Court Opinion

ID: 6695945
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:50:45.499777+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:14.611256
License: Public Domain

Walker, J.,
after stating tbe case: Tbe larger part of tbe argument before us was taken up with a full discussion of tbe question whether a blank indorsement by tbe payee, or one of tbe payees, to a third party can be explained by oral evidence showing what tbe special contract between them was, and that it was different from tbe one implied by law from tbe mere indorsement of tbe paper. This is a question of evidence, and tbe admission of tbe oral proof could only be incompetent on tbe ground that it would vary, alter, or contradict tbe terms of a contract which tbe parties have reduced to waiting as tbe only expression of their agreement, and would violate tbe general rule of evidence prohibiting tbe introduction of such evidence. But there was no exception to tbe evidence, as there should have been, if that rule was relied upon; but tbe evidence was admitted without any objection, so far as appears, and tbe referee found tbe facts in regard to tbe special contract. Besides, if plaintiffs bad objected, they have not appealed, and tbe exception to tbe admission of tbe evidence would not now be open to them.
But waiving, for tbe present, this view of tbe record, and considering tbe other question argued, we are of tbe opinion that, by our decisions, although there is some conflict in other States, tbe evidence is competent. In Mendenhall v. Davis, 72 N. C., 150, this Court, after stating that when a payee or regular indorsee thereof writes bis name on tbe back of a note, as between him and a bona fide bolder for value and without notice tbe law implies that be intended to assume tbe well-known liability of an indorser, and be will not be permitted to contradict this implication ; “but this rule does not apply between tbe original parties to a contract which is not in writing, although there may be tbe signature of one or more parties to authenticate that some contract was made. In such cases it must always be a question of fact what contract tbe signature authorizes to be written above it; in other words, what was.tbe agreement of tbe parties at tbe time it was written. There is no written contract to be altered; tbe whole (except tbe signature, which by itself does not make a contract) exists in parol, and must be established by such proof.” Tbe Court their proceeds to say that tbe presumption that one *605who indorses a note after its delivery by the maker is a guarantor (under ' the law as it then texisted), is not one of law, but one.of fact only, and may be rebutted; so that it does not a-ffect injuriously the right of a subsequent bona fide holder. Several cases are cited to support the position, in which the rule was applied. Love v. Wall, 8 N. C., 313; Gomez v. Lazarus, 16 N. C., 205; Davis v. Morgan, 64 N. C., 570, and Sylvester v. Downer, 20 Yt., 855, where Judge Bedfield said that in the particular case there was a legal implication “that the indorser was a joint prom-isor, but the signature being blank, he may undoubtedly show that he was not understood to assume any such obligation”; and to the same effect are these cases: Clapp v. Rice, 13 Gray (Mass.), 403; Perkins v. Catlin, 11 Conn., 213; 2 Parsons Bills and Notes, p. 121 and notes (and Ed. of 1871, p. 517), where numerous like cases will be found. This doctrine is so firmly established by a long series of decisions in this State that it is far too late now to question it, as will presently appear. In the more recent case of Hill v. Shields, 81 N. C., 250, Justice Dillard, who was always careful and accurate in the statement of legal principles, said: “The indorsement being in blank, and the contract implied by law with his indorsee and subsequent holders, giving such unqualified power to dispose of the same, as we have seen, it has been much debated and variously decided as to the competency of the indorser, by parol proof, to rebut the implication of the law, and to annex a qualification when none is expressed. It is settled in this State, however, that parol testimony may be adduced under a blank indorsement to annex a qualification or special contract as between the immediate parties. Davis v. Morgan, 64 N. C., 570; Mendenhall v. Davis, 72 N. C., 150. But between an indorser in blank and remote parties without notice the weight of authority is that parol proof is inadmissible, and the contract implied by law stands absolute. 2 Parsons, 23; Hill v. Ely, 1 Serg. and Rawle, 362; 1 Daniel on Neg. Inst., secs. 699 and 719." The following cases recognized and applied the principle in a general way: Comrs. v. Wasson, 82 N. C., 309; Adrian v. McCaskill, 103 N. C., 186; Cobb v. Clegg, 137 N. C., 153; Typewriter Co. v. Hardware Co., 143 N. C., 97; Woodson v. Beck, 151 N. C., 148.
