75 Mo. App. 189 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
Ellison, J. —
This action is based on the following paper transferred to plaintiffs who are a banking company. For convenience we shall designate the paper a note: •
“$441.25 Lamoni, Iowa, May 15, 1890.
“Twelve months after date, for value received, we promise to pay to the order of D. S. Booze, four hundred and forty and 25-100 dollars, without interest if paid when due; payable at the Cainsville Bank, Mo.; and it is expressly agreed that in case default is made in payment, it shall draw ten per cent interest from date, and reasonable attorney’s fees shall be allowed and made a part of the judgment, and that any justice of the peace may have jurisdiction thereon.
“D. F. McLain.
“A. J. Booze.”
It was in this court on a former occasion, 65 Mo. App. 555. Defendant Booze is surety for the other defendant, the maker. Plaintiffs recovered principal and interest in the trial court from date of note.
Our conclusion is that the mere failure of a bank to apply in payment of its depositor’s note the amount of the deposit at its maturity will not affect the liability of the surety. This was decided in Bank v. Carson, 32 Mo. 191. But since that case merely asserts the rule in a sentence, without discussion or citation of authorities, and since counsel have made arguments at length, we have concluded to examine into the question as though an original one in this state, though, of course, bound by that case even if our conclusion had differed from it. The failure of the bank to apply the deposit can not relieve the surety unless it is a duty which the bank, as creditor, owes to the surety. And we know of no proper course of reasoning whereby it may be shown to .be the bank’s duty. Generally, the creditor owes no active duty to the surety. He may stand by and see the principal make way with his property and go into a state of utter insolvency and he need not sue (unless compelled by proceedings in equity or notified by the surety under the provisions of the statute). Bank v. Hill, 76 Ind. 223. He may obtain judgment against the principal and his not enforcing it, though he could, will not discharge the surety. Ins. Co. v. Landis, 50 Mo. App. 116. There is no doubt that the creditor may, if he choose, apply what he owes the principal on what the principal owes him; and so a bank could apply the deposit of the principal to discharge of the principal’s indebtedness to it. But it is not what the bank could do, but rather what is its bounden duty to the surety to do. That no such duty exists is held by Bank v. Hill, supra; Bank v. Smith, 66 N. Y. 271; Voss v. Bank, 83 Ill. 599; Glazier v.
“The general rule accordingly is, that where moneys drawn out and moneys paid in, or other debts and credits, are entered, by the consent of both parties, in the general banking account of a depositor, a balance may be considered as struck at the date of each payment or entry on either side of the account; but where by express agreement, or by a course of dealing, between the depositor and the banker, a certain note or bond of the depositor is not included in the general account, any balance due from the banker to the depositor is not to be applied in satisfaction of that note or bond, even for the benefit of a surety thereon, except at the election of the banker.” When there are mutual accounts between parties the rule as to adjusting balances may well apply, and as said in the quotation just made a balance may be considered struck in favor of either party at the time of each payment to or from either party. “Between two persons mutually indebted, the balance is the debt.” Bank v. Hughes, 17 Wend. 101; Clayton’s case, 1 Meriv. 604; 2 B. & Ald. 39. And therefore if the bank charges the note in the depositor’s account, then when the deposits of the depositor make the balance in his favor it would, ipso facto, be a payment of the note to the extent of the balance and the surety would, of course, be discharged to the extent of the payment. But if the note is not charged against the depositor in his account it is not a debit against which any credit of his in such account could apply.
The defendant having failed to maintain the points of objection to the judgment it is affirmed.