McLean v. Bryer
McLean v. Bryer
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff sues as holder of two notes, one for the sum of $200, payable on demand to Thomas B. Gory, dated May 1, 1899 ; the second for the sum of $400, payable to said Cory on demand with interest, dated July 24, 1899.
The defence was that, as the notes were taken by the plaintiff so long after their issue, he took them as notes overdue ' and subject to equities between the parties, the special equity relied on being payments made as principal which had been credited as interest, amounting in all to enough to pay the notes with interest at the legal rate.
■ Upon this defence the question was whether there was an agreement on the part of Mr. Bryer to pay interest on said notes at the rate of five per cent, per month.
As to the first note, for $200, the defendant, Mrs. Bryer, was a joint maker, the note having been given prior to the negotiable instruments act, Pub. Laws cap. 674, which went into effect July 1, 1899. Carpenter v. McLaughlin, 12 R. I. 270 ; Perkins v. Barstow, 6 R. I. 606.
The note was taken by the plaintiff eighteen months after
But, unlike previous cases, this note was kept alive by continuous payments of monthly interest to the original payee, and to this plaintiff after he took the note.
Mrs. Bryer testified' that she signed the note for her husband’s accommodation, who has died since the trial, leaving her the sole defendant ; that she expected to' pay the principal as she could ; that she left the payment of interest to her husband, and that any arrangement he made about the interest was satisfactory to her. Under these circumstances, the note cannot be considered as overdue at the time of transfer.
In Bacon v. Harris, 15 R. I. 599, the defendant was an accommodation maker of a note, which bore indorsements of interest paid to a time beyond the sale of the note to the plaintiff. The court held that the question should have been left to the jury whether Mrs. Harris, the defendant, knew of, assented to, or ratified such payments of interest, thereby implying that if she did the note could not be regarded as overdue.
Upon the first note the verdict for the defendant was wrong, and contrary to the substantial instructions of the court.
(3) It also shows that the maker of the notes knew that when he paid his money it was received and applied as interest, without protest on his part. He is therefore estopped from setting up afterwards that the payments were made on the principal. Draper v. Horton, 22 R. I. 592 ; Pettis v. Ray, 12 R. I. 344. It cannot be assumed that the holder of the note would have allowed it to run so long if he had known that the rate of interest was disputed. Mr. Bryer evidently had doubt about this when he gave his reason for not disputing the interest that he ‘ ‘ didn’t want a rupture ” and was fearful that Cory might foreclose the chattel mortgage. “A person is estopped to set up the truth in contradiction to his conduct, so as to make the truth an instrument of fraud.” East Greenwich Inst. v. Kenyon, 20 R. I. 110. Moreover, Mr. Bryer’s claim that a man whose business was letting money at high rates of interest, even though he was a friend, would loan money for whatever the debtor might see fit to pay him, under an agreement that might run twenty months, is too contrary to common business transactions and too inconsistent with the conduct of the parties in this case to be credible.
Upon the second note, also, the verdict for the defendant was clearly against the evidence.
New trial granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.