253 F. 758 | D.N.J. | 1918
The primary question in this matter, as I understand it, is whether claimant’s stock in the Prudential Insurance Company, which was first pledged with the Fidelity Trust Company to secure the payment of a note or notes of the Blue Ridge Enamel Brick Company, and later with Milton E. Blanchard, to secure a note of the same company made to his order, was loaned by the claimant to her sons jointly — the bankrupt, Fred C. Blanchard, and William W. Blanchard — as it is contended on her behalf, or whether it was loaned to the Brick Company as the trustee contends. The referee has found in accordance with the claimant’s contention. If his conclusion in that respect was correct, undoubtedly the allowance of the claim was proper. I have accordingly examined with care all of the evidence which was before the referee, and am forced to the conclusion that his finding was not justified from the evidence.
The disputed part of her claim is $271,155, which represents the amount due on the note, after giving credit for a dividend received from the Brick Company, which in the meanwhile had been adjudged a bankrupt. The claimant, as well' as her three sons, were the only persons financially interested, at least to any extent, in the Brick Company. The bankrupt was the president,'Fred C. Blanchard the treasurer, and William W. Blanchard the general manager. Its capital stock was originally $100,000, or $150,000, of which the claimant owned 100 shares, of the par value of $10,000. Afterwards she ac
It is necessary, therefore, to ascertain what the evidence discloses as to the arrangements which were made when, and circumstances under which, the stock was originally acquired from the claimant. There was no written agreement, or any memorandum in writing, respecting any of the original transactions. The only competent evidence on this point, outside of a letter to the Fidelity signed by the claimant, was the unaided recollection of the claimant, and two of her sons and her daughter, as to what generally transpired when they asked her for stock for borrowing purposes, in which pursuit they seem to have been quite extensively engaged, both personally and on behalf of the Brick Company, for 10 years or more preceding the bankruptcy. The claimant, Mrs. Blanchard, a woman over 90 years of age, testified that she did not think that the stock was pledged for the Brick Company’s debts, and did not know whether the sons specified the purpose for which they wanted it, although they may have done so. She had no clear recollection of the transactions, or anything about them. Her testimony may be well summarized in her own language, viz.:
“I loaned my stock to my boys. - * - Why, I loaned it to the boys whenever they wanted it; they knew they could have it when they needed it. * * * I trusted my boys and gave it to them; that is all I know about it.”
Mrs. Walter, a daughter who lives with the claimant, and whose husband, in later years, has been attending to the claimant’s business affairs, stated that she remembered that her brothers frequently met at their mother’s home for luncheon, and on some occasions they requested loans of stock of the mother, that they might borrow on it; that she remembered, when improvements were needed at the plant of the' Brick Company, the brothers would ask for a loan of the stock, so that they might borrow on it and make the necessary improvements; that her mother sometimes objected to having the stock go out of her hands, and would tell them “to be sure and return it to her as soon as they could”; that they would say that the stock would be perfectly safe with them, and that they hoped to return it soon.
Fred C. Blanchard testified that the brothel's met at their mother’s home very frequently for luncheon; that the brothers explained the condition of the Brick Company from time to time to their mother,
“we always promised, at those times, to return the stock to her — oust as soon as we possibly could * * * We [two brothers and himself] made an explanation of the need of the money and the condition of the company, and gave our promises to return the stock.”
He admitted having testified, during an examination held in the general bankruptcy proceedings in this case under section 21a, regarding the manner in which the stock in question came into the possession of the Brick Company, as follows:
“As they needed money they borrowed the stock from my mother, and that was the only way.”
The only explanation given by him of the apparent difference in his testimony'was that by the use of the word “they” he referred to his two brothers and himself; that tire “Brick Company was the three brothers.”
W. W. Blanchard testified that, after he and his brothers had used up all of their stock, they felt compelled to go to their mother:
“We would say: ‘Mother, it is absolutely necessary; we must have money, and can’t you let us have say probably 10 or 20 shares of Prudential stock, and we will get the money on it.’ * * * I'Ve always assured her we would hold ourselves responsible for the return of her stock. * * * My brother Theo would invariably say she need have no fear whatever; they (referring to the Fidelity Trust Company) wouldn’t dare to sell her stock, and, if they did, we will see that it is made good, or she would get the equivalent back.”
By “they” he stated that he referred to the Fidelity Trust Company, and by we “to Fred and myself.” He further testified, when asked the direct question, that she had loaned the 1,225 shares to the three brothers. He admitted, however, that, when being examined in the general bankruptcy proceedings under section 21a, he had testified that the Blue Ridge Company had borrowed the stock in question from his mother. He attempted to explain the apparent conflict in his testimony by stating:
“I never differentiated between myself and my brothers, nor myself and the Blue Ridge Enamel Brick Company, until my attention had been called to the fact that X had stated that the Prudential stock had been loaned by my mother to the Blue Ridge Company. The importance of it was read to me, or rather the testimony was read to me, and I saw at a glance that I had said what was not the case. That stock was .never loaned to the Brick Company, although in my testimony I said it was. I treated as one — we brothers — and never thought of differentiating between myself and my brothers. I did not realize the importance" of it.”
