213 Mass. 336 | Mass. | 1913
This was an action by the receiver of the American National Bank against the drawer of a check which on present
Where a defendant for the accommodation of a debtor and without consideration gives his note or check to a creditor of the debtor in payment of or as security for the debt due from the debtor to the creditor, he is liable to the creditor on the note or check. That is the rule of the negotiable instruments act (R. L. c. 73, § 46), which governs the case. The negotiable instruments act in this regard is a codification of the common law. The creditor who has accepted it can recover on the accommodation note or check (Pacific Bank v. Mitchell, 9 Met. 297; Thompson v. Shepherd, 12 Met. 311; Lowell v. Bickford, 201 Mass. 543), and the fact that the creditor knew that the note or check was given for the accommodation of the debtor is not a defense (Tucker v. Jenckes, 5 Allen, 330; Indian Head National Bank v.
We understand the defendant’s contention on the question raised by this ruling to be that on his testimony the jury were warranted in finding that the check here sued on was given at the solicitation of the cashier of the bank and not at the request of Pearson, who was in New Hampshire át the time,' and that if the jury so found, the plaintiff and not Pearson was the “party accommodated” within the rule that the party for whose accommodation a note or check is given cannot sue on it, for as to him it is a mere gratuity. But even if the- note was given at the cashier’s solicitation it was confessedly given to be passed to the credit of Pearson’s overdrawn account in order to make the account whole. That is to say, it was given for the accommodation of Pearson who was the debtor, and not for the accommodation of the bank, which was the creditor. The entry must be
Exceptions overruled.