93 Vt. 486 | Vt. | 1919
This is an action of contract to recover on a joint and several promissory note for the sum of four hundred dollars, dated January 23, 1908, signed by I. A. Norcross, J. J. Gallagher, and the defendant, C. IT. Hanson, in the order named, and made payable to the order of the 'plaintiff in six months from date.
From the concessions, statements of counsel, and the evidence in the case it appeared that this note was delivered by Norcross to the plaintiff as collateral security for the payment of a note of like amount, signed by Norcross alone, bearing date February 17, 1908, and made payable to the order of the plaintiff in six months from date, and also as collateral security for the payment of any other obligations that Norcross might be owing the plaintiff. Both of the four hundred dollar notes mentioned above were delivered to the plaintiff at the same time.
On November 27, 1908, Norcross gave the plaintiff a writing in which, for a valuable consideration, he promised the plaintiff that all the notes held by it as collateral security might be treated by the plaintiff, without notice to him, if so desired, as general collateral for any and all of his present indebtedness to the plain
In 1909 Noreross was owing McFarland • and Son, grain dealers in Hardwick, Vermont, about $1,000, and one Robie about $700, and at the request of the attorney of these parties Nor-cross gave to' each his promissory note for the sum due. These notes finally came into the possession and ownership of the plaintiff, in accordance with the understanding of the parties at the time they were given, and were paid from the proceeds received from Noreross’ collateral, leaving debts of about $1,100 against Noreross which were outstanding at the time the McFarland and Robie notes were given. . .
After the plaintiff had made out a prima facie case and had rested, the defendant offered to show as hereinafter quoted from defendant’s brief.
Subject to defendant’s exception, the offered evidence was excluded, and as no further evidence in defence was offered by the defendant, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff. As the ease then stood, no question is or can be raised but that the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict for the sum due on the note. The only question, therefore, is whether the evidence offered would constitute a defence to the note in suit.
Assuming, for the. purpose of considering the question, that the facts are as the defendant offered to prove, such facts would constitute no defence, unless the note in suit was a debt which Noreross owed the plaintiff and was bound to pay as a debt. But the note in suit was delivered to the plaintiff as collateral, and has always been held as such, and not otherwise. Its character in that respect has never been changed. It never constituted or represented a debt due from any of the makers to the plaintiff. It was a pledge, and the pledgee took but a special property therein; the general property remaining in the pledgor. It is said in Wood v. Dudley, 8 Vt. 430, 435: “But in case of a pledge the general property does not pass, but remains in the pawnor, the pawnee having.only a special property, or lien; and in this ease, although.the pledge may not be redeemed by the time limited, yet it retains the character of a pledge still. ’ ’ And since the transaction as to this note constituted a pledge, the plaintiff’s
Under the agreement connected with the making of this pledge, and that of other property by way of notes, the plaintiff had a right to avail itself of the benefit to be derived from the collateral; but on common principles the money so received by the plaintiff as pledgee should be applied as a payment on the debt or debts which it secures.
Did the agreement offered by the defendant to be shown as made by McFarland, representing the plaintiff bank, with Nor-cross at the time the latter gave the McFarland and Son note and the Robie note, make any change in this respect ? It seems to have been understood that these two notes should be secured by the same collateral that was already held by the plaintiff, including the note in suit. But according to the offered evidence -(quoting from the defendant’s brief where it is stated certainly as strongly in favor of defendant as the evidence will warrant) : "And it was then and there agreed, at the time said Norcross executed said McFarland and Son note and delivered the same to H. M. McFarland as aforesaid, that none of the proceeds of the said collateral should be used by the plaintiff in payment of the said note of Norcross to McFarland and Son until all other indebtedness then held by the plaintiff against said Norcross had been fully paid, * * * and that at the time said Norcross executed and delivered said Robie note to said Henry McFarland it was agreed between them, as in the case of the McFarland' and Son note, that none of the proceeds of the collateral then held by the plaintiff should be applied in the payment of said Robie note until all other indebtedness of said Norcross to the plaintiff had been paid.”
Defendant’s counsel then proceed in their brief to argue or state that a part of the indebtedness of Norcross to the plaintiff was the note in suit. Herein lies the fallacy of their position. “We have already undertaken to show that the note in suit never was a debt, nor did it ever represent a debt from Norcross to the plaintiff. On authority, as we have quoted from the 8th Vermont at page 435, the pledge of this note, "retains the character of a pledge still.” Let us follow the idea advanced by defendant’s counsel in this respect and see to what it leads. Nothing has ever been received by the plaintiff on this piece of collateral. So the argument goes to the extent of saying that
Let us test the soundness of the defendant’s position in another way. The plaintiff, as pledgee, is entitled to the benefit of the collateral held by it, including the note in suit, until the indebtedness for which it was pledged is fully satisfied, or the lien otherwise discharged, which is not claimed in this case. But when the principal indebtedness has been paid, or tender made, the collateral still unavailed of is discharged in law of the incumbrance, and the pledgor is entitled to the return of the property pledged, including the note in suit. Robbins v. Packard, 31 Vt. 570, 76 Am. Dec. 134; 21 R. C. L. at page 679, § 41, and eases there cited in note 16. Yet, if it be a debt due to the plaintiff, it must be paid in addition to the actual indebtedness for which the collateral is held as security, and the payment of such actual indebtedness in full does not operate to discharge this piece of collateral, though still held by the pledgee unavailed of, because, forsooth, it represents a debt to the pledgee other than the actual indebtedness before specified. If it constitutes a debt, when was it contracted, and what was the consideration? A careful study of the record, including the transcript, shows that it has always been held by the plaintiff only as collateral, and that neither party has ever claimed otherwise. This brings us to the same result as does the other course of reasoning, namely, that in order to sustain defendant’s claim, we must say that the avails of one piece of collateral must go in payment, not in discharge, of another piece of collateral held in exactly the same way and for the same precise purpose, thus showing that the
Neither was there any error in the action of the court below in directing a verdict for the plaintiff; for there was and is no question raised but that it made out a case which entitled it to a verdict before it rested, and no evidence afterwards appeared in the case to change that result.
The defendant excepted to the-amount of damages allowed the plaintiff in the judgment rendered on the verdict directed; but neither party takes notice of that exception in their briefs, and none is taken by us.
Judgment affirmed.