132 A. 716 | Pa. | 1926
Plaintiff bank sued defendants as endorsers on two notes given by Howard L. Lafaw. Plaintiff's directors *30 authorized the renewal of notes which it had previously discounted for Lafaw, provided defendants, Rapp and Kiernan, became endorsers; thereupon the notes here sued upon were made by Lafaw, endorsed by defendants and discounted by the bank. The only defense set up is that defendants were induced to endorse the notes by the verbal promise of plaintiff's cashier to obtain for their (defendants') benefit and security a second mortgage on certain land which Lafaw was about to acquire; and that, by plaintiff's neglect, this mortgage, — executed by Lafaw alone on property owned by himself and wife as tenants by entireties, — if ever a lien at all, became so only after another mortgage, for purchase money, that was subject to a previously existing first mortgage, had been recorded and a judgment for another debt had been entered against the mortgagor, which made the mortgage given for defendants' security a possible third or fourth lien, instead of the second encumbrance contracted for by plaintiff's cashier.
On failure of proof, or offers of proof, sufficient in law to show authority in the cashier to make such binding promise as that relied on by defendants, or to show ratification by plaintiff bank, the court below directed a verdict in favor of the latter, on which judgment was entered; from this judgment defendants appeal.
We find no error. Discounting of commercial paper is primarily a function of the directors of a bank, and it is for them to fix such special conditions as they may deem proper for loaning the bank's money; individual officers have no authority, unless given in some legal form, to make special agreements or promises in regard thereto (Mutual Trust Co. v. Stern,
The judgment is affirmed.