Spencer v. Allerton

On September 24th, 1884, the plaintiffs, at the request of one J. C. Stevens, gave him their accommodation note for two thousand dollars, payable in three months, and agreed to give him another three months' note of the same amount at its maturity. In exchange for this note Stevens gave the plaintiffs his six months' note of the same date for two thousand dollars, indorsed by the defendant. On the 27th of December, 1884, the plaintiffs gave Stevens their second note as agreed, with which he took up the first. When the second note became due the plaintiffs paid it. On the 2d of April, 1885, Stevens, in renewal of his six months' note, gave the plaintiffs his note for one thousand dollars, *Page 415 payable in two months, and his note for a like sum, payable in three months, each payable to their order at the Yale National Bank. The defendant indorsed each of these notes in blank before Stevens delivered them to the plaintiffs. Afterwards the plaintiffs indorsed them, writing their names below that of the defendant. These notes were given by Stevens to the plaintiffs as a security for the loan by the plaintiffs of the sum therein mentioned, namely, of the sum to be raised by the discount of the above mentioned accommodation notes made by the plaintiffs. At each of the times when Stevens signed the notes, namely, on September 24th, when he signed the six months' note for two thousand dollars, and on April 2d, when he signed the two notes in renewal thereof (the indorsement of which is the subject of this suit), he and one of the plaintiffs were together at Stevens's office. Before the notes were delivered to the plaintiffs Stevens called the defendant into the office, and he then indorsed the notes in the presence of Stevens and the plaintiffs. There was no conversation in relation to the indorsements, nor was there any conversation between the defendant and the plaintiffs at any other time in relation thereto. There was no evidence of any agreement between them except such as the law imports from the blank indorsement which the defendant put upon the notes, as the same appears upon them, under the circumstances and upon the facts already detailed. Nor was there any other evidence that the defendant had any knowledge that his indorsement of the notes was, or was intended to be, a guaranty to the plaintiffs. There was no evidence that the defendant had any knowledge of the exchange of notes by the plaintiffs and Stevens. The notes of April 2d, 1885, were duly presented for payment at the bank but were not paid. Notice thereof was duly given to the defendant. The plaintiffs still own the notes and they are still wholly unpaid. At their maturity the maker was insolvent and without any property exempt from execution. These are the facts in brief as they are stated in the finding. The case, after a short explanation by the counsel for the defendant, was submitted to us *Page 416 on briefs, and the questions discussed relate to the liability of the defendant upon the facts found. The finding is slightly complicated. To simplify the matter we copy one of the notes with its indorsements, the other being precisely similar, except that it is payable three months after date.

"$1,000.        NEW HAVEN, CT., April 2d, 1885.

"Two months after date, I promise to pay to the order of I. S. Spencer's Sons one thousand dollars at Yale National Bank, value received, with interest. J. C. STEVENS."

(Indorsed.)

"CHAS. G. ALLERTON.

"I. S. SPENCER'S SONS."

In the year 1884 the legislature passed the following act: — "The blank indorsement of a negotiable or a non-negotiable note, by a person who is neither its maker nor its payee, before or after the indorsement of such note by the payee, shall import the contract of an ordinary indorsement of negotiable paper, as between such indorser and the payee or subsequent holders of such paper." Gen. Statutes, § 1860.

Before the passage of this act, by the law of this state as declared through a long line of decisions, fromBradley v. Phelps, 2 Root, 325, toAEtna National Bank v. Charter Oak LifeInsurance Co., 50 Conn., 167, the blank indorsement of either a negotiable or a non-negotiable note by a stranger to the note, implied, primâ facie, a contract on the part of the indorser that the note was due and payable according to its tenor; that the maker should be of ability to pay it when it came to maturity; and that it was collectible by the use of due diligence. And this was the law, it was held in the latter case above cited, whether the indorsement by the third party was for the better security of the payee or for the purpose of getting the note discounted. The same case, commenting upon our long established law on this subject, speaks of it as peculiar to this state, no part of the law-merchant, and the anomalous existence of which, eminent judges, while admitting, have regretted. The statute was doubtless intended to deliver our law from its anomalous position and bring it into harmony with the law-merchant *Page 417 as it is interpreted in the great commercial centers of our country with which we are connected in business transactions involving the daily exchange of notes, bills and all manner of negotiable securities.