Fie then went on to reiterate that the stock was loaned to the sons, and was never loaned to tire Blue Ridge. I cannot conceive that the testimony of Mr. John R. Hardin, who acted as an attorney for apparently all of the brothers, as well as the mother, at the time the Fidelity Trust Company note was taken over by Milton, and which was relied on very largely by the referee, was competent as establishing the conditions under which the stock was originally loaned,
“We always assured tier that we would hold ourselves responsible for the return oí the stock.”
That cleanly imports an indemnity agreement. If the stock was loaned to the sons, there was no need of án assurance to their mother that the.3 would hold themselves responsible for the return of it. The bankrupt was not called as a witness, although he had testified in the main bankruptcy proceedings. It appears that on July 5, 1901, Mrs. Blanchard signed a letter, prepared by the president of the Fidelity Trust Company, authorizing the Brick Company “to borrow such sums of money and at such times as may he deemed by them necessary, for their use and benefit, and to pledge therefor certificates ! naming them] of the capital stock of the Prudential Insurance Company of America, standing in my name on the books of the company.” While, because of the claimant’s age and the circumstances under which the letter was signed by her, I attach no great importance to it, the natural inference to be drawn from this letter is that the stock had been delivered to the Brick Company. Later on, when Milton took over the note, he wrote his mother a letter, stating the terms upon which he would hold certain of the pledged stock which he found necessary to be transferred to his own name, and therein referred to the stock as having been “pledged with your consent to secure the loan made by me to the Blue Ridge Enamel Brick Company.”
In the dealings of the parties respecting the affairs of the Brick Company, there was apparently no distinction made between the claimant’s three sons and the Brick Company itself. The. mother was an indorser on the original note, and hence her liability thereon was fixed, irrespective of the stock furnished hv her to he used as collateral. I can see no good reason, therefore, why the delivery of the
I am unable to conclude that the claimant’s contention that the stock was loaned to the bankrupt and his two brothers personally, rather than as agents of the Brick Company, has been established as against other creditors by such clear, explicit, and convincing evidence as the before-mentioned rules require.
The trustee, however, invokes the rule laid down in a number of cases, and which I think may be considered as a general one, that an accommodation indorser of a note, except there be an agreement to the contrary, is not liable as a cosurety to a surety who signs a note as a maker (see cases cited in Brandt on Suretyship & Guaranty, vol. 1 [3d Ed.] § 286; 32 Cyc. 17, note 16), and contends that the claimant’s stock occupied, in effect, the same position as if the claimant had signed the note as an accommodation maker. Hence it is argued on his behalf that, on familiar principles, the claimant cannot recover against the bankrupt. Even if it be assumed that the claimant’s stock occupied the same legal position as if the claimant had signed the note as an accommodation maker, it seems to me that the trustee’s contention is not sound, because it is entirely clear, in view of the circumstances under which, and the purpose for which the stock was procured and pledged, and the relationship of the parties toward the Brick Company, that the claimant and her sons never intended, as between themselves, that her stock should be liable for a greater proportion of the Brick Company notes than the sons should be liable for, which intention, for all present purposes, may be considered as a sufficient agreement between the sureties to satisfy the exception mentioned in the rule, and to overcome the presumption upon which the rule is based, that those who sign in different capacities arc presumed not to be cosureties.
The claimant’s contention that they were not cosureties is based on the proposition, set forth in her proof of claim and relied upon at the hearing and the argument, that the stock was not loaned to the company, but was loaned to the sons, and by them loaned to the company. Of course, if such were the fact it needs no argument to demonstrate that the stock, so far as the claimant is concerned, would not have occupied the position of a cosurety with the sons, for in that case the stock would have been pledged as the property of the sons, and not of the claimant. But, as it has been heretofore found, the
The claimant having chosen to attempt to overcome the presumption of cosuretyship pn the theory that the stock was loaned directly to the sons, and offered evidence to that effect, she is bound, on this appeal, at least, to stand or fall on the position which she has taken. I do not mean to be understood, by anything that I have just said, as intimating an opinion as to whether or not an indemnity agreement such as that above discussed would be within or without the statute of frauds. It follows, therefore, I think, that the only legitimate conclusion which can be reached_ is that the claimant’s stock occupied the position of a cosurety with the sons for the payment of the note. Such being the relationship, it is entirely well established, as in reason it must be, that the mere fact that the claimant has paid and acquired the note in order to save her stock, does not entitle her to recover against one of her cosureties more than his proportionate share of the debt which she paid. Lidderdale v. Robinson, Fed. Cas. No. 8,337, 2 Brock. 159, affirmed 12 Wheat. 594, 6 L. Ed. 740; German, etc., Bank v. Fritz, 68 Wis. 390, 32 N. W. 123; Dillenbeck v. Dygert, 97 N. Y. 303, 49 Am. Rep. 525; McDaniel v. Lee, 37 Mo. 204; In re Carmichael, 96 Fed. 594 (D. C. N. D. Iowa); In re Bingham, 94 Fed. 796 (D. C. Vt.); 37 Cyc. 428; Brandt on Suretyship & Guaranty, vol. 1 (3d Ed.) § 341. As there is no evidence that the other sureties are insolvent, and no other equity to change the general rule appears, the claimant is only entitled to recover from the bankrupt’s estate one-fourth of the amount which she paid to Milton E. Blanchard when she acquired the note. See 32 Cyc. 285, E, et seq., and cases cited.
My conclusion, therefore, is that, in so far as the order of the referee allowed her claim for any sum in excess of such one-fourth, it was erroneous, and should be reversed accordingly.