Two cases, which are apparently relied on by appellee, should be noticed. Davidson v. Powell, 114 N. C., 575, is one; but a close reading of that case will show that it is a clear authority in support of our view, as Justice MacBae, in the opinion written by him for the Court, says: “In the hands of an original payee an indorsement may be shown to be upon certain conditions; but a bona fide holder for value before maturity and without notice is not affected by any equities existing between the original parties. The same rule will apply between the last payee and all subsequent indofsers.”
*606The other case is Bank v. Pegram, 118 N. C., 671. This is a still stronger case, as there it was proposed to show by jfarol evidence that the cashier of the plaintiff bank had informed /the indorsee that the maker had sufficient funds in the bank to pay-the note, and that he would not be held responsible upon it, his signature on the back of the note being a mere form. The first syllabus of the case is this: “Parol testimony may be adduced under a blank indorsement to annex a qualification or special contract as between immediate parties; but between an indorser in blank and remote parties without notice such parol proof is inadmissible, and the contract implied by law stands absolute.” The Court cites and approves Hill v. Shields, supra, Davidson v. Powell, supra, Mendenhall v. Davis, supra; and admitting a conflict in the decisions of other courts, it states that here the matter has been settled and closed by numerous decisions. It then cites Bruce v. Wright, 10 N. Y., 548, and refers to it in the following language: “It was there held that in an action against any indorser by his immediate indorsee it is a good defense that there was a verbal agreement at the time of the indorsement that the indorsee should not sue the indorsee, and that ‘the contract between the two consists partly in the written indorsement, partly in the delivery of the bill to the indorsee, and partly in the actual understanding and intention with which the delivery was made, and that the intention of the parties may be gathered from the words of the parties, either spoken or written.”
In commenting upon the very instructive cáse of Baxter Natl. Bank v. Talbot, 13 L. R. A. (Mass.), p. 52, the learned-annotator says: “While it is elementary law that parol evidence is incompetent to vary the terms of a written instrument, still it is equally well settled that, as between the original parties to commercial paper, such proof is admissible as will have a tendency to establish the character in which an indorser in blank intended that he should be bound; and proof of this intention will countervail the prima facie presumptions which the law indulges with reference to the paper,” citing Riley v. Gerrish, 9 Cush., 104; Sylvester v. Downer, 20 Vt., 355; Owings v. Baker, 54 Md., 82; Nurre v. Chittenden, 56 Ind., 465; Pierse v. Irvine, 1 Minn., 369; Strong v. Riker, 16 Vt., 555; Quinn v. Sterne, 26 Ga., 224; Good v. Martin, 95 U. S., at p. 95 (24 L. Ed., 343). In the last case cited (Good v. Martin, 95 U. S., 90), Justice Clifford quotes with approyal this passage from Story Prom. Notes, sec. 479: “Judge Story says that the interpretation ought to be just such as carries into effect the true intention of the parties, which may be made out by parol proof of the facts and circumstances which took place at the time of the transaction. If the party intended at the time to be bound only as guarantor of the maker, he shall not be an original promisor; and if he intended to'be liable only as a second in-*607■dorser, he shall never be held to the payee as first indorser.” It is said in Parson on Bills and Notes, sec. 520: “In a suit between the original parties it is considered that the blank name of the indorser means nothing of itself, but its purpose must be shown, aliunde.” And in Fullerton v. Hill, 18 L. R. A. (Kan.), at p. 36, it is held, in regard to the liability upon a blank indorsement, that “parol evidence is received to rebut the presumption (arising from the indorsement being in blank), and to show what liability it was intended (by the parties) he should assume, and what relation he should sustain to the paper.” The opinion in that casé-is a well considered one, and in the notes to it many cases are cited that support the text. In order to show that the great weight of authority favors this view, we add the following cases: Johnson v. Schnabaum, 17 L. R. S. (N. S.), 838; Pike v. Sheil, 1 M. and M., 299 (Ld. Tenterden) ; Riley v. Gerrish, 9 Cush., 104; Collett v. Wright, 1 Wright (Ohio), 80; Honck v. Graham, 106 Ind., 198; Drummond v. Yager, 10 Ill. App., 382, citing our cases; Bank v. Crabtree, 86 Iowa, 731; Forepaugh v. Delaware, 128 Pa. St., 217; Tankersley v. Graham, 8 Ala., 247; Roads v. Webb, 91 Me., 414; Taylor v. French, 2 Lea (Tenn.), 257; Goodrich v. Stanton, 71 Conn., 419; Hirsch v. Kaufman, 81 Atl. Rep. (R. I.), 66; Chapze v. Young, 87 Ky., 480; True v. Bullard, 45 Neb., 412; Doll v. Getchmann, Anno. Cases, 1913, A-882, and notes; 2 Eandolph Com. Paper, sec. 778.