The statute is before this court for the first time, and we have given it the consideration commensurate to its importance. Under it is at once apparent that the blank indorsement of a negotiable or non-negotiable note by a person who is neither its maker nor payee, whether before or after its indorsement by the payee, no longer imports a contract that the indorser will pay the note if, on the use of due diligence, it is not collected of the maker. It is no longer a contract of guaranty. But it imports, as between such indorser and the payee or subsequent holders thereof, a contract of an ordinary indorsement of negotiable paper, which is, by the law-merchant, a contract for payment conditioned on due presentment to the maker for payment and due notice of dishonor.

The full contract which the general commercial law implies from the indorsement of a negotiable promissory note on the part of the indorser, with and in favor of the indorsee and every subsequent holder to whom the note is transferred, is — (1) that the instrument itself and the antecedent signatures thereon are genuine; (2) that he, the indorser, has a good title to the instrument; (3) that he is competent to bind himself by the indorsement as indorser; (4) that the maker is competent to bind himself to the payment, and will, upon due presentment of the note, pay it at maturity, or when it is due; (5) that if, when duly presented, it is not paid by the maker, he, the indorser, will, upon due and reasonable notice given him of the dishonor, pay the same to the indorsee or other holder. Story on Prom. Notes, § 135.

Into this contract, under our statute, the indorser of a note, either negotiable or non-negotiable, though a stranger thereto, impliedly comes, as between himself and the payee or subsequent holder.

Thus far there is no difficulty and it is evident thatprimâ *Page 418 facie at least, the defendant is an ordinary indorser and not a guarantor of the notes.

But the facts in this case require us to consider the provision of the statute that the indorsement therein mentioned shall import a contract of ordinary indorsement between the parties named, whether it stand before or after the indorsement by the payee.

Here the plaintiffs indorsed the note after the defendant, and the order of their names upon it accords with the fact. Such an indorsement falls within what BIGELOW, J., inClapp v. Rice, 13 Gray, 403, calls "an anomalous class of cases," and which the text books generally call "irregular indorsements." It is impossible to harmonize the existing decisions in respect to the import of such an indorsement; they are very numerous, diverse and conflicting. Our statute may render much of the discussion of other jurisdictions valueless to us, except as a guide to its construction, if, upon examination, its language should appear ambiguous.

Does the statute, then, intend to go any further than simply to declare that, irrespective of the position of his name, a third person who puts his name on the back of a note is to be held as an ordinary indorser, and not as a guarantor? Or do the other provisions clearly indicate a purpose to leave no question open which would turn upon the relative position of the indorsements; and to provide that such third party, though indorsing before and above the payee, is, nevertheless, quoad him and subsequent holders, impliedly an indorser precisely in the order in which he stands upon the note?

We unhesitatingly incline to the latter construction.

