Yellowstone National Bank v. Gagnon

Hunt, J.

In considering the question presented by this appeal, it must be remembered throughout that the single note over which this controversy arises — that is, the note for $2,392.75 — was indorsed to the plaintiff by Nickey simply as collateral security for a debt of $1,200, due the bank by Nickey. It is upon this note that the plaintiff maintains a right to recover for the fáce thereof unconditionally and in all events, without reference to the debt of Nickey intended to be secured thereby.

Much space in the brief and argument of the respondent’s counsel is devoted to supporting the proposition that an indorsee of a negotiable promissory note, taking the note in good faith, as collateral security. for an antecedent debt, and with no other consideration, is entitled to be regarded as a holder of such paper for value, and consequently unaffected by an equitable and valid defense of the maker against the payee.

But we do not understand that the appellant disputes that general proposition of law. Ever since the decision of the supreme court of the United States in the case of Railroad Co. v. National Bank, 102 U. S. 14, reafSianing the doctrine established by that court in Swift v. Tyson, 16 Pet. 1, and reviewing the English and American authorities at length, it may be affirmed as a result of the best cases that the transfer of negotiable paper before maturity as collateral for a preexisting debt merely, without other circumstances, ‘ ‘if the paper be so indorsed that the holder becomes a party to the instrument, although the transfer is without express agreement by the creditor for indulgence,” is within the usual course *405of commercial business, as much as would be its transfer in payment of such debt. “In either case,” said Justice Harlan, “the bona fide holder is unaffected by equities or defenses between prior parties, of which he had no notice. ’ ’

Applying the principle just stated to the pleadings in the case before us, we find that the indorsement of the note by Nickey to the bank, as a collateral security for his own preexisting debt, was upon a sufficiently valuable consideration for the transfer to bring the case within the rule which protects the holder of negotiable paper, and entitles the bank to the full benefit of the security. And we now are brought to the real question raised by the appellant, but which has to some extent been lost sight of by the respondent.

The facts pleaded show that Nickey only owed the bank f1,200 and interest at the time he transferred the Gagnon note for 82,392.75, to it as collateral security, and that the defendant, who was the original maker of the note, has an equitable claim against Nickey, growing out of some partnership relations that existed between them.

The question, therefore, is not whether the bank is a bona fide holder at all, but to what extent is it to be regarded as a bona fide holder for value, and how much may it recover upon such note delivered to it as collateral security only ?

The degree of protection to which the bank is justly entitled is, in our opinion, controlled by the amount of the preexisting debt of the payee of the note to the bank, or tbe extent of the obligation to secure which the note was passed as collateral.

Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (section 832a) expresses the rule in this language:

“When it appears that the bill or note was acquired by the holder as collateral security for a debt, and he is deemed entitled to recover upon it, he is still limited to the amount of the debt which it secures, if there be a valid defense against his transferror being regarded as, at all events, a bona fide holder, and entitled to stand upon a better footing only pro tanto. Thus, such a holder could recover against an accom*406modation party no more than the consideration actually advanced; but, in the absence of proof, he will be deemed to have advanced the full amount of the paper. ’ ’

The pledgee of the note is fully protected against loss by its right to recover the full amount of the debt due to it by the payee. Its rights are preserved, which is all it may reasonably ask.

This general principle was recognized over 50 years ago in the case of Williams v. Smith, 2 Hill 301, where the court after declaring that a person to whom a promissory note was transferred.before due as collateral security for indorsements to be made to him, which were afterwards made, and who took the note without notice of a defense existing against it in the hands of the person from whom he received it, was entitled to be treated as a bona fide holder, decided, however, that, inasmuch as the person who took the note received it as collateral security, he could recover no more than the amount remaining due on the principal demand.

