109 N.E. 481 | NY | 1915
The plaintiff, as receiver of an insolvent national bank, sues the defendant as indorser upon 19 separate promissory notes made by various makers. The answer sets up by way of defense and counterclaim that at the time of the suspension of the bank the defendant had on deposit $647.66, and offers to pay the amount of the notes sued upon, less this sum.
The Appellate Division has certified two questions to this court, to wit:
1. Is the separate and distinct defense alleged in the answer sufficient in law, upon the face thereof, as a defense to the cause of action set up in the complaint ?
2. Is the second and distinct defense pleaded in the answer sufficient in law, upon the face thereof, as a set-off or a counterclaim to the nineteen causes of action alleged in the complaint ?
While an indorser is said to be secondarily liable, the holder of a note may sue both the maker and the indorser or either. An indorser sued upon his contract of indorsement is absolutely liable thereon. It is not a defense for him to plead in such an action that the maker is solvent. When sued, the indorser stands for the purpose of that action in the same position as the maker except that he is absolutely liable upon his contract of indorsement while the maker is absolutely liable upon the note. In such an action against him he may set off against his obligation as indorser any debt which the holder of the note may owe to him. In this respect the *398
maker and indorser stand in the same position. The allowance of such a set-off is not a direct preference because where there are mutual demands, the amount of the debt due from one to the other is the difference between these mutual demands. The fact that the indorser may, if the maker is solvent, be indemnified by him in addition to being allowed to set off the amount of his deposit against the insolvent holder, does not preclude the indorser's right of set-off. The possibility of a preference thus resulting to the indorser is speculative and uncertain. In order to defeat the indorser's right of set-off it must appear that he has more than a speculative or uncertain chance of indemnity from the maker. When the indorser seeks equitable relief and proceeds affirmatively against the holder of the note to have the indebtedness of the holder to him set off against his obligation to the holder, it may be that a court of equity would require that he give some satisfactory assurance that he will not be indemnified by the maker. Where the indorser is himself sued he may plead as a set-off the indebtedness of the holder to him and the fact that the holder is insolvent does not deprive the indorser of his right of self-defense. In the presence of mutual demands existing between the holder of the note and the indorser the debt due is the balance that remains after one has been set off against the other. The party claiming that the debt due is more than the balance, which is the prima acie amount of the debt, has resting upon him the burden of proving the fact upon which his claim rests. In the case under consideration, upon the pleadings as they stand, the defendant was entitled to set off the amount due him from the bank. The authorities in this state as well as in other jurisdictions sustain the view expressed above. In Matter of Receiver of Middle District Bank (1 Paige [1829], 585) a receiver of an insolvent bank applied to Chancellor WALWORTH for instructions and in answer to the question propounded the chancellor said that if the *399
real debtor was unable to pay, the indorser could offset his deposit with the bank, and added, "but no such offset should be allowed to an indorser where he is indemnified by the real debtor, or where the latter can be compelled to pay." This statement by Chancellor WALWORTH has been extensively commented upon and followed, and we think that it states the rule which still prevails in cases of equitable set-off or in cases where a depositor proceeds against the bank in order to have the amount of his deposit set off against the amount due from him. In such a case the burden is upon the depositor seeking equitable relief to establish that equitably such relief may be given him. It has been repeatedly held that statutory provisions against according a preference to those having claims against an insolvent estate do not prohibit the allowance of a set-off, whether legal or equitable, which a debtor may have against the obligations due from him to the bank at the time of its insolvency. (Armstrong
v. Warner,
The order should be affirmed, with costs, and the questions certified answered in the affirmative.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN and CARDOZO, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.