79 Me. 275 | Me. | 1887
The defendant, an accommodation indorser of a note, contends that he is released from liability by an agreement between the maker and holder to extend the time of payment of the note without his assent.
The principle involved in such a defense, while clearly logical, is subtle and refined, so much so that persons unlearned in the law rarely suspect the legal consequences that may follow their giving time for the payment of over-due notes. It is the unseen, sunken rock on which thousands of commercial obligations have been wrecked, to the utter dismay of the losers and sometimes to their ruin. While the situation of a surety must be carefully .scrutinized, so should that of a holder be, who is to lose, if he loses at all, about seven thousand dollars for unwittingly
Applying to the present case the definition of liability as declared by Virgin, J. in Berry v. Pullen, 69 Maine, 101, we are convinced that the facts, affected as they are by the finding of the judge, fail to prove any contract of extension which can release this indorser from liability on the note. It is in that case said: "But before a surety, whose name was deliberately and understandingly placed upon a note to give it credit, can be thus absolved from liability, the law, as well as justice and equity, requires that there shall be a valid, binding contract — one founded on a sufficient consideration, and the effect of which shall be to give further definite time to the principle, without the consent of the surety.” We think this plaintiff has escaped from the risk of any such contract; the facts fall short of it.
The maker of the note in a letter dated January 24, 1885, offers to renew his then over-due paper, asking that the name of one endorser be omitted from the new note. The plaintiffs do not accept the proposition, they are unwilling to lose an indorser. They answer, on January- 27, 1885, in these words : " We prefer to hold the note we now have to taking a new one, but will carry it for thirty to sixty days as it is, if nothing materially transpires to change the status of the security and the names; this, however, is only on condition that you remit immediately the interest on the note for three months, to January 15.”
All the phrases of this letter are freighted with the idea that the bank was unwilling to lose an indorser from the note. It is the language of caution and self-protection. They were willing to grant indulgence, but at no risk to themselves. They prefer to "hold the note” — "as it is” — "will carry it,” not change it — not for any fixed, definite time — but " for thirty to sixty days.” The very indefiniteness of the indulgence shows merely promise not to press, and not a contract to be bound by.
The maker’s reply indicates that he was craving indulgence merely, and not expecting to make any legal contract for delay. "I trust you will give me sixty days,” he writes. But the bank
We do not say, of course, that there may not be some force in the ingenious argument submitted in behalf of the defendant’s position. Truth mixes with error in many cases, the alliance making error only the more difficult to contend against. We do say that the plaintiffs’ position is much the most satisfactory.
The plaintiffs asked for nothing as a legal consideration for an extension. Over-due interest, and not all of that, only was required. They did not write for extra interest — it was " interest ” that was wanted. The contention of the defense is that interest at seven per centum per annum was intended,— while there is not evidence in the case to show any such thing. When a settlement was to be made, out of which this note grew, the president of the bank wrote that they would accept notes with interest in advance at " six per cent.” At another time a bank official offered to settle this note, by new notes which they would discount at seven per cent; which would be a legal transaction. The record of the case shows no other instance when interest of any kind was mentioned by the bank.
The whole amount was kept. Why should it not be? More of legal interest was then due than the amount sent. It was a pro tanto protection to the indorser to keep it. The bank indorsed three months interest, not naming the amount of it. But if they did not appropriate the excess over six per cent, the law of Yermont appropriated it, upon the note, at the moment it was received. It could not be retained for an illegal purpose. It was never asked for for any purpose. There is not satisfactory-evidence that the bank designed to use the excess illegally, in view of the finding of the judge, upon both law and fact, in favor of the plaintiffs. The judge ruled as a matter of law that the correspondence and the conduct of the parties did not operate to discharge the defendant. His decision of fact implies that the conduct was not incompatible with such finding. The case is before us on exceptions, and not on report of evidence or an appeal from the whole record. The finding at nisi prius gives all favorable intendments, which the facts can allow, to the plaintiffs. If it be necessary to find as a fact that the extra was not accepted as a consideration for extending the note, the finding below makes it so. And here it may forcibly be asked how the extra interest could be regarded as the consideration for the promise of the bank, when the promise was made without such consideration — before it was received.
The question, a doubtful one, whether the payment of usury would be a valid consideration for such an agreement as the defendant depends upon, never decided either in Vermont or Maine, need not now be entertained by us.
There may be stronger ground, possibly, for contending that the time of payment was not extended to the indorsers than there is that it was not extended to the maker — and this action is against an indorser only. Some distinction of the kind might appear, upon the face of the principal letter, to some persons.
Exceptions overruled.