This doctrine was followed in the early case of Valette v. Mason, 1 Smith (Ind.) 89. That was an action in assumpsit by an assignee against the makers of a promissory note. The defendants pleaded that the note was assigned to the plaintiff only as collateral security for certain money lent and advanced to the payee. It was decided, as in' the case of Williams v. Smith, cited above, that the holder of commercial paper assigned as collateral security is entitled to be regarded as a holder for a valuable consideration, and is not bound by equities existing between the payee and the makers which would interfere with the collection of his debt, but that in a suit on such paper the holder is not entitled to recover more than the debt actually due to him, if any part of it has been previously paid, or if there is no good consideration as between the original parties.

Chief Justice Shaw, in Stoddard v. Kimball, 6 Cush. 469, briefly discussed the question of what amount the holder of a promissory note, as indorsee, had a right to recover of the maker where the note was negotiated to the plaintiff as col*407lateral security for a debt due to him. He was of the opinion that, the plaintiff having taken the note to secure a pre-existing debt of a less amount, was holder for value in his own right only to the amount of the debt due him.

In Youngs v. Lee, 18 Barb. 187, it was also decided that the bona fide purchaser and holder of a note was entitled to recover the amount paid for it, ‘ ‘with interest, and no more. ’'

Colebrooke on Collateral Securities (section 92) cites several of the cases just referred to, and deduces the following text from them :

“Where negotiable promissory notes, pledged as collateral security, are accommodation paper, without consideration, or subject to an equitable set-off, or, in cases of misappropriation, as between the makers and payees and indorsers thereof, and the collateral securities are of greater amount than the loan represented by the principal evidence of indebtedness, the recovery of the pledgee against the makers upon an action thereon is limited to the amount of his advances. The pledgee in such cases of fraud is a holder for value of the collateral note, as against the makers of such paper, to the extent only of his interest at the time he acquires the title or has notice of the defenses to it.”

This doctrine is also followed in Bank v. Barnett, 27 La. Ann. 177.

In Fisher v. Fisher, 98 Mass. 303, the court affirmed the case of Stoddard v. Kimball, heretofore cited, and held that where the evidence established the fact that the plaintiffs received the note from .the holder before its maturity, without any knowledge of the circumstances under which the defendants had delivered it to the payee, or the purpose for which the latter delivered it to the holder, and where it was shown that it was held by the plaintiffs as collateral security for a valid debt due from the holder to them, plaintiffs, as bona fide holders for value and without notice, could recover “to the extent of their debt for which the note was pledged as collateral security.”

In Huff v. Wagner, 63 Barb. 215, the court sustained the *408principle that “a bona fide holder of commercial paper, to which, as between the maker and payee, there is a good defense, is entitled to be protected only to the extent of the value which he has paid. ’ ’ The court there further said :

‘ ‘The protection of the holder for value in such cases, as in other cases where the law protects bona fide purchasers against latent claims, is founded upon the idea of protecting such bona fide purchasers for value against any possible loss. And this is the precise reason why a bona fide holder of such paper, which has been transferred to him to secure an antecedent debt, cannot recover against the party who has been defrauded, namely, that he has lost nothing by his reliance upon the face of the paper. ’ ’

The supreme court of New Jersey, in Duncan v. Gilbert, 29 N. J. Law 521, followed a like doctrine, and said : “It is certainly true that the holders of accommodation paper assigned as collateral security, can recover against the accommodation maker and indorser no more than the consideration actually advanced. ’ ’

In a very able review of the decisions upon the question of whether a person situated as was the plaintiff in the case at bar is entitled to the position of a holder of negotiable paper for value, and therefore not affected by the defense of want of consideration to the maker, the court of appeals of Maryland, through Chief Justice Alvey, also decided that all the plaintiff in such a case can recover is the amount due on the debt for which the note has been taken as collateral security. “In such case, ’ ’ said the chief justice, ‘ ‘while the plaintiff is entitled to be treated as a holder for value, it is only so to the extent necessary to protect the debts intended to be secured.” (Maitland v. Bank, 40 Md. 540.)

