225 A.D. 300 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1929
The action was brought by the plaintiff, respondent, as payee of a promissory note made by the defendant David Knopfler to secure the payment of the sum of $500 and interest from December 11, 1925, the date of the note. The defendant, appellant, and the defendant Morris Schupper were indorsers of the note in suit. The plaintiff joined as parties defendant the maker of the note and the two accommodation indorsers. The defendant Knopfler appeared in person in the action and set up the defense of usury in his answer. The defendant Schupper made default in appearing or answering. The appellant Rossmoore answered in the action alleging that he was an accommodation indorser and indorsed the note without any consideration whatever and set up six affirmative defenses. The only defense involved upon this appeal is the sixth, wherein the defendant, appellant, alleges that the plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of said defendant, appellant, released and discharged a chattel mortgage executed by the maker of the note as collateral security for the payment of a prior promissory note in the same amount and of which the note in suit was a renewal, and that the value of such security was in excess of the amount of the note, and that by discharging such chattel mortgage the plaintiff had discharged the appellant from all liability on the note in suit.
The pertinent facts are as follows: On May 11, 1925, Knopfler, the maker of the note in suit, made and delivered to plaintiff his promissory note for $500, payable seven months from the date
In Jones v. Guaranty & Indemnity Co. (101 U. S. 622, 630) the United States Supreme Court said: “ If a note secured by a mortgage be renewed or otherwise changed, the lien of the mortgage continues until the debt is paid. Changes in the form of the instrument are immaterial. Equity regards only the substance of things, and deals with human affairs upon that principle.”
In Jogger Iron Co. v. Walker (supra) the Court of Appeals said (at p. 524): “ Where a chattel mortgage is given to secure a debt, the taking of a new note and a new mortgage, does not extinguish the original debt, nor the first mortgage.”
The respondent, however, takes the position that the note in suit was not a renewal of the prior note, and that the prior note was paid by the giving of the note in suit. This contention is contrary to all legal presumptions and to the well-considered decisions of our courts. A man may not pay his promissory note or discharge the debt secured thereby by executing a new note for the same amount. The presumption is that the note in suit was a renewal of the original note (Garfield National Bank v. Wallach, 223 App. Div. 303; Dibble v. Richardson, 171 N. Y. 131; Jagger Iron Co. v. Walker, 76 id. 521; Bates v. Rosekrans, 37 id. 409), and the fact that the note in suit bore the name of a new indorser, the appellant herein, does not alter the situation. (Bates v. Rosekrans, 37
Not only is the note in suit presumptively a renewal of the original note, but such was the clear understanding of the plaintiff and the maker of the new note at the time it was made. In this respect the following testimony of the plaintiff is significant: “ Q. Did you receive from Mr. Knopfler or any of the endorsers any part of this five hundred dollars that you loaned to Mr. Knopfler on May 11th, 1925; was any part of it paid back to you? A. No, sir, it was not. * * * Q. And the note in suit, the one you are suing on now, is a renewal of that note, isn’t it? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. Now, before the note, the seven months’ note expired, you stated to the Court and jury that Mr. Knopfler came to your place and said that he could not pay it? A. Yes, sir. Q. Thereupon the note was renewed, was it not? A. Yes, sir. Q. He gave you another note? A. Yes, sir. Q. For five hundred dollars? A. Yes, sir. Q. For a period of one year? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that is the note upon which you are suing in this action? A. Yes, sir. Q. The note, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1? A. Yes, sir.” The testimony of the maker of the note also clearly shows that the note in suit was intended to be a renewal of the original note. “ Q. You are the maker of the first note, of which this note is the renewal? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. You told him you wanted a renewal? A. Yes, sir. * * * Q. What did he say? A. I saw Mr. Cohen after and he told me Mr. Bossmoore would not sign such an arrangement and Mr. Cohen accepted the note. Q. He accepted a renewal note? A. Yes, sir.”
Moreover, the record of the trial discloses that plaintiff’s counsel throughout the trial regarded and referred to the note in suit as a renewal of the note of May 11, 1925.
The burden was clearly upon the plaintiff, who had discharged and released the security, to show that the. value of the security was less than the indebtedness, and by his failure to offer such proof the value was presumed to be at least the amount of the indebtedness, and the appellant was discharged from liability. (Kennett v. Hopkins, 58 App. Div. 407, 416; Thomas v. Zahka, 228 N. Y. 187.)
The determination appealed from should be reversed, with costs and disbursements in this court and in the Appellate Term, and the judgment of the Municipal Court reversed as to the defendant Emerson E. Rossmoore and the complaint dismissed as to said defendant, with costs.
Dowling, P. J., Martin, O’Malley and Proskauer, JJ., concur.
Determination reversed, with costs and disbursements in this court and in the Appellate Term, and judgment of the Municipal Court reversed as to defendant Emerson E. Rossmoore and complaint dismissed as to said defendant, with costs.