10 F. Cas. 617 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1879
A motion was made by the assignee to expunge tbe claim of the bank. Issues have been framed, and the cause heard. Goodwin, Behr, & Go. were the makers, and Hoeber the endorser, of a note for $0,000, which the bank discounted. Before the same became due the bank knew that the makers were such solely for the accommodation for the endorser. The bank then discounted a note of said endorser at ninety days for $5,000, passed the proceeds of the discount to his private account which he kept with said bank, and he gave his cheek for $0,000, which was charged against said private account. As the endorser’s note for $5,000 was not secured by an endorser thereon, the bank retained the original note for $6,000, and seek to have the same allowed against Goodwin, Behr, & Co.’s estate in bankruptcy. There are two propositions, either of which is fatal to the claim: 1st. Hoeber, the endorser, paid the note by his cheek for the $6,000, which extinguished the bank’s demand thereon. 2d. If that be not so, the bank, knowing that Hoeber was primarily liable (Goodwin, Behr, & Co. being mere accommodation makers), received payment of .at least $1,000 thereon from Hoeber, and extended to him the time of payment for the balance for ninety days without the assent of the accommodation makers.
The legal rule in such cases is that if the holder of the note is informed that the maker is only nominally such, but actually an accommodation maker for the endorser, he must deal with the paper and the parties with reference to their true relationships to the obligation. The makers were sureties, and an extension of time to Hoeber, the actual principal, without the assent of the surety, was a discharge of the surety if the bank precluded itself from enforcing at once the original obligation. It is true that matters have been called to the attention of the court which show peculiar equities as between Goodwin, Behr, & Co. and Hoe-ber, but the bank does not represent said equities. [The decision is against the claim of the bank and judgment must be for the defendant.]
H. A. Haeussler and Finklenburg & Ras-, sieur, for the bank.
Nathaniel Myers, for the assignee in bankruptcy.
In England an
accommodation maker is, in courts of. law, regarded as the principal 'debtor, although-the creditor or holder knew, at the time of-taking the note, that it was given by the maker to the payee without consideration (Byles, Bills. 4th Ed., 191, where the cases are cited; 1 Bars. Notes & B. 325, and notes; 3 Kent, Comm. 104; Story, Bills, §§ 291, 368, 432, 434); and, therefore, the extension of-time by the holder to the acceptor without the consent of the payee and endorser will. not discharge the acceptor — nothing will discharge the maker but payment or release. The leading case is Fentum v. Pocock, 5 Taunt. 192, 1 Marsh. 14, which has been-frequently approved in England and in this country. The cases are referred to by Mr.Parsons (1 Notes & B. 325), and in White & Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity (volume 2,' 4th Am. Ed., p. 1917). There is no decision of the exact point by the supreme court of the United States. The nearest approach to-it is in Sprigg v. Bank of Mt. Pleasant, 12 Pet. [37 U. S.] 257; Lenox v. Prout, 3 Wheat. [16 U. S.] 520; and Creath v. Sims, 5 How; [46 U. S.] 192, 206. The American cases rest on the authority of the English cases — particularly Fentum v. Pocock, and those which follow it.
But in equity it is otherwise, and the real relation of the parties to the note, bill, or bond determines their rights in all cases where the holder has knowledge of that relation. And it has recently been expressly decided by the' queen’s bench, the court of chancery, and by the house of lords, that the rule of law that if the creditor contracts with the principal debtor to give him time, the surety is discharged, applies to bills of exchange and promissory notes; and that it makes no difference, in the application of the rule, that at the time of contracting the debt the surety was believed by the creditor to be the principal debtor. Oriental Financial Corp. v. Overend, Gurney & Co. (A. D. 1871) L. R. 7 Ch. 142, 41 Law J. Eq. 332,
1 will not enter upon a lengthened discussion of the subject These cases settle the law of England, and overrule the cases on which the American decisions to the contrary rest. I am inclined to think the doctrine of the court of chancery, and of the house of lords, rests upon sound principles, and that a creditor who actually knows that a given party is a surety on the contract ought not to be permitted to change that contract, or vary the surety’s rights by a new contract, without his consent — unless, indeed, the surety has, by express stipulation, as in Sprigg v. Bank, supra, declared in the contract that he is a principal, and thereby estop-ped himself to plead and show that he was such, and entitled to the privileges and rights of a surety.
I affirm the decision of the district court on the strength of the recent English cases referred to, and regret that the case is such that my judgment cannot be reviewed by the supreme court Affirmed..
[From 17 N.- B. It. 257.]