288 Mass. 181 | Mass. | 1934
This is an action of contract to recover upon a promissory note, payable to the plaintiff on demand and signed by Warren H. Davis, Frank A. Minkler and the defendant, as makers in that order. The defendant’s answer is a general denial and a denial of the genuineness of the signature, and an averment that the defendant was an accommodation party. The defendant further answered that if he signed the note he did so as an accommodation party and that the party accommodated was the plaintiff.
There was evidence tending to show that in 1920 a note in the sum of $3,000 was given to the plaintiff which was signed by the three persons above named; that a check for that amount was drawn by the plaintiff to the order of the defendant and indorsed by him. The note was renewed several times, each of the three parties thereto signing each renewal, and, the note not being paid upon demand, this action was brought.
The defendant offered evidence tending to show that in the year 1920 the defendant, an attorney at law, made application to the plaintiff for a loan to one Davis upon real estate secured by a mortgage. The loan was declined, and thereafter the president of the plaintiff stated to the defendant that the reason for the refusal to make the loan on the real estate was that lumber was to be taken fro'm the property, which would reduce the value thereof, but that the bank was willing to assist Davis and could make a loan to him on a personal note. The defendant did nothing further as a result of any employment by Davis. He was at that time also acting as attorney for the bank in certain other transactions. The president of the bank then asked the defendant to sign the note with the other parties thereon, stating that the defendant was acting as attorney for the
We are o'f opinion that upon the entire evidence it was not proper to grant the motion. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107, § 52, recites: “An accommodation party is one who has signed the instrument as maker, drawer, acceptor or endorser, without receiving value therefor, and for the purpose of lending his name to some other person. Such a person is liable on the instrument to a holder in due course, notwithstanding such holder at the time of taking the instrument knew him to be only an accommodation party.” The defendant in his amended answer alleges that, if he executed the note, “he did so as an accommodation maker and the plaintiff was the party procuring said execution and was the party accommodated.” If the jury believed the testimony of the defendant, it could have been found that the defendant signed the note at the request and for the accommodation of the plaintiff and that it was without consideration. “It is a good defence to show that there was no consideration, and that the promise was a mere gratuity.” Corlies v. Howe, 11 Gray, 125, 127. Goodman v. Gaull, 244 Mass. 528, 530. Between the accommodation party and the person accommodated there is no such liability as exists between an accommodation party and holders in due course, and one who draws or indorses commercial paper for the accommodation of another is not liable on it to him, whatever their apparent relation upon the paper may be. Bird v. Daggett, 97 Mass. 494. Conners Brothers Co. v. Sullivan, 220 Mass. 600, 605. The defendant testified that he signed the note at the request of the plaintiff’s president as an accommodation maker to the bank, and that he did so as a result of such
Where upon the entire evidence the facts are not in dispute the judge may properly direct a verdict for the plaintiff upon a ruling of law. Graves v. Apt, 233 Mass. 587. But where, as in the case at bar, the entire evidence was open to more than one conclusion, a verdict cannot rightly be ordered. Whiteacre v. Boston Elevated Railway, 241 Mass. 163, 166. Where material facts are in dispute the case must be submitted to the jury. Although the trial judge might feel that the evidence establishing a certain fact was so overwhelming that a verdict disregarding it ought not to be permitted to stand, still it would be his duty to submit the question of fact to the jury. McDonough v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 228 Mass. 450, 454.
As the motion for a directed verdict should have been denied and the case submitted to the jury, the entry must be
Exceptions sustained.