Havlin v. Continental National Bank

253 Mo. 292 | Mo. | 1913

WALKER, J.

John H. Havlin, the respondent, brought suit in equity against the Continental National Bank, hereinafter designated as “the bank,” appellant, in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, to recover seven thousand, two hundred dollars paid by him to the bank as an endorser on two notes of one O. L. Hagan, which subsequent to Havlin’s payment were again paid in full by Hagan in a settlement with the bank, which thereafter refused to repay Havlin. Upon a trial a judgment was rendered in favor of Havlin, from which the bank appeals.

The material facts are as follows:

O. L. Hagan was indebted to the bank in the sum of $23,203.15. This debt was represented by three promissory notes executed by Hagan to the bank, one for $5000, another for $1500', and the balance by a third note.- The respondent Havlin, who then resided and. now resides in" Cincinnati, Ohio, indorsed the first two notes for the accommodation of Hagan, the bank having knowledge of the character of the indorsement. As further security for the payment of said debt, Hagan had deposited with the bank as collateral 770 shares of the capital stock of the Hagan Opera House Company-*297under a contract in which said stock was valued at $89,-000, and the hank was given power to sell same at public or private sale in default of the payment of the indebtedness.

Oh the 22nd day of June, 1897, all of said debt was past due and unpaid and the bank, claiming to act under the power of sale conferred by the contract, sold said stock at a so-called public sale on the floor of the Merchants Exchange during a session of said body, -in the city of St. Louis, when it was bought by one Finis E. Marshall, cashier of the bank, for $5000', he being the only bidder. About a week after the sale the bank, claiming to be the absolute owner of the stock, sold it at private sale to J. C. Jannopoulo for $30',000, receiving a part of the purchase price in cash and taking Jannopoulo ’s notes for the balance. On the same day, or the day after the sale to Jannopoulo, said Marshall, representing the bank, called upon Havlin, who happened to be in St. Louis, for the payment of the two notes of $5000 and $1500 respectively. Havlin protested that he ought not to pay them, that the so-called public sale of the collateral made by the bank -on the floor of the. Merchants Exchange was invalid, and that the bank should apply the proceéds of the sale of the stock to Jannopoulo to the payment of the notes. The bank through Marshall insisted that the sale on the Merchants Exhange floor for $5000' was valid; that it had applied this sum to the payment of the third note upon which Havlin was not an indorser; that upon the purchase of the stock by Marshall it became the property of the bank, and that the proceeds of the sale of the stock to Jannopoulo were the bank’s individual property, and that the notes indorsed by Havlin were still wholly unpaid. After much discussion, Havlin, upon the repeated declarations made by Marshall, that the bank would look to him (Havlin) for payment, finally took up the two notes upon which he was indorser, and gave his individual notes for their full amount. The *298original notes were then indorsed over to him, without recourse, and the individual notes he subsequently paid in full to the bank.

A few weeks after the payment of the notes to the bank by Havlin, who thereupon returned to Cincinnati, to-wit, on August 9, 1897, Hagan brought suit against the bank to redeem the 770 shares of the Hagan Opera House Company stock, pledged by him to the bank as aforesaid, or for an accounting as to its value. In this suit Hagan contended that the bank had improperly exercised its power to sell the stock at public sale under the pledge made by him to it; that the so-called public sale was invalid, and that he was, therefore, entitled to redeem the stock, or if it had been sold, to have an accounting for its value.

The trial court sustained this view, rendered a decree setting aside the sale made on the floor of the Merchants Exchange as unfair and found that the bank had subsequently “effectually sold at private sale to J. C. Jannopoulo, for the sum of $30,000, the 770 shares of the capital stock of the Hagan Opera House Company, but that said Jannopoulo was an innocent purchaser for value and without notice, and that the bank must account to plaintiff for that amount of money.” This judgment was, upon appeal, affirmed by this court in Hagan v. Continental National Bank, 182 Mo. 319. In this suit Hagan alleged that he was indebted to the bank in the sum of $23,340, that being the full amount of his indebtedness, inclusive of the two notes for $6500 indorsed by Havlin as aforesaid, and which had been paid by the latter. There is no evidence that Hagan knew that Havlin, his indorser, had previously paid the two notes to the bank. At the time of the trial Hagan was dead.

The bank in its answer admitted that Hagan’s indebtedness was $23,340, together with interest thereon, which necessarily included the two notes indorsed and which had been paid by Havlin, there being no other *299indebtedness of Hagan to the bank. The answer did not mention the fact that Havlin bad paid the notes indorsed by him, and that said notes upon being paid bad been assigned to him. The decree rendered in favor of Hagan in that suit was upon the theory that be was still indebted to the bank in the full amount of all notes held by it against him on June 22, 1897, or prior to Havlin’s payment. The court, therefore, gave the bank credit for the full amount of these notes and rendered judgment over in Hagan’s favor for the sum of $6796.85, being the difference between tbe sum of $30,-000, for which tbe court decreed that tbe bank was accountable, and tbe amount of all of tbe notes Hagan bad given tbe bank. In this decree, therefore, tbe bank received and accepted credit for tbe amount of tbe notes which bad been previously paid by Havlin and as a consequence was twice paid tbe notes of Hagan on which Havlin was indorser.

