bank (except that one of the indorsers made a payment of $2,500 to the bank in June, 1930) until March, 1932, when the liquidating agent of the bank, which had closed, wrote to the maker demanding payment of the loan.
The authorization which was requested by Marcus was manifestly an authorization by the indorsers whose stock constituted the collateral. It was pledged "to secure . . . [their] endorsements.” The maker of the note had no interest in the stock which the indorsers had pledged and could not make a new agreement binding on the indorsers which varied the terms of their existing agreements of pledge. The letter on which the indorsers here rely as the act which made binding the promise of Marcus for a unilateral contract did not bear nor purport to bear their signatures. It is true that one of the indorsers signed to the letter the name of the maker but there is nothing to show that Marcus knew that to be so. The evidence does not indicate that the indorser had authority to sign the maker’s name or authority to bind the other indorser or that either indorser was an agent, employee or officer of Thomson & Kelly Co. The authorization received was not
Furthermore, it does not appear that anything done by the bank resulted in damage to the indorsers. While the market value of the stock during a period of ten days after the telephone conversation between Marcus and Thomson on March 13 appears in the record, there is nothing to show any lesser market value at any later time. There was no evidence on which any damages to the indorsers could be computed. They sought by recoupment the opportunity to offset in whole or in part damages which might be recovered by the plaintiff. The burden of proving damages in recoupment was on the indorsers. Sayles v. Quinn, 196 Mass. 492, 495. In recoupment a defendant establishes a defence to the plaintiff’s claim only to the extent to which he proves damage. Pothier v. Doucette, 276 Mass. 326, 334. Roche v. Gryzmish, 277 Mass. 575, 578. If he produces no evidence of damage he makes no case in recoupment for the consideration of a jury.
Exceptions overruled.
Decree affirmed with costs.