166 Ga. 163 | Ga. | 1928
D. EL Powell, desiring to loan money indirectly to his son G. H. Powell, entered into a parol agreement with the Citizens Bank of Moultrie, and, in pursuance thereof, executed with his said son, each signing as principal, a promissory note dated December 31, 1925, for $4757.10, stating that “I, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of” the bank the above-stated amount, “with interest from maturity.” Contemporaneously with the delivery of the note to the bank D. II. Powell deposited with the bank $15,000, for which the bank issued its time certificate of deposit. The parol agreement contemplated that the money loaned to. G. H. Powell on the note should be from the money
A promissory note signed by two or more persons as makers, and containing the words, “I, we, or either of us promise to pay,” imports joint and several liability of the makers. This comports with the negotiable-instruments law (6a. L. 1924, pp. 126-130, sec. 17 (7); Park’s Supp. 1926, § 4269 (17-7); Michie’s Code, § 4294 (17-7).
This court has decided that “In an action against the maker and indorser of a promissory note, joined in the same suit, the indorser may set off an individual claim against the plaintiff, growing out of the transaction which gave rise to the execution of the note.” Wilson v. Exchange Banlc, 122 Ga. 495 (50 S. E. 357, 69 L. R. A. 97, 2 Ann. Cas. 597). The decision in that case was founded upon the principle that the liabilities of the principal and the indorser were severable, so that there was an individual liability of each which might be enforced against him separately and against which he might set off a contractual demand which he held against the payee of the note. The principle was affirmed
In State v. Brobston, 94 Ga. 95 (21 S. E. 146, 47 Am. St. R. 138), it was held-: “Where a bank which is a State depository becomes insolvent while indebted to the State, and its effects are in the hands of a receiver, depositors in the bank who are also indebted to it by promissory notes have the right to set off against' such notes in the hands of the receiver the amounts justly due them respectively on their deposits.” And in Nix v. Ellis, 118 Ga. 345 (4) (45 S. E. 404, 98 Am. St. R. 111), it was held: “A receiver takes ehoses in action of a bank in the same plight in which they existed at the time of the filing of the equitable proceedings under which he was appointed, and subject to all set-offs which might have been pleaded thereto in a suit by the bank itself.” See also Butler v. Mitchell, 128 Ga. 431 (57 S. E. 764). In Bennett v. Green, 156 Ga. 572 (3) (119 S. E. 620), it was held: “When the superintendent of banks takes possession . of an insolvent bank and its assets for the purpose of liquidating its affairs, he acts in the capacity of a statutory receiver.” See also Bennett v. Wheatley, 154 Ga. 591, 599 (115 S. E. 83); Fidelity & Deposit Co. v. Duke, supra. Under application of the principles above stated, D. H. Powell, one of the signers of the note involved in this case, was liable to the payee bank separately on the note, and, in a proceeding by the superintendent of banks, succeeding to the management and control of the bank upon its insolvency, against the two makers of the note, could set off in satisfaction of such note a sufficiency of a time certificate of deposit issued by the bank to him at the time the note was executed, of which he was still the holder.
It is further insisted that D. H. Powell had a right by contract to set off a sufficiency of the certificate of deposit to discharge the note. It is unnecessary to decide that question. Owing to the importance of establishing a precedent for guidance of the administrative officers of the State Banking Department, it has been
Judgment reversed.