238 F. 285 | 5th Cir. | 1916
(after stating the facts as above).
Under the facts, a court of equity should consider the pledge of the securities uninterrupted from the date of their original delivery to intestate in October, 1910. The identity that is essential is the identity of the debt, not that of the parties to the notes evidencing it. The principal debtor in the note to the New York bank was W. H. Knowles, just as he was in the note to the Sullivan bank. That there were additional or different parties for accommodation to the later note, or that the original parties occupied different positions on it, is unimportant, so long as the original debt and the original debtor, secured by the same indorser, are present. It is clear that the intestate would not have consented to surrender the securities to the Sullivan bank, except to accomplish the.payment of the debt due it, for which he was secondarily liable. His doing so was pursuant to, not in contradiction of, the original pledge. It is also clear he indorsed the new note for the purpose of taking up with its proceeds the note on which he was already contingently liable. This was the effect of the written agreement between Knowles and intestate. It was also agreed that the securities, held by the Sullivan bank to secure the original debt, should be given intestate, when they were released by payment of that debt, to protect him on the new indorsement. Had it not been .so, he would have been the worse for the new transaction, since he would then have been without security for his indorsement in the same amount. There was never a time from the intestate’s indorsement of the original note to the Sullivan bank in October, 1910, until the debt was paid by his executors, when he
“Every negotiable instrument is deemed prima facie to have been issued for a valuable consideration; and every person whose signature appears thereon to have become a party thereto for value.”
It is also true that the bankrupt, if not actually solvent in October, 1910, continued thereafter to do business for more than three years as a going concern, and paid all its then creditors in full, except two, who were content to renew their claims till bankruptcy intervened. It seems difficult to predicate notice to the intestate of an insolvent condition, if existent, that withstood bankruptcy for that period, and of which the bankrupt’s officers and creditors seemed unaware.
We find it unnecessary, in view of the conclusion reached, to decide the effect of the statute of limitations upon the transaction of October, 1910', or the claimed want of creditors who are in a position to successfully assail that transaction, and furnish proper representation to the trustee in bankruptcy in his endeavor to do so.
The decree of the District Court will be reversed, with directions to dismiss the bill at the trustee’s costs. If there is an equity in the securities in controversy over and above what the executors were compelled to pay on account of their intestate’s indorsement, the trustee, on proper application and tender, should be permitted to' redeem them from the executors.
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