157 A. 297 | Md. | 1931
The question in this case is as to the right of an indorser to set off its deposit in an insolvent bank against its liability on notes held by the bank, maturing after the receivership; the makers having signed for the accommodation of the indorser. The appeal is from a decree dismissing the petition, all of the facts of which were admitted by the answer except the charge of insolvency of the makers, which, by agreement, was abandoned.
On December 10th, 1930, George W. Page, bank commissioner of Maryland, was appointed receiver of the Chesapeake Bank of Baltimore. At the time of his appointment there were among the assets of the bank two notes made by M.R. Johnston and M. Grace Johnston, indorsed by the M.R. Johnston Coffee Company, Inc., one of the notes, for $1,100, dated September 9th, 1930, maturing January 9th, 1931, the other, for $500, dated November 22d 1930, maturing *505 December 22d 1930. The loans were applied for by the appellant, the M.R. Johnston Coffee Company, which was credited with the proceeds, the makers receiving none of the money advanced. The bank required the notes so to be made and indorsed. The appellant has on deposit in the insolvent bank $1,041.06, which it has requested the receiver to apply to the notes so indorsed by it, and, upon the refusal of the appellee to credit the appellant's deposit against the notes, a petition was filed praying an order directing the credit to be made.
The question raised by the petition has not been before this court, the nearest approach to it being the case of Colton v.Drovers' Bldg. Assn.,
In that case the court, in distinguishing between the facts of the case and the provisions of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law, which was in force in New York, said: "It nowhere appears from the Negotiable Instruments Law, or from anything that can be considered in determining the *506
intention of the Legislature, that said sections 3 and 55 (sections 15 and 48, article 13 of the Maryland Code) were intended to prevent the courts from determining, in equity, all questions between an insolvent holder of a note and the one primarily liable for the indebtedness on the instrument as a matter of fact, whether maker or endorser"; and: "If we assume that in an action at law the makers of the note must arbitrarily be treated as primarily liable thereon, and the plaintiff as secondarily liable thereon, it does not prevent the court, in an action in equity, from determining and enforcing the rights of the parties as the same are found as a matter of fact." See alsoWinne v. Winne,
But, while this court has never had before it the precise question which this case presents, it has had occasion to express its opinion and to declare its position on the proposition that a court of equity may be appealed to to give relief where the real relations of the parties to a note are not what, from the instrument, they appear to be. In Jamesson v. Citizens' NationalBank,
It will thus be seen that this court has disapproved any efforts to assert any other relationship or to put liability on any other basis than appears from the plain language of the act, and from the instrument itself. As between the parties to the paper, their relationship to it, and their liability on it, they all have their remedies.
Under the law the appellee, receiver, can proceed against the maker, the indorser, or both. If we were to entertain the petition, it would take away this right, at least to the extent of the indorser's deposit, and thus the remedy to be applied or denied would depend on the speed with which the respective parties got into court. If the receiver were to sue the indorser at law, we would have the situation presented in Curtis v.Davidson, supra, and the question might there arise as to whether the appellant could set off his deposit against his liability as indorser, but that would be another and a different case, as to which we express no opinion.
The appellant suggests that, because a negotiable instrument may be discharged "by payment in due course by the *508 party accommodated, where the instrument is made or accepted for accommodation" (section 138[2], article 13 of the Code), the appellant should be permitted to do what the maker could do, that is, pay the note and receive credit for its deposit. Of course, payment by the accommodated indorser would discharge the accommodation maker, but unless the notes are paid by the indorser, the receiver still has and should have recourse against the makers of the notes who are primarily liable under the 48th section of the act. The parties themselves cannot by their own acts affect the rights of the holder; they remain as they appear from the face of the notes and the indorsements thereon.
In our opinion, the indorser (appellant) cannot invoke the aid of a court of equity to establish a relationship or liability different from that appearing on the notes, and in this proceeding is not entitled to an order for the set-off claimed.
Decree affirmed, with costs.