The language of the statute standing by itself, and also as construed in the light of the greater weight of authority, seems to leave no room for doubt. Daniels, in his work on Negotiable Instruments, treating of the various decisions relating to the transfer of notes by indorsement, says, (sec. 713): — "When nothing appears but the instrument itself bearing a third person's name before the payee's, in a suit by the indorsee of the payee, the question next arises, what *Page 419 is to be presumed to have been the contract and liability of such a person? It will be presumed in the first place, from the fact that the name is before that of the payee in order, that it was placed there before his in point of time, and was placed upon the note in its inception with a view of strengthening its credit with the payee and inducing him to take it; and, for the reason that such third person never was the legal holder of the paper, it is held by a number of authorities that he cannot be deemed an indorser, and must be regarded, primâ facie, as a joint maker. By others it is held that he is primâ facie a surety or guarantor, using those terms as the equivalent of joint maker; others consider that he is primâfaice only secondarily liable as a guarantor; while very many regard him as assuming the liability of a second indorser." "But," says the author, (sec. 714,) "it would seem to us that such a party ought to be regarded asfirst indorser. If he intended to be second indorser he should have refrained from putting his name on the note until it was first indorsed by the payee. By placing it first he enables the payee to place his own afterwards; and primâ facie the facts would seem to indicate such intention. There is nothing in the objection that there is no title in him to indorse away. Prior parties could not be sued without the payee's indorsement; but he, being an indorser, can be sued by any one deriving title under him. In fact his position seems to render his liability strictly analogous to that of the drawer of a bill upon the maker in favor of the payee, and so to regard it simplifies, as it seems to us, a question which, unless such analogy be followed, is exceedingly complicated and difficult." "When, (sec. 716,) the note is sued upon by the payee, it is held that the idea of the party before him being bound as an indorser is excluded. But this doctrine does not seem to us correct. The indorsement, it is true, is an irregular one; but it is quite similar to a bill drawn by the indorser on the maker, and to follow that analogy in all regards seems to us the simplest and most reasonable solution of the question. And there are a number of cases which regard such a party's liability as primâ facie that of an indorser." *Page 420

Judge STORY, discussing the various decisions concerning irregular indorsements, says: — "When the note is negotiable and is indorsed in blank by a third person, not being the payee or a prior indorsee thereof, there, in the absence of any controlling proof, it is presumed that such person means to bind himself in the character of an indorser, and not otherwise, and precisely in the order and manner in which he stands on the note. If the note is not negotiable and the indorsement in blank is not a part of the original transaction, but subsequently made, then, in the absence of the like controlling proofs, it is deemed a mere guaranty) and the indorser liable only as guarantor." Story on Prom. Notes, § 480.

Randolph, in his recent treatise on Commercial Paper, goes extensively into the subject of irregular indorsements. Premising that it is a matter of frequent occurrence, in the United States especially, that one who is neither maker nor payee of a note places his name on the back of it at the time of its inception, he says the legal effect of such indorsements has been much discussed and variously decided. He discusses the numerous cases which follow the Massachusetts rule, and hold such indorser to be a joint maker, though now, by statute of 1882, he is entitled, like an indorser, to notice of dishonor; the also numerous cases which hold, as did our courts, such an indorser to be a guarantor; and the cases, in opposition to both of these views, which hold that such indorser contracts and becomes liable as an indorser, his position on the back of the note indicating that intention. In California and Dakota, he adds, (sec. 836,) "he is now by statute liable as an indorser to the payee. And so, by a recent statute in Connecticut, whether the note is negotiable or not, and whether he indorses before or after the payee." Randolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 829 et seq.

In Hall v. Newcomb, 7 Hill, 416, it was held that one who writes his name in blank on the back of a negotiable note before the payee indorses the same, is not liable as maker nor as guarantor. Thus says WOODRUFF, J., in Hahn v. Hull, 4 E. D. Smith, 670, overruling all the previous cases *Page 421 to that effect. It was also held in Hall v. Newcomb, that the person so writing his name could be held liable to such payee as indorser. Spies v. Grilmore, 1 Comst., 322, is to the same effect. InMoon v. Cross, 19 N. York, 227, it was held that one who, for the accommodation of the maker, indorses his note payable to the order of a third person, is liable thereon to such payee as indorser. In that case, as in the one at bar, the third party indorsed the paper before it was indorsed by the payee. Thus it would appear that in New York the result reached by our statute was reached through the courts instead of through the legislature. The authorities quoted, by showing the various positions which have been taken respecting the matter under consideration, throw light not only upon the presumed intention of the legislature in passing the statute and the interpretation which should be given it, but show also the impossibility of harmonizing our law, under any interpretation of it, with the law of all our neighboring states.