Tiedeman on Commercial Paper (section 304) states that, where the pledge of a negotiable note is made for the purpose of securing the payment of a debt, the better rule is that the pledgee can recover the whole of the face value of the note, and hold the balance over and above the amount of his own claim as a trustee for the pledgor. It would seem, therefore, *409as if he took a different view of the law from that taken by Daniel, although he expressly states in a subsequent part of his text that the pledgee in siich a case is a bona fide holder only in respect to the amount of his claim against the pledgor; and, if there be a good defense to an action on the collateral by the pledgor, the recovery of the pledgee is limited to the amount of his claim against the pledgor. But we think that, if the pledgee is to be regarded in such a case (as he undoubtedly should be) as a bona fide holder only to the amount of his claim against the pledgor, and if he be limited in his recovery to the amount of his claim, it is most reasonable that the controversy over the balance be litigated by those directly interested, and that ordinarily the pledgee is not to be held as a trustee for the pledgor.

We are aware that there is a contradiction of opinion as to the attitude of the pledgee who seeks to recover the full amount of the collateral where such amount is in excess of the debt secured to him; but we are content to adopt the rule sustained by the decisions already cited, which limit his recovery to the amount due to him. In addition to the cases above cited, we may include Steere v. Benson, 2 Ill. App. 560, and Bank v. Hemingray, 34 Ohio St. 381.

A recent case upon this subject is that of Farmers' State Bank v. Blevins, 46 Kan. 536, 26 Pac. 1044. There the court stated the question substantially as follows:

In an action against the maker of the notes which had been transferred before maturity to an innocent and bona fide holder as collateral security for an indebtedness existing between the payee of such notes and the indorsee, is the indorsee entitled to recover against the maker to the full amount of such collateral notes, where such amount exceeds the indebtedness which they were transferred to secure, without regard to any defenses that may exist between the original parties to such notes, or is in such case the right of the plaintiff to recover limited to the amount of the principal debt ? In that case, as in the one before us, equitable defenses were made by the pleadings; and it appeared that there was a controversy be*410tween the maker and the payee of the notes, by which it appeared that the paper was subject to equitable set-offs between the maker and payee. The court answered the- question by holding ‘ ‘that the doctrine that the pledgee cannot recover more than the amount of the debt of the pledgor is in accord with natural justice,” and that, while it hesitated to state that as a rule, yet it did not think that any other rule ought to be applied without great caution. We are impressed with the reasoning in the Kansas case, and believe it correct in principle, as well as more practical, and well founded by the several decisions relied upon in the opinion of that court and the additional authorities above referred to by us.

There is another point made by the supreme court of Kansas in their decision which is applicable in this case as well. We think that the payee of the note, Nickey, ought to have been made a party to this litigation. Although the bank, under the views that we have taken of the law applicable to its rights, really has no interest in the controversy between Nickey and Gagnon, yet it would be eminently proper that the whole controversy be settled in this one action, and that the rights of all parties be determined. As was asid by the supreme court of Kansas in the case above cited: ‘ ‘At the commencement of this action to recover on the notes as pledgee, the bank ought to have made Brady a party. He was the payee of the notes sued upon. He had transferred them by indorsement to the bank, who claims to be an innocent holder for value. Even after Blevins filed his answer, setting up his various defenses as against Brady, and the knowledge of the bank of these equitable defenses, the bank, for protection against Brady, ought to have made Brady a party, as it now insists upon a recovery for the full amount of the notes; and yet it is shown that Brady’s pre-existing indebtedness to the bank is less than the face of the notes and interest. As Brady was not a party then, and is not now, he will not be bound by the decision of this court on the question presented. ’ ’

We think the case at bar is one where the court might properly order the payee of the note to, be made a party, and *411that in the further conduct of the case this ought to be done, provided the pleadings remain as they are.

It follows, therefore, that the motion for judgment on the pleadings was improperly granted. The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court, with direction to overrule said motion, and to proceed according to the views expressed herein.

Reversed and Reminded.

Pemberton, C. J., and Buck, J., concur.