Lawrence County Bank v. Arndt

BuNN, C. J.

This suit was instituted on a promissory note on the 16th February, 1899, and on the pleadings and testimony in the ease the cause was transferred to equity, judgment was rendered for the defendants, and plaintiff appealed.

The plaintiff is an incorporated bank, doing business at Walnut Ridge, in Lawrence county in this state,' and'the defendants are citizens of said place, who made their promissory note to the bank, of which the following is a copy, -to-wit:

“$1,540.
“Ninety days after date we or either of ns promise to pay to the Lawrence County Bank fifteen hundred and forty dollars, negotiable and payable at the Lawrence County Bank, Walnut Ridge,’ Ark., for value received, with interest at ten per cent, per annum after maturity until paid. The drawers and indorsers severally waive presentation for payment, protest and notice of protest, and nonpayment of this note.
[Signed] “EL ARNDT, President,
“J. M. Phelps, Yice President, “BeN0\ F. GRAPE, Secretary,
“S. 0. Dowell, Treasurer.”

Payment of interest to November 1, 1898, amounting to $83, was indorsed on the note. No other payments were made, and the prayer was for judgment for the $1,540, and interest from 1st November, 1898.

The defendants answered, averring that the note was. in fact hut a renewal note, of two pre-existing notes aggregating the same amount, which the Walnut Ridge Manufacturing Company, another corporation of the same place, owed said bank, and that the defendants executed the same for no other consideration than to take up and renew said two notes and old indebtedness, and that they did not execute the note sued on in their individual capacities, nor was it the intention of the parties to it that they should be held individually liable for the same, but that, on the contrary, as the terms set opposite their signatures indicate, they executed the same as officers and directors of said Manufacturing Company, to bind said company alone; that the note was executed at the instance and request of said J. M. Phelps, who was the president of said hank, and at the same time vice president of said company, and that it was perfectly understood among them all at the time, and so expressed, that the note was to be regarded as the obligation of the Manufacturing Company, executed by the defendants as its officers and agents, and not otherwise. The two notes, of which the note sued on is claimed to be a renewal, appear, in the record as having been similar in language to the one sried on, and signed, by persons designated as president and treasurer, and others writing without official designation. The testimony in the case goes to show that the consideration of all these notes was an indebtedness originally of the Manufacturing Company, evidenced by note and renewed from time to time from an indefinite time past.

The sole question necessary to be considered in this case is, whether a note expressed in the language of the one sued on, and signed as it was, is subject to be explained by parol testimony.

It will be observed that the Walnut Bidge Manufacturing Company is nowhere referred to in the bodjr of the note as the payer or obligor; nor is it referred to, in connection with the signers of the note, as a company of which they were officers and directors, nor otherwise. There is, in fact, nothing on the face of the note, nor connected with the signatures, which has any reference to said Manufacturing Company, which is sought to be made the obligor by the defendants. Therefore a suit on the note as this is could' have no reference to said company, unless by extraneous averments, as made in defendants’ answer herein.

The rule, as laid down in all the works of the text writers, and supported by all the decisions (with a few exceptions, and they only apparently exceptions), is that such a note is the note of the signers, individually, and not of the body or company they claim to represent, and that parol evidence is not admissible to explain the intention of the parties, and show the same to have been different from that expressed in the language of the note itself. In stating the principle, it may be well, however, to say that any reference, however slight, to the alleged obligor company in the body of the note, or in the official designation of the signers, would be sufficient to let in proof of the real intention of the parties, but the difficulty in this case is that there is nothing on the face of the note, or connected with the signatures, to indicate that the Manufacturing Company had any connection with the transaction whatever. That being true, parol testimony to show such connection is inadmissible under the rule, however hard that rule may appear to be; and the rule is in equity the same as at law. Tiede-man, Commercial Paper, § 123, and note thereunder, and corresponding sections in Daniel, Neg. Inst.; Randolph on Commercial Paper, and all text writers on the subject.

The case having been determined in the court below contrary to this rule, the decree is reversed, with directions to render judgment for the plaintiff.