113 Ga. 242 | Ga. | 1901
Lead Opinion
The Atlanta Trust and Banking Company brought suit against M. M. Mauck Company, M. M. Mauck, and F. 0. Mays, On a promissory note payable to the order of the plaintiff, signed by the M. M. Mauck Company, and indorsed by M. M. Mauck and F. O. Mays. So far as appears from the record, the Mauck Company and Mays filed no defense. Mauck filed a plea, in which he set up that lie was an accommodation indorser or surety on the note; that the maker of the same placed in the hands of the plaintiff certain accounts as collateral security; that from these accounts a sufficient amount had been collected to fully pay off the note sued on; and that for this reason the defendant is not indebted to the plaintiff on the note sued on. After evidence introduced by both parties, the court directed the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff. At the close of the evidence the defendant offered an amendment to his plea, which alleged that “ the loss of the accounts placed in the hands of the plaintiff had damaged the defendant in an amount sufficient to have paid the note sued on.” The court ruled that, under his view of the evidence, an amendment of the kind offered would not prevent him from directing a verdict. Mauck sued out a bill of exceptions to this court, complaining of the direction of the verdict, and of the court’s refusal to allow him to amend his plea and to submit the case to the jury.
In Vose v. Yulee, 4 Hun, 629, it was held: “ Where an indorser of a note is sued upon it, if the plaintiff has received any collateral security for its payment, the burden of proof is on the party sued to show that such collateral security has been improperly disposed of.” In Girard Fire Ins. Co. v. Marr, 46 Pa. St. 504, 507, it was held, in effect, that it was not a valid defense to an action on a note, that the plaintiffs had exchanged notes given to secure its payment for other notes, and that the latter had not been collected and applied as a credit on the principal note; but that the defendant must go further and show that the exchange was the result of negligence on the part of the plaintiffs, and that the notes received in exchange were not as good as those for which they were taken. In Dugan v. Sprague, 2 Ind. 600, it was held that, “If a debtor give his creditor notes as collateral security, he can not obtain credit therefor in a suit upon the principal debt, unless he can show that the notes constituting that security had been, or could have been, collected.” The same court in Kiser v. Ruddick, 8 Blackf. 382, held that it was not sufficient for the pledgor to show that the col-laterals were lost or uncollected, but that the burden was upon him to show that the loss or failure to collect was due to the negligence of the pledgee. In Plants Mfg. Co. v. Flavey, 20 Wis. 211, 216, it was ruled that, where notes are transferred as collateral without any special agreement, the law implies an agreement on the part of the assignee to use diligence in the collection of the collaterals, and the burden is on the pledgor to prove loss by reason of the negligence of the pledgee. In the well-considered case of Murphy v. Bartsch, supra, it appeared that on October 18, 1886, Murphy delivered to Bartsch his promissory note, due the next day, and as collateral security for its payment transferred a demand he held against one Shaw, payable on November 1, 1886. At the latter date Shaw was solvent, but became insolvent some time in April following. In August, 1887, suit was brought on the note. The defendant interposed the defense that the plaintiff had neglected to collect the claim against Shaw, which by the latter’s subsequent in
It is a general rule that where the opportunity to collect collaterals is lost by the insolvency of the parties liable on the same, by the negligence of the pledgee, when with ordinary care the same might have been enforced, the pledgee is liable to account for the full loss and damage of the pledgor. Where, however, the pledgee has no reason to believe that the maker of the collateral is embarrassed, and the pledgor has not requested him to take steps to enforce the same, mere delay on the part of the pledgee will not render him hable for a failure to collect. Colebrook, Col. Sec..§§ 114, 115. In Goodall v. Richardson, 14 N. H. 567, it was held that proof that the pledgee delayed five months to collect a collateral which was due and unpaid by a solvent debtor, after which time the debtor became insolvent, was not sufficient evidence to show negligence on the part of the pledgee and reheve the pledgor from the payment of the debt due by him.
Applying the foregoing to the facts of the present case, we think it clear that, even if the amendment to the plaintiff’s plea had been allowed and the allegations therein had been estabhshed by evidence, he would stall have proved no defense to the note. It is contended that the defendant proved enough to cast upon the plaintiff the burden of showing that it had exercised proper diligence to collect the collaterals. What the defendant proved was that valuable ac
Judgment affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Where a bank sues a surety on a promissory note, and it appears from the evidence that the maker of the note placed with the bank good solvent collateral amounting to more than three times the amount of the note; and where the defendant’s evidence shows that at the time of the trial the bank has not collected the collateral, but has misplaced or lost it so that it can not be found after diligent search, the negligence of the bank, the loss sustained by the surety, and that the damage resulted from the negligence of the bank are established. It is at least, under the evidence, a question for the jury; and the judge erred in directing a verdict against the surety.