133 A. 793 | Pa. | 1926
Appellee, in October, 1920, was indebted to the Lincoln Deposit Trust Co., a bank in Altoona, in the sum of $8,000, evidenced by a promissory note. On October 4th. of the same year, appellee borrowed from the First National Bank of Pittsburgh, a like sum, giving therefor his note with Albright, president of the Lincoln bank, as endorser. Four hundred shares of the capital stock of the Manufacturers Coal Company were deposited as collateral. It was the understanding between appellant, appellee, and Albright that the proceeds of the note were to be forwarded to the Altoona bank to pay the money borrowed on the note first mentioned. The proceeds of the note were duly credited to the Lincoln bank, which was immediately advised of that fact; they were not applied by that bank on appellee's note. Albright, its president, the endorser, claiming the funds as his own, had this amount transferred from the Lincoln general *485 account to his personal one. He used the money and defaulted.
The note in the Lincoln bank, to which was attached 100 shares of the Silica Brick Company's stock as collateral, became due sometime after October 4, 1920. A short time later, appellee received a slip from the Lincoln bank, requesting payment of the interest due on the note it held. While surprised that the obligation was not paid, he took no action whatever to discover the reason.
The note in appellant bank was due February, 1921, and notwithstanding appellee had full knowledge of the fact that his note in the Lincoln bank had not been paid, he then renewed the note in appellant's bank. The next time the note fell due he again renewed it and continued doing so every four months until October 8, 1923, when this action was brought. Payments, in various amounts, were made in 1923, and this claim is to recover the balance then due, $7,163.35. The court below submitted all questions to the jury, who found for appellee, the defendant, which finding was not disturbed. By the verdict the jury found that appellant did not give the notice to the Lincoln bank, as to the application of the proceeds.
It is of little moment how we may consider the character of the relationship between appellant and appellee from the circumstances attending the loan. Whether the omission to give notice amounted to a failure of consideration or the default of an agent, the result to be reached will be the same. Applying governing principles to the first proposition, the case clearly falls within the rule laid down in Longacre v. Robinson,
Here it is not questioned appellee knew the credit had not been properly applied by the Lincoln bank. He knew that note had not been paid and he would be called on to meet it. Notwithstanding this knowledge, he deliberately executed the renewal to the Pittsburgh bank several times during the two years before suit, and made payments on the indebtedness. He now attempts to escape responsibility because, as he alleges, the Pittsburgh bank violated the trust or confidence reposed when it failed to give notice as to the application of the proceeds as stipulated for, applying the rule stated in 7 C.J. 632, and followed in First National Bank v. Rogers,
Nor is this a case of appellant acting as an agent in transmitting the information to the Lincoln bank. Even assuming that it is, however, appellee knew, when he received the demand for interest from this bank, that his instructions had not been carried out somewhere along the line. Had proper steps been taken, his agent, appellant, could have proceeded in some way to eliminate or reduce the loss. This was a substantial right that appellee could not, at least negligently, injure. *487 Appellee could not affirm the validity of the original transaction, by giving renewals, and later disavow it after depriving the agent of the opportunity to make itself whole from the third person. Had some action been taken at once or within a reasonable time after the principal discovered the default, appellant might not now complain. The questions as to whether the understanding was in existence and whether the notice required thereby was given would have been immediately raised. There was never any denial of liability to the Pittsburgh bank until 1924. In the meantime payments were made on account of the note to appellant. Appellant was never given an opportunity to enforce any right it might have had against the Altoona institution. Consequently appellee is now estopped from setting up failure to give notice as a defense; his silence as to this defense, when he ought to have spoken, precludes him from being heard, when he should be silent.
The court below seemed to be of opinion that appellee was protected because he did not know the Pittsburgh bank had not given notice of the application of credit to the Lincoln bank. Appellee knew the money was to be used to pay off his Lincoln bank note. That was not done. Knowing that fact, whether instructions were sent or not by the Pittsburgh bank, it was his duty, in the exercise of ordinary diligence, to ascertain why his note was not paid: Padgett v. Lewis, supra; Montfort v. American Guano Co.,
The case, however, is clearly within Longacre v. Robinson, supra; Schenck's App.,
Judgment is reversed and the record is remitted with directions that judgment n. o. v. be entered in appellant's favor.