57 Ga. App. 238 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
The petition of P. A. Callianos against Harry Lamis is substantially as follows: “(2) That said defendant is indebted to your petitioner in the sum of two hundred and twenty-five ($225) dollars by reason of the following facts: (a) That on June 4, 1930, said defendant secured the indorsement of your petitioner on a certain note for fifty ($50) dollars principal, payable to Harry Lamis, and signed as maker by Y. Broun, (b) That the said Y. Broun failed and refused to pay said note, although said note had been previously discounted by the said defendant at the City Bank & Trust Company of Macon, Georgia; and since the said Y. Broun and Harry Lamis both failed and refused to pay said note, payment was demanded of your petitioner, he being an accommodation indorser, and on the 22nd day of October, 1932, your petitioner paid to the City Bank & Trust Company the sum of fifty ($50) dollars and accumulated interest. That said City Bank & Trust Company assigned in writing to your petitioner said note, copy of said note together with the assignment being hereto attached marked exhibit A. (c) Your petitioner further shows that on August 22nd, 1932, said defendant executed and delivered to the Luther Williams Bank & Trust Company, of Macon, Georgia, his note in the amount of three hundred fifty ($350) dollars, (d) That the said defendant secured the accommodation indorsement of your petitioner and one Charles Lamis, and that the said
It is the general rule that “the payee of a note who indorsed it to another is liable only to such indorsee or to subsequent holders of the note,” and that “one who indorsed a note for the maker’s accommodation, and pays the note, does not thereby become a purchaser, nor be entitled to hold the payee liable on his indorsement.” Lingo v. Swicard, 150 Ark. 384 (234 S. W. 264). However, the petition in the present case alleged that the payee of the note- (the defendant here) “secured the indorsement of your petitioner” on said note, and that the defendant and Y. Broun, the maker, failed and refused to pay the note, although it had been previously discounted by the defendant at the City Bank & Trust Company of Macon, Georgia. If the note was thus indorsed by the plaintiff for the accommodation of the payee, he became an accommodation indorser for the payee; and there being no consideration flowing to him, he was not liable on the note to the payee. McLendon v. Lane, 51 Ga. App. 409 (180 S. E. 746), and cit. The Code, § 14-306, declares that “An accommodation party is one who has signed the instrument as maker, drawer, acceptor or indorser, 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 for value, notwithstanding such holder at the time of taking the instrument knew him to be only an accommodation party.” Therefore, under this section, the plaintiff became liable to the bank, who was the transferee thereof and a holder for
In paragraphs 2(c) and (d) of the petition it appears that the defendant executed and delivered to the Luther Williams Bank & Trust Company, of Macon, Georgia, his note in the amount of $350, and that he secured the accommodation indorsement of the plaintiff and Charles Lamis thereon; that the defendant failed and refused to pay the note; and that on November 1, 1930, the plaintiff paid one half of the face amount of the note to the Luther Williams Bank & Trust Company. The note is attached to the petition as an exhibit, and the following appears thereon: “$175 paid by Chas.' Lamas [Lamis] 11/1/30. $175 paid by P. A. Gallianos, 11/1/30.” Under these allegations it appears that the plaintiff was a surety on the note executed by the defendant to the Luther Williams Bank & Trust Company. Code, § 103-104. As such he had the right, “after paying the amount due by the principal, [to] recover it in a suit against the principal, either in a suit upon the note after a transfer, or upon an obligation of the defendant
The Supreme Court, in Hull v. Myers, 90 Ga. 674 (4) (16 S. E. 653) in holding that, under the Code, accommodation indorsers who have paid more than their pro rata share of the debt may sue jointly a co-indorser for contribution, founding their action upon the indorsed instrument, and will have the same time in which to bring suit as the creditor would have had on the same instrument, but that one of the subrogated indorsers can not sue severally on the note for his pro rata share of the contribution to which he and his co-owners of the note are entitled, said, with reference to the character of the suit there brought: '“Enough has been said to show that there is no legal reason why such an action as the present might not be founded directly on the indorsed notes, and a recovery be had upon the contracts of indorsement, commensurate with the rightful claim to contribution. But is this action so founded? Manifestly it is not. A conclusive answer to the question is furnished by the fact that the plaintiff is not the sole owner of the notes, but only one of several cosureties who own them in common. According to the facts alleged in the declaration, the plaintiff alone did not pay off the notes but they were paid off by him in part and by the three others in part, the defendant paying nothing. Now, the creditor remained the legal owner until the last dollar was paid; there was no substitution as to either note until it was fully discharged, and the substitution which then actually took place was not the substitution of any one of the paying sureties in place of the creditor, but a substitution of them all jointly as owners in common. From thenceforth the notes stood,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.