From this examination of the authorities we feel the more assured in holding that the defendant, in the case at bar, upon the showing of the note itself, is an ordinary indorser, and may be held as such by the plaintiff, who is payee, and whose name appears as an indorser subsequent to that of the defendant.

So much for the contract which the statute imports.

A third question remains, namely, whether the contract which the statute imports can be varied by parol evidence, and, if so, when and how? The general expressions scattered through our reports, consequent upon our peculiar law respecting the contract primâ facie implied by the indorsement of a note by a stranger, make it a little difficult to give an answer that shall at first sight appear consistent with some of our decisions, or rather with some of the expressions used in some of our decisions. Indeed, the principle involved has been variously decided in different jurisdictions and at different times in the same jurisdiction.

In Riddle v. Stevens, 32 Conn., 378, after stating the contract which the law implies from the blank indorsement of *Page 422 a note by a stranger, the case holds that this implication is however only primâ facie, and will yield to proof of the real character of the contract. Notes so indorsed, it says, have not the sanctity of ordinary negotiable paper and do not fall within the rules of the law-merchant; any person taking them, therefore, is put upon an inquiry as to the real character of the contract.

In Beckwith v. Angell, 6 Conn., 315, a third party wrote his name on the back of a non-negotiable note, under, as he claimed, a special parol agreement with the payee. It was decided that he might prove the special agreement when sued by the payee. The court said: — "The undertaking of an indorser is always collateral, unless made otherwise by a special agreement. But the defendant was not an indorser; because he was neither promisee nor indorsee. His contract was therefore necessarily special and whatever the parties chose to make it."

It appears from these and other cases which might be cited, that parol evidence has been admitted to prove the real contract entered into by a third party when he made a blank indorsement of a note, because such blank indorsement onlyprimâ facie implied a contract of guaranty; and because, being anomalous and not the ordinary indorsement recognized by the law-merchant, it possessed none of its sanctity, but was its own sufficient notice of its irregularity.

But our courts have not failed to recognize and uphold the sanctity of a regular indorsement. The law on that subject was admirably stated by BUTLER, C. J., inDale v. Geer, 38 Conn., 15. That case held "that the contract implied by law from a blank indorsement of a negotiable note before its maturity by the payee, is as certain and absolute as if written out in full, and parol evidence is not admissible to contradict it. This rule is applicable between indorser and indorsee, and it is not competent for the former to prove a cotemporaneous naked agreement that an unrestricted in dorsement should be operative as a restricted one only, in bar of an action by the latter." "There are," says the opinion, "four classes of cases, in which, as exceptional *Page 423 cases, and as between the original parties, indorser and indorsee, any relation, antecedent agreement, or state of facts, from which a controlling equity arises, may be pleaded and proved by parol in bar of an action on the warranty. Thus the relation of principal and agent may be shown, for the agent takes no title or warranty from the indorser, but holds as agent. So, secondly, it may be shown that the note was indorsed to the holder for some special purpose, and is holden in trust, as where it is indorsed and delivered for collection merely. * * * Thirdly, the relation of principal and surety may be shown, and that the indorsement was made at the request and for the accommodation of the immediate indorsee; for the equity of the relation forbids the enforcement of the contract. Such was the case ofCase v. Spaulding, 24 Conn., 578. So, fourthly, it may be shown that there was an equity arising from an antecedent transaction, including an agreement that the note should be taken in sole reliance on the responsibility of the maker, and that it was indorsed in order to transfer the title in pursuance of such agreement, and that the attempt to enforce it is a fraud. Such wasDowner v. Chesebrough, 36 Conn., 39. These exceptions illustrate the rule."

