128 N.Y.S. 632 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff has recovered on three promissory notes made by the defendant to the order of the plaintiff, payable at the Oriental Bank, Hew York city. The first note bears date June 13,1907, and was for four months; the second bears date October 28, 1907, and was for a like period, and the third is dated January 13, 1908, and was payable in thirty days. The plaintiff.does not set out the notes in his complaint, nor doed he allege that they were given for value. The notes all recite that they were given for value, but the allegations of the complaint are confined to the making and delivery of three promissory notes for the amounts and on the dates and for the periods specified, and an allegation that thereby defendant promised to pay to the plaintiff the respective amounts. The answer contains no denial of any of the allegations of the complaint, but it is therein alleged as a defense, first, that each of the notes was made for the benefit and accommodation of the plaintiff, and that at the time of making the same it was agreed between plaintiff and defendant that the plaintiff and not the defendant should pay the same. The defendant pleads as. a further defense an agreement, in writing, between him and the Ryan-Parker Construction Company, a Hew Jersey corporation, of which the plaintiff was president, executed on the 3d day of May, 1906, wherein and whereby, in consideration of services rendered and to be rendered by the defendant, the company agreed, among other things, to pay an advance to the defendant, on account of his interest in another contract therein referred to, the sum of §1,000 per month, and he alleges that for a short time the monthly payments were made, and then the. company was unable to continue to make the payments, a,nd the plaintiff, on account of his interest in the company, agreed that if defendant would make his promissory notes to the order of the plaintiff he would have the same discounted and have the proceeds delivered to the defendant for his use, and would pay the notes as they fell due out of the
On the trial the court received, under objection and exception taken by counsel for plaintiff, the testimony of the defendant tending to establish the facts set forth in the answer as defenses, subject, however, to a motion to strike it out, and after receiving it struck it out, and an exception was duly taken by the defendant. We are of opinion that this ruling requires a new trial.
Of course, parol evidence to the effect that the defendant was not to pay his own note, and that it was to be paid-from the funds of the Ryan-Parker Construction Company, in and of itself tended to vary the terms of the notes and would have been inadmissible for that reason. (Jamestown Business College Assn. v. Allen, 172 N. Y. 291.) Manifestly this evidence did not tend to show that the notes were delivered conditionally, or were not intended to have effect as notes, and, therefore, the evidence was not admissible on that theory. (Smith v. Dotterweieh, 200 N. Y. 299; Niblook v. Sprague, Id. 390; Higgins v. Ridgway, 153 id. 130.) I am of opinion, however, that the evidence was admissible to establish the first defense pleaded, namely, that the notes were given for the benefit and accommodation of the plaintiff. The fact that the defendant did not deny any of the allegations of the complaint is not an admission that there was a good consideration for the notes. As already observed, the complaint neither sets forth the notes in hme verba nor contains an allegation that they were given for value or that there was any consideration therefor, and while it is true that a presumption arises, and doubtless without a recital to that effect in the notes (Neg. Inst. Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 38; Laws of 1909, chap.
Another theory would probably render this testimony admissible to establish a defense to two of the notes. The note of June 13, 1907, was never discounted, and the testimony of the defendant shows that he received no consideration therefor, although it appears on its face to be the obligation of the defendant, who says that it is one of two notes for the same aihount bearing the same date Which were made by him with the understanding that only one of them was to be used and to become of force, and this testimony is rendered probable by the fact that every other note made by either party relating to the matter of the indebtedness of the Ryan-Parker Construction Company was, according to the testimony of the defendant, which could have been readily disproved on this point if not true, discounted, and this note was not. With respect to this note, therefore, the effect of the testimony of the defendant is that it was executed and delivered on the understanding that it was not to be used provided the other note bearing the same date was discounted, and this would bring it within the rule, to which reference has been made, that it may be shown that there was not an unconditional delivery of the note with the intention that it should become a binding obligation were it not for the fact that its execution and delivery are admitted; but if the plea that the notes were accommodation paper be equivalent to a plea of want of consideration, then that defense would seem to be established as to this note, for defendant, according to his testimony, received no consideration for it. With respect to the note of January 13, 1908, it appears that it relates back through a series of renewals to a note for the same amount executed by the plaintiff and indorsed by the defendant and discounted at the same bank and the proceeds cred
With respect to the second note, which was the last renewal of a series of notes of the same amount, the facts are quite different. The first note of that series was made by the defendant and was discoimted and he received the proceeds of the discount, and, therefore, with respect to that note he has no defense excepting on the theory that it was made for the benefit and accommodation of the plaintiff and that he, in fact, received no consideration therefor, for the reason that he made it to enable the plaintiff to pay an existing indebtedness on the part of the Ryan-Parker Construction Company to him, which the plaintiff evidently, according to the testimony of the defendant, preferred to pay rather than have his company sued.
It follows, therefore, that the- judgment and order should he
Olabice and Milleb, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Laughlin that there must he a new trial of this case on the ground that there was evidence that the note of June 13, 1907, was without consideration, and that the note of January 13,1908, was also without consideration, for the reasons stated by Mr. Justice Laughlin in his opinion. I dissent, however, as to the competency of the evidence to affect the liability of the defendant as to the second note sued on.
The evidence is undisputed that by that note .the defendant promised to pay to the plaintiff the sum specified; that that note • was actually discounted for the benefit of the defendant; that he received the proceeds thereof; and that the rule that parol evidence could not be received to contradict the express provisions of a written instrument prevented the defendant from proving that the note by which he promised to pay the plaintiff a sum of money at a specified time was without consideration because when the note was given the plaintiff promised to pay it when due.
Scott, J., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.