Payette National Bank v. Ingard

BUDGE, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note for $1,776.55, given by appellants to respondent on June 10, 1915.

In their answer appellants admit the execution and delivery of the note, but allege that there was no consideration therefor; that respondent falsely and fraudulently represented to them that if they would give said note it would not look to them for payment; and that relying on said representation they executed and delivered the note as an accommodation to respondent.

*298From the record it appears that respondent is a banking corporation at Payette, and appellants were officers and directors of the Fruitland State Bank at Fruitland; that the latter bank had made two loans to one Shearer, one for $2,500 and another for $1,700, but being unable to carry both loans had transferred the $1,700 note to respondent by indorsement without recourse; that this note was renewed several times in the same manner; that when said note fell due on June 10, 1915, respondent charged the amount of the note with interest to the account of the Fruitland State Bank, to which the cashier of the latter bank objected; that on June 15, 1915, three officers of respondent bank met appellants, as directors of the Fruitland State Bank, and after a discussion of the Shearer note, appellants gave respondent the note sued upon.

Respondent was permitted over objection to introduce evidence that the cashier of the Fruitland State Bank, at the time the latter bank transferred the first Shearer note to respondent, orally agreed with respondent that the Fruit-land State Bank would guarantee the note, and that the note now sued upon was given in consideration of forbearance to sue the Fruitland State Bank upon this oral agreement; while appellants contend that respondent’s officers represented to them that the State Bank Examiner would not permit them to continue to carry the Shearer note, that they could not afford to charge it off without making an assessment, that appellants should help them out by giving them the note now sued upon, and that they would never be called upon to pay it.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury and from a judgment in favor of respondent, this appeal is taken.

Appellants make two assignments of error; first,- that the court erred in permitting the introduction of testimony as to the alleged oral agreement that the Fruitland State Bank would guarantee the payment of the Shearer note, thus varying the terms of the written contract between the parties, and, second, that the court erred in finding that the note sued upon was given for a valuable consideration.

*299The general rule is that parol evidence is not admissible to vary or contradict an indorsement without recourse. (4 A. L. R. 794, note IV.)

In Youngberg v. Nelson, 51 Minn. 172, 38 Am. St. 497, 53 N. W. 629, the defendant transferred the promissory note of a third party to plaintiff by indorsement “without recourse,” and the only question considered was whether evidence of a contemporaneous oral guaranty of payment was admissible. The court held that: “The indorsement of commercial paper, ‘without recourse,’ creates an express and complete contract, which cannot be varied or contradicted by parql,evidence of a contemporaneous agreement by which the indorser undertook to be liable, as guarantor, for the payment of the instrument.”

See, also, Odom Realty Co. v. Central Trust Co., 22 Ga. App. 711, 97 S. E. 116, Cross v. Hollister, 47 Kan. 652, 28 Pac. 693, and Smith v. Barner, 95 Or. 486, 188 Pac. 216.

There is no showing of fraud or mistake in the giving of the indorsement involved in this case, and it must, therefore, be presumed that the whole engagement on the subject covered by the indorsement was reduced to writing.

With respect to the second assignment of error, there are but two considerations presented under the facts of this case: First, was the note now sued upon given in payment of the obligation, alleged to be due respondent by reason of the transfer of the Shearer note to it by the Fruitland State Bank? or, second, was it given in consideration of forbearance on the part of respondent to sue the Fruitland State Bank upon the Shearer note?

By its indorsement without recourse, the Fruitland State Bank became the mere assignor of the title of the instrument to respondent, specifically declining to assume any responsibility for its payment. No obligation existed, therefore, on the part of the Fruitland State Bank to pay the Shearer note, nor was any cause of action shown against it thereon.

*300Under sneh circumstances, we think the correct rule is that a demand that has no real existence is no consideration for the note of a third party given in discharge thereof. (Bullock v. Ogburn, 13 Ala. 346; L. R. A. 1197C, note p. 843; 8 C. J., sec. 354, p. 219, sec. 367, pp. 231, 232, note 67, and sec. 373, p. 238.

In the case of Pacific Rys. Advertising Co. v. Carr, 29 Cal. App. 722, 157 Pac. 529, defendant had agreed to assume an alleged indebtedness theretofore incurred by the Amritam Company (of which she was a stockholder), under an unauthorized contract, it having been represented to her that the obligation was binding upon the company. In the course of its opinion the court said:

“Conceding the contract was not an obligation of the Amritam Company, as to which there seems to be no doubt, . . . . the consideration for her note was the purported obligation of the company upon this contract; but there was no obligation, either express or implied. This being true, it cannot be said there was any consideration for the execution of the note sued upon. Clearly, if suit had been brought upon the contract against the Amritam Company, no recovery could have been had thereon upon a showing of the facts here presented; and, if there was nothing upon which to base an action against the Amritam Company, it must follow that plaintiff in releasing the company from liability which did not exist suffered no prejudice by reason thereof. . . . . Neither is the release of a purported claim against one upon whom there rests no legal .... obligation to pay the same a sufficient consideration for a third party’s promise to pay such nonenforceable claim.”

As is stated in 9 Cyc. 341, it is clear that:

“If the right is not doubtful there is no consideration, for there is neither benefit to the promisor nor detriment to the promisee, and therefore forbearance or a promise to forbear to insist on a claim clearly unenforceable cannot be a consideration.”

*301See, also, Bank of Ontario v. Hoskins, 33 Mont. 306, 83 Pac. 493.

The theory of respondent’s whole case is that the note sued upon was given in fulfilment of the oral agreement of guaranty that the Shearer note would be paid, even though indorsed to respondent without recourse. There is, therefore, no merit in the suggestion made in respondent’s brief that appellants repurchased the Shearer note by giving therefor the note sued upon. The conduct of the parties clearly negatives any such conclusion.

From what has been said it follows that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed, and it is so ordered. Costs are awarded to appellants.

McCarthy and Lee, JJ., concur.