Court Opinion

ID: 9336359
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-15 21:50:28.469021+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:12.453439
License: Public Domain

ROSS, Circuit Judge
(dissenting). I agree, and so held in the case of Flannagan v. Bank, 56 Fed. 959, that a national bank has not the power to guaranty the debt or obligation of a third party; but, in my opinion, the findings of fact of the court below, upon which the present writ of error must be determined, do not present any such case. The complaint in the case counts upon four separate causes of action, each of the firs! three of which is upon a certain draft drawn by the defendant Needles Bank on the Chase National Bank, of New York, in favor of the plaintiff, doing business under tbe name of Bowen & Co., and delivered to the plaintiff, according to the findings, in exchange for a check of Blake drawn on the defendant bank, and discounted by Bowen & Co. The checks of Blake on the defendant Needles Bank in favor of Bowen & Co. were ilius honored by the defendant bank, and the amounts thereof necessarily entered upon its books on tbe debit side of Blake’s account. When the plaintiff presented and delivered those checks of Blake to the defendant: Needles Bank, and received from the latter, in exchange therefor, its own drafts in the plaintiff's favor on the Chase National Bank, of New York, the plaintiff manifestly parted with all of its interest in those checks of Blake, holding in exchange therefor the obligations of the defendant bank. Tn respect to the first three causes of action, therefore, I am unable to see how, in view of the findings of fact, it can be properly held I hat the action is upon any guaranty of the debt or obligation of Blake. On the contrary, in respect to each of these three causes of action the defendant bank honored the checks of Blake drawn upon if, and in exchange for them issued its own obligations, upon which the first three causes of action rest. There is nothing in the findings of fact to the effect or tending to show — what seems to be assumed in the prevailing opinion — that Bowen & Co. knew that the drafts drawn in its favor by the defendant bajik, and issued in exchange for Blake’s checks upon the defendant bank, were only to be paid by means of drafts drawn by the defendant bank on Blake and in favor of the Chase National Bank, of New York. It seems to me that: the effect of the decision here is to attach a condition to the drafts of the defendant bank sued upon, which is altogether unauthorized by any fact made to appear in the findings of the court below. According to the complaint as it appears in the record, the fourth cause of action is upon a check drawn by Blake "upon the plaintiff, A. T. Bowen & Co.,” which, it is alleged, the defendant bank guaran*932tied. If the complaint in respect to this cause of action be so taken and considered, it is plain that in respect to it tbe action is upon a guaranty which the defendant bank was not empowered to make. But the word “upon” was probably inserted in the record by mistake in place of the words “in favor of,” since the findings of fact are that this check was drawn upon the defendant bank and in favor of the plaintiff, Bowen & Co., and it is so treated in the opinion of the court below, as also in the opinion of this court. Thus considered, I am of opinion, in view of the findings of fact made by the court below, that in respect to this cause of action, also, the.action is not upon any guaranty, but upon the direct promise of the defendant bank to pay the check so drawn by Blake upon it, upon the faith of which promise the plaintiff parted with his money. What I have said is based upon the findings of the court below, which, as I understand it, are to control the judgment of this court. In the opinion of the learned judge of the court below, however, reference is made to certain testimony given in the trial court tending to show that the plaintiff, Bowen & Co., did know that the drafts sued upon were to be paid, by other drafts drawn by the defendant bank upon Blake in favor of the Chase National Bank, of New York, and were only to be paid in the event of Blake’s paying those drafts, and that, in truth, all of the transactions in question constituted but the guaranty by the defendant bank of Blake’s obligations, of which the. plaintiff, Bowen & Co., had actual knowledge. The testimony thus alluded to in the opinion of the trial judge finds some support in the agreement executed by Blake on the 12th of September, 1894, which is set out in the findings of fact that were made by the court below. The evidence in the case may have been amply sufficient to justify findings to the effect that all of the transactions sued upon in reality constituted but the guaranty on the part of the defendant bank of the obligations of Blake, and that the plaintiff, Bowen & Co., had knowledge thereof. The difficulty is that- the findings do not show this state of facts, and therefore I am of opinion that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.