221 Pa. 630 | Pa. | 1908
Opinion by
This is an appeal from one of two judgments against appellant as an indorser on two promissory notes of the Island Park Association held by the appellees. The defense set up in each suit was that the appellant was a mere accommodation indorser for the holders of the notes. Under facts which were undis
No material fact upon which the appellees rely is disputed, and the defense that the appellant was a mere accommodation indorser for them, to enable .them to raise money on the notes, is absolutely barren of merit. Professional zeal hardly excuses the attempt to make it. Some time in March, 1906, the appellees, lumber déalers, agreed to furnish lumber to the Island Park Association for the construction of a hotel and other buildings upon its grounds in Somerset county. J. O. Rauch, J. T. Plourney and O. L. Seward, the appellant, were three of its directors, and respectively its president, secretary and treasurer. Before furnishing any lumber to the association the appellees took from these three men in their individual capacity an agreement, under seal, dated March 27, 1906, in which they obligated themselves, “ jointly and severally, to pay the said David Ott & Company the full amount of the purchase price of said lumber, approximating four thousand dollars, within four months after the date hereof, in the event the said amount is not paid in full by the said Island Park Association.” Later on the association asked for more .lumber, and, the appellees having asked for additional protection, the •same obligors, on April 27, 1906, executed another agreement, obligating themselves, jointly and severally, to pay the appellees, within four months from that date, the full amount of the purchase price of the mill work, lumber and building supplies furnished by them to the association. When it was pressed by the appellees for the payment of their bill, O. A. Hargraves, its general manager, told them the only way they could be helped would be by a note. The appellees agreed to accept it, if assured that it would be taken care of when due. In pursuance of this, two notes of the association were given to them, each dated September 29, 1906, one for $4,000, payable two months after date, the other for $5,000, payable in one month. Each note was made payable to the order of J. T. ■Flourney and by him indorsed. Following his indorsement were those of Seward, Hargraves and Rauch. The notes, hav
The only attempt made by the appellant to show that he had become an indorser for the accommodation of the appellees was his testimony as to what took place between him and Hargraves when the latter procured his indorsement. Whatever may have taken place between them at that time could not have affected the appellees, unless apprised of it, or Hargraves was acting for them and not for the association. ■ He was not acting for the appellees, and there was no offer to show that what -was alleged to have taken place between him and Seward was ever communicated to them. The court ought, therefore, to have sustained the objection made to the offer to prove by Seward that when he indorsed the note he did so because Hargraves told him the appellees had requested his indorsement as an accommodation to them to enable them to get money out of bank. Though the offer was improperly admitted nothing was proved under it to help the appellant, for Hargraves was not called to testify that what he is alleged to have told Seward was true. Each of the appellees testified that it was not. They knew absolutely nothing as to how the indorsement was procured. They only knew that the notes were brought to them by the general manager of the association after they had pressed him for payment, bearing the absolute indorsements of responsible men, and these the very men who, by their agreement of April 27, 1906, had assumed the payment of the bill if the association should not pay it. They were not merely guarantors but absolute sureties to the appellees. If, instead of suing Seward on his indorsement, they had sued him on his obligation to pay their whole bill, nothing shown in this suit would have availed him as a defense. The situation as to this feature of the case is summed up in a sentence in the charge of the court: “When the note was brought back to them, and they had no knowledge of his restrictive’ indorsement, that he put any restrictions about it, they had a perfect right to take it, because they were only getting their due, and Mr. Seward was not increas
The assignments of error are all overruled and the judgment is affirmed.