Upon the presentation of the foregoing facts and submission of the cause, the St. Louis Circuit Court at the June term, 1909, rendered the following judgment in the case at bar:

“Now at this day the court being fully advised of and concerning this cause heretofore submitted, doth find that the defendant [the bank] is indebted tó the plaintiff [Havlin] in the sum of $7200', with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from October 2, 1906, to date. It is, therefore, considered and adjudged by the court that the plaintiff recover of the defendant the sum aforesaid as found, together with interest thereon, and also bis costs and charges herein expended and that execution issue therefor.”

It is from this judgment that the bank appeals.

Appellant’s contentions are:

First. That the money paid by respondent to the bank was paid by him with knowledge of all the facts and in settlement of a dispute as to bis liability to the bank; and that bis mistake, if there was a mistake, in *300paying money to the bank, was a mistake of law which will prevent his recovery in this case.

Second. Even if respondent’s mistake in paying the money can be regarded as a mistake of fact in that he was ignorant of the manner in which the sale of the stock had been conducted on the floor of the Merchants Exchange, he nevertheless cannot recover because he was not induced to pay the money because of such alleged mistake of fact, but to avoid annoyance and expense of litigation with the bank.

Third. That there never was a sale to Jannopoulo of the Hagan Opera House stock bought in by Marshall at the Merchants Exchange sale; that Jannopoulo was to pay for the stock out of the profits earned in conducting .a theatre in the Hagan Opera House, which profits never materialized and he never paid but $12,-500 of the $30,000* contracted to be paid.

I. Respondent, an accommodation indorser for Hagan, the maker, on the notes, to the bank, was, in contemplation of law, a surety. [Weimer v. Shelton, 7 Mo. 237; Osborne v. Fridrich, 134 Mo. App. 449.] As such, he was equally bound with the maker to pay the notes when they became due. In so doing he simply met the obligation he made when he became surety,’ and the payment can in no sense be said to have been voluntary ; in fact, it has been expressly decided in another jurisdiction that a payment made by an accommodation indorser under a state of facts similar to those in the concrete case, was not voluntary (Smith v. Folsom, 80 Ohio St. 218) but was made under what may not inaptly be termed- legal coercion. An indorser of a negotiable instrument warrants inter alia that if the instrument is dishonored he will, upon notice thereof, duly given to him; pay the same, with interest, [Kinsel v. Ballou, 151 Cal. 754; Mer. Natl. Bk. v. Bentel. 15 Cal. App. 170.] No question as to dishonor arose in the case at bar, but it may be said in passing, if it had, *301presentment and demand aro not necessary where notes, as in this case, were at maturity owned by the bank and by their terms were made payable there. [Bank U. S. v. Smith, 11 Wheat. 171, 6 Law Ed. 443; Cent. Natl. Bank v. Stoddard, 83 Conn. 332.]

Respondent’s interest as well as his legal duty, therefore; when the notes became due and remained unpaid, was to pay them and thereby avoid the annoyance and expense of litigation. [Wilson v. Kieffer, 141 Mo. App. 137.] A payment made under such circumstances does not involve the question of a mistake of law as contended by appellant, but on account of the legal relation of the respondent to the obligation as a surety, the payment may properly be held to have been made under duress, thus rendering the contention groundless. This disposal of appellant’s first contention eliminates the second from consideration.

As to the third contention that there was no safe of the Hagan Opera House stock to Jannopoulo, it would be sufficient to say, if this fact were vital to the-determination of the matter here at issue, that it was-fully adjudicated and the safe declared to- have been made in Hagan v. Continental Bank, 182 Mo. 319. However, leaving out of consideration the ruling of this court in the Hagan case, the record here is ample to sustain the conclusion that the sale was made; it is admitted both by direct averment and by implication in appellant’s answer; it is testified to by Jannopoulohimself and by Lewis, formerly cashier of the appellant bank, and now cashier of the.Bank of Commerce,, which subsequently absorbed the appellant bank. Other evidence direct and circumstantial points to proof of a sale. If the transaction constituted a sale, and we hold that it did, then it was none the less so when respondent brought this action, and contentions to the contrary based on the ground that Jannopoulo did not pay for the stock or that he did not have manual posses*302sion of it, cannot change it. The matter, therefore, in our opinion, is no longer open to argument.

II. Respondent’s payment not having been voluntary but in discharge of his obligation as a surety, and the bank having twice been paid the notes, the second time by the maker, Hagan, in his settlement with the bank after the judgment against it in his favor (Hagan v. Bank, supra), the respondent is entitled to recover from appellant the amount paid by him with interest, under the rule that one compelled to pay the debt of a principal is subrogated to the latter’s rights. If the principal had himself twice paid the notes, he would unquestionably be entitled to recover of the bank any sum paid in excess of the amount of. the debt and interest actually due. A surety is in no worse position and is entitled to a like right of action. This conclusion is too elemental to require the citation of authorities to sustain it and is clearly consonant with equity and good conscience.

The judgment of the circuit court should, therefore, be affirmed, and it is so ordenad.

Brown, P. J., and Paris, J,, concur.
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