Moffett v. Maness, 102 N. C., 457, is relied on by plaintiffs, but the principle there announced has no application, and Justice Shepherd, who wrote the opinion in that case, said, in the later case of Southerland v. Fremont, 107 N. C., 570: “It is well settled that the agreement upon which the indorser of another’s obligation signed, and the liability which he intended to assume, may (at least, between the original parties or those parties and holders with notice) bé shown by parol evidence, and he will be held only according to such agreement and intention.”
On the same theory that parol evidence is 'admissible as between the first parties to the blank indorsement, it is also applicable as against subsequent holders with notice. 8 Cyc., 266; Davidson v. Powell, supra. An assignee, under a general assignment, acquires the property of his assignor, subject to all equities against him. 4 Cyc., 219; Wallace v. Cohen, 111 N. C., 103; Carpenter v. Duke, 144 N. C., 291. "While such a trustee is a purchaser for value under 13 and 27 Eliz. (Revisal 1905, secs. 960, 961), “he takes the property subject to any .equity, or 'other right, that attached to the same in the hands of the debtor,” as said by Justice Shepherd in Wallace v. Cohen, supra. See, also, Potts v. Blackwell, 56 N. C., 449; Small v. Small, 74 N. C., 16; Day v. Day, 84 N. C., 408; Brem v. Lockhart, 93 N. C., 191, and Southerland v. Fremont, 107 N. C., 565.
*608It may be added that plaintiffs acquired the notes by the assignment to them, after their maturity, and therefore, in law, with notice of all equities and other rights of the indorser, Everett, and consequently, in law, took subject to them. Causey v. Snow, 122 N. C., 326; Bank v. Loughran, 126 N. C., 814; Taylor v. Lauer, 127 N. C., 157; Brooks v. Sullivan, 129 N. C., 190. So that plaintiffs, as trustees of Mr. Farthing, are bound by the agreement between defendant and him to the same extent as he was himself.
What, then, was this agreement ? It is true, as argued by defendant’s counsel, that the taking of collateral security does not suspend the right of action upon the principal debt, in the absence of any stipulation to that effect. Jones on Collateral Security, sec. 590. But that is not the question, by any means, as the agreement did not consist merely in the transfer of collaterals. It was distinctly understood and agreed that Mr. Farthing would not look to Mr. Everett for payment until he had exhausted the Annin estate. This was a valid agreement, and Mr. Earthing is bound by it, and his trustees as well. It bears a close resemblance to a guaranty of collection. We said in Cowan v. Roberts, 134 N. C., at p. 418: “A guaranty is a promise to answer for the payment of some debt, or the performance of some duty, in case of the failure of another person who is himself in the first instance liable to such payment or performance. Carpenter v. Wall, 20 N. C., 144. There is a well defined distinction between a guaranty of payment and a guaranty for the collection of a debt, the former being an absolute promise to pay the debt at maturity, if not paid by the principal debtor, when the guarantee may bring an action at once against the guarantor, and the latter being a promise to pay the debt upon the condition that the guarantee diligently prosecuted the principal debtor for the recovery of the debt, without success. Jones v. Ashford, 79 N. C., 172; Jenkins v. Wilkinson, 107 N. C., 707; 22 Am. St., 172.” See, also, Mudge v. Varner, 146 N. C., 147. A surety undertakes primarily to pay if the debtor does not; an indorser undertakes to do the same thing, after due notice of dishonor, while a guarantor undertakes to pay if the debtor cannot. Randolph Com. Paper (2 Ed.), sec. 849, note 2; Rouse v. Wooten, 140 N. C., 557. The distinction may be further illustrated by the statement that a surety is considered as a maker of the note; a guarantor is never a maker. The surety’s promise is to pay a debt, which becomes his own, as between him and the creditor, when the debtor fails to pay it, and he may be sued upon it as soon as it is due and dishonored. 2 Parsons Bills and Notes (Ed. 1871), at page 118. The contract of Mr. Everett, is, therefore, analogous to a guaranty of collection, as we have said, and though a party to the note and the indorsement, he nevertheless has contracted, as does such a guarantor,, that he will pay, not if the Annin estate does *609not, but if it cannot, or not until it is first exhausted, and to the extent only that it does not pay, after being made to pay whatever it can. That this parol agreement is valid, see also Breese v. Crumpton, 121 N. C., 122.