In Allen v. Rundle, 45 Conn., 528, the defendants had signed a writing on the back of the note as follows: — "For value received we jointly and severally guarantee the within note good and collectible until paid." Held, that it could not be shown by parol that the defendants, though in form guarantors, in fact undertook thereby to obligate themselves to pay the note. Nor that they made at the time a verbal promise to pay the debt. The court says: — "There is an anomalous class of cases where a third person, neither payee nor maker, puts his name on the back of a note before its indorsement by the payee, where by parol evidence such person may be held liable either as original promisor, guarantor or indorser, according to the nature of the transaction and the understanding of the parties." (Citing cases). "But in all these cases the indorsement is in blank and there is no written contract, and none is definitely implied *Page 424 by law from the indorsement. In cases of blank indorsements, where the contract is implied by law, it has the same effect as if written, and parol evidence is not admissible to contradict or vary it. The Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in the recent case of Allen v. Brown,124 Mass., 77, held that parol evidence was not admissible to show that indorsers who indorsed a promissory note before delivery to the payee, were accommodation indorsers and sureties only."

In Story on Promissory Notes, sec. 146, note 1, many cases are cited to the point that the contract implied by law, from a regular indorsement, is as certain as if it were expressed in writing, and parol evidence is not admitted to vary it. To the same effect see Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 717, et seq. In Randolph on Commercial Paper, where much attention is given to the subject throughout the work, it is stated, sec. 778, that most authorities hold that the implications and intendments which the law-merchant has attached to blank indorsements of negotiable commercial paper, render them express and complete contracts which cannot be explained or varied by parol. See also Parsons on Notes Bills, vol. 2, chap. 1, sec. 6, page 23.

Now, under our statute, the blank indorsement of a negotiable or non-negotiable note, by a person who is neither its maker nor its payee, before or after the indorsement of such note by the payee, can no longer be classed as an anomalous or irregular indorsement, nor will the rules applicable to such indorsements any longer apply. They cease to exist as the reason for them ceases. By the very terms and force of the statute such an indorsement becomes, to all intents, a regular, ordinary indorsement, and the rules applicable to the regular indorsement of negotiable paper apply.

Evidently, then, the judgment rendered by the court below for the plaintiffs in this case was correct. The defendant's case comes within none of the exceptions named inDale v. Geer, supra. It comes nearest to the third exception. But in the case ofCase v. Spaulding, 24 Conn., 578, given as an example of what was covered by that exception, the note was only apparently commercial paper, regularly indorsed. *Page 425 In fact the defendant, a stranger to the note, indorsed it in blank at the request of the plaintiff, who afterwards indorsed it over the defendant's name and procured it to be discounted at the bank. As between the parties it was the case of a note indorsed in blank by a stranger, theprimâ facie import of which was that the indorser would pay it if it could not be collected of the maker by the use of due diligence. But the law permitted the defendant to show the real contract, and he proved that his indorsement was intended as security for the bank only, and was made because the bank would not discount the note for the plaintiff on the security of the maker alone, but required an indorser. So the plaintiff, who was the payee, and the first indorser in order of names, though second in order of time, failed to recover.

In the case at bar the defendant indorsed the notes in the presence of their maker and the plaintiffs before they were delivered. There was no conversation at that time in relation to such indorsement, nor ever any between the plaintiffs and defendant in relation thereto, nor any evidence of any agreement between them different from that which the law imports from the blank indorsement of the defendant under the circumstances stated. Such circumstances certainly indicate that the indorsement was made for the security of the plaintiffs.

At their maturity the notes were duly presented for payment, but were not paid. Due notice of their dishonor was given to the defendant, and subsequently this suit was brought. We see no sufficient reason why, under the statute, the defendant must not be held as an ordinary indorser of negotiable paper.

As the law now stands, if a party intends to contract only as second indorser, he should see to it that the location of his name accords with such intention. If he intends to contract as guarantor or to make any different contract from that of an ordinary indorser, he should write it out above his signature.

There is no error in the judgment appealed from.