217 N.W. 381 | Minn. | 1928
On December 30, 1918, defendant bank sold to plaintiff a $3,500 note given by Theodore Mellum, receiving therefor a draft for that amount on a Minneapolis bank. It fairly appears that Mellum was a customer of defendant bank, which was capitalized at $35,000. It was then carrying another Mellum note for $3,500. It claims that the money procured from plaintiff eventually went to a Sauk Center bank to pay another Mellum note, with which defendant bank rediscounted notes. Defendant bank indorsed the note so sold to plaintiff. It also indorsed renewals thereof. On December 9, 1919, in connection with a renewal note, it ceased being an indorser and gave plaintiff a separate guaranty, whereby it guaranteed
"the payment and interest of any note discounted by them or its officers or any renewal thereof now held or which may be held later by the Farmers Merchants State Bank of Hawley, Minnesota, and waives demand and notice of protest."
This guaranty was signed:
"First National Bank of Ulen, Minnesota.
"By L. Lofgren, Cashier."
On May 19, 1922, when a renewal note was given, Lofgren and defendant E.A. Westin, then assistant cashier of defendant bank, individually executed and delivered to plaintiff a general guaranty of notes which it purchased from defendant bank up to $25,000.
The last mentioned renewal note being long past due, plaintiff seeks to recover upon the two guaranties.
1. After defendants answered, defendant bank, being insolvent, came into the custody of the comptroller of currency who appointed *328
Peter L. Klyver receiver under the federal laws. Defendant bank filed an amended answer showing this calamity. It pleaded the same defenses as before and claimed that the receiver could not be sued. It alleged that plaintiff's only remedy was to file its claim with the receiver as provided by law.
But in this case the trial court had acquired jurisdiction prior to the proceedings for liquidation. The national bank act provides that actions may be prosecuted against a national bank in the state court.
Generally the appointment of the receiver has no effect on pending suits. Toledo W. W. Ry. Co. v. Beggs,
It is argued that the rights of the creditors become fixed at the time of the appointment of a receiver, and that it will work an inequality to permit the plaintiff to add costs incident to the litigation and interest included in the judgment to the amount of plaintiff's claim as it existed on the day of the appointment. It would seem that the claim would draw interest after allowance. Nat. Bank of the Commonwealth v. Mechanics Nat. Bank,
2. Defendants claim that the original note was not owned by defendant bank. Its books do not show that it was carried as an asset. But it assumed to own it. It had possession of it. It sold it. No one else claims to have been the owner. It took plaintiff's money therefor. It has made no satisfactory explanation of its conduct indicating ownership, and we are of the opinion from the facts that the conclusion of law to the effect that it was the owner thereof at the time of sale is inevitable. State v. Peterson,
3. The evidence is sufficient to show that the original note was not only indorsed by defendant bank but that it waived presentment for payment, protest, etc. Its liability was absolute. G.S. 1923, §§ 7109, 7125(3). In an effort to establish a foundation to escape the rule that a note given for an antecedent debt is not payment unless given and received as such as stated in Miller v. Farmers State Bank of Arco,
4. The claim that plaintiff had notice that defendant bank never owned the Mellum note is without merit. The fact that it did not bear a discount number cannot be so construed. Nor is such notice to be imputed from the fact that the cashier attempted to substitute his individual indorsement in place of the bank's indorsement.
5. The consideration which supported the indorsement was the $3,500 which plaintiff gave it for the note. Hall v. Oleson,
6. Was the guaranty of defendant bank ultra vires? This assignment falls because of our conclusion of law, which we draw from the facts found by the trial court, to the effect that defendant bank owned the Mellum note when it sold it to plaintiff. Being the owner, it could, in selling, guarantee. Greene v. First Nat. *331
Bank,
7. The consideration supporting the guaranty of defendant Westin was the extension of time of payment and the surrender of the note then maturing for the new note. Perhaps there was a further consideration by the purchase of other notes as the guaranty signed by Westin apparently contemplated, but as to that we are not required to express any views.
Affirmed.