The cases relied on by plaintiffs, holding that a creditor having col- • lateral security for his note may, notwithstanding this fact, sue the debtor without first resorting to the collateral and exhausting it (Jones on Collateral Security, sec. 686; Silvey v. Axley, 118 N. C., 959), are clearly not in point, because here the indorser has not only deposited the collateral, but required a further agreement that his indorsee should not proceed against him until it is exhausted; nor are the cases of Barnard v. Martin, 112 N. C., 754, and Hinsdale v. Jerman, 115 N. C., 152, as it was found in those cases that the collateral had become worthless and the creditor “was not required to- do so vain a thing as to seek recovery from an insolvent person, who was liable primarily for the debt, or to enforce payment out of valueless and unsalable stock.” Nor is the doctrine as to extension of time, where there is no consideration therefor, for payment, applicable to the facts of this case. Here the time was as definitely fixed as was practicable, they not knowing exactly when the estate would be settled, and the stipulation for the exhaustion of the Annin estate was founded upon a sufficient consideration, it being the same one which supported the entire contract of indorsement and its several parts, the promises being mutual and reciprocal. Mr. Farthing is presumed to have known what he was doing, being sui juris, and able to take care of himself; the parties standing “at arms’ length.” He thought he was getting a good investment for his surplus money, and it may yet turn out to be so. The agreement was a lawful one, and there is no reason why he should not be bound by it. The ruling below would imply that the contract was thought to impose upon Mr. Everett the duty of exhausting the Annin estate, whereas it is plainly stated that Mr. Farthing must assume that burden. Mr. Everett promised to employ and pay attorneys to assist in the matter, and he has done so. He has performed fully his part of the contract, and it is now incumbent upon his indorsee to do his part, by either exhausting the Annin estate and realizing what he can by law, or by showing that the estate is insolvent. All that appears is that “the end of the settlement of that estate is not in sight”; but this may be due to a lack of diligence on his part, and is not to be imputed to Mr. Everett as the consequence of any default by him. If it would be futile to proceed further against the estate because of its insolvency, the plaintiffs should have shown it, as the burden was upon them and not upon the defendant. Plaintiffs, in their brief, state that there was no exception to the evidence or the findings of fact, but only to the conclusions of law therefrom, and this being the *610case, they cannot recover, as they have not performed their assignor’s part of the contract, which, as we have shown, is valid and binding. The judgment of the court was based entirely upon the wrong theory, and it had no right in law to impose terms upon defendant and require him to exhaust the Annin estate by a fixed .time, as the agreement authorizes no such requirement of him.
What defendant said as to the time within which the estate could be settled is not material, as there is no allegation or contention that there was any false and fraudulent representation. It was merely the expression of his opinion or “expectation,” and it may have been a correct one, if proper diligence had been used in prosecuting the case against the estate. He is not responsible for the delay. Besides, the court had proceeded upon the theory that the contract is valid, .by allowing him more time for the settlement, to which he would not be entitled if there had been any fraud or other equitable ground upon which to set it aside.
This view of the case is not only in accordance with good law, but good morals and manifest justice. When Mr. Farthing accepted the notes from Mr. Everett, he did so with an express agreement, as found by the referee. That agreement was definite and binding, towit, that Everett should be ultimately responsible if there was failure on the part of the Mo'ores to pay, and on the part of the estate of John Annin to make good the liability. He agreed to bear the expenses of suing them, and has done so. It is now found as a fact that the estate of John Annin has not been wound up, and of course has not been exhausted. It is not even found as a fact that it is insolvent, and we were told on the argument that, as a matter of fact, it is not. Then why should the terms of the agreement entered into between Mr. Everett and Mr. Farthing be varied by the court in order to accelerate the time for payment by the defendant ? If Farthing had sued the defendant Everett upon these notes, and this agreement had been shown, the court would not have sustained his action.
It must be declared that there was error, and the judgment will be reversed and the action dismissed.
Reversed.