Court Opinion

ID: 3658183
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:10:43.75495+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:36:03.965764
License: Public Domain

His Honor charged the jury that the plaintiff as the first indorser of the bill was liable for the whole amount of it, and if the bond in question was made and indorsed for his accommodation in order to raise funds for its payment, he could not recover on the indorsement.
A verdict was returned for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.
This case may be determined without the                        (229) aid of the principle established in the case of Daniel v. McRae, 2 Hawks, 590, to wit, that in bills or notes for the accommodation of the drawer or maker, prior and posterior indorsers stand in equal degree as cosureties, without any express contract to that effect, if at the time of their respective indorsements they knew that it was accommodation paper for the benefit of the drawer or maker, and that nothing was paid for or upon the indorsement. For this case states that Rogerson, the maker of the note, had before that time drawn a bill on Garrison and Ford for $1,000 in favor of Hatcher, which they had accepted, and which Hatcher had indorsed to McMorine, and McMorine to another, and finally it was discounted at bank; that the drawer and exceptors became insolvent, and that Hatcher, the first indorser, paid the bill. If this was a real transaction, Hatcher had a right to call on Rogerson for the $1,000. And if the note now in suit was drawn by Rogerson, although it might have been indorsed by McMorine solely for Rogerson's benefit, McMorine is bound to Hatcher, because Rogerson, whom he authorized to receive value for it, has in fact received it, as he paid it to Hatcher in part discharge of the money which the latter had paid on the bill. Rogerson's receipt of value for the note is McMorine's receipt of value, because Rogerson received it by his authority. This is our daily experience with the banks upon accommodation paper. Therefore, in the absence of all proof on the subject, except that Hatcher paid the $1,000 on the bill, the plaintiff has a clear right on this note and indorsement. Does Hatcher's letter to McMorine, which McMorine produces, and therefore makes evidence, vary the case? I think it makes it stronger for the plaintiff. That letter proves, I think, that Hatcher and McMorine were Rogerson's accommodation indorsers on the bill. *Page 196 
It requires McMorine to pay him one-half, and offers to take Rogerson's note (who was bound for the whole) with McMorine's indorsement for $500. For what? For McMorine's part of the $1,000, which he (Hatcher) had paid on the bill, and of which it seems, from the letter, he held McMorine bound for one-half, and McMorine's accession (230) to the proposition, and his offering the letter in evidence are very strong evidence that the fact is so. This superadds an obligation prior to and independent of the indorsement on which he is sued. There is nothing, then, but the testimony of the witness, who swears that the note in question was given for Hatcher's accommodation, upon which to rest the defense. But how for Hatcher's accommodation? The witness himself tells us, "that Hatcher might get it discounted at the bank, and thereby raise or get money to pay the bill." He must mean to reimburse Hatcher for the money paid on the bill, as the case states that Hatcher had before that time paid the bill. Then, according to the witness' own account, it was not for Hatcher's accommodation. The parties may have called it so, but in reality, from the witness' account, it was to pay Hatcher part of what was due to him from Rogerson, and according to the letter, and I think the acquiescence in the proposition contained in it, due to Hatcher by McMorine also as cosurety on the bill. If the bill of exchange had been for Hatcher's accommodation, it cuts up the plaintiff's case. For then this note and indorsement have no value — no consideration to rest on. I thought I might have misunderstood the case, and examined it again to seewhat the witness said was for Hatcher's accommodation. But I find the case is explicit. It is the bond on which this suit is brought.
The judge, therefore, as I conceive, mistook the point of the case as to prior and posterior indorsers. It depended not on that solely, but on the question whether the bill for $1,000 was for Hatcher's benefit and accommodation. If it was the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
I should have been glad to review the decision in Daniel v. McRae, as I am aware that it has not given very general satisfaction, and the Supreme Court of the United States has decided a case in direct opposition to it which I have seen and examined. But the reasoning is very far from satisfying me that they are right, or that Daniel v. McRae is wrong.
PER CURIAM.                                 Judgment reversed.
Cited: Richard v. Simms, 18 N.C. 50; Dawson v. Petway, 20 N.C. 535. *Page 197 
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