Ewing v. Anderson
Ewing v. Anderson
Opinion of the Court
On May 4, 1861, the defendant Anderson guaranteed the payment of a note made for the ■purpose of being discounted, and which was discounted by ■the Bank of Tennessee at Nashville. The note was not paid at maturity, and the defendant became liable as guarantor. The assets of the Bank of Tennessee were conveyed, •after the war, to S. Watson in trust, who filed his bill in this court for the administration of the trust, and continued to act as trustee until his death, last year, when the complainant, Ewing, became receiver of the bank assets. The ■note guaranteed by defendant Anderson came to the hands of Watson as trustee under the assignment. Anderson made payments on it from time to time, and, on November 27, 1872, executed a note, with his co-defendant, Dodd, as ^surety, payable on April 1st next thereafter, to S. Watson, trustee of the Bank of Tennessee, for $75, the unpaid balance of the original note, the payment of which he had .guaranteed. On April 10, 1877, Anderson tendered to Ewing, as receiver, into whose hands the note had come as part of the assets of the Bank of Tennessee, the full amount then due upon the note, in the new issue of the Bank of Tennessee. The question submitted to me is whether the teuder in such notes was legal.
By the thirtieth section of the General Banking Act of ■this state, of February.6, 1860, it is provided thus: “ In -case of the insolvency of any bank or banking association,
It is an elementary principle of commercial law, that the-same defence which the defendant might make to an action by an indorsee of the note given by him, and the same requirement of proof, may be made by him on a renewal of a former note, both notes being regarded as given on the-same consideration. 1 Dan. on Neg. Inst., sec. 177. A new note given for one which was without consideration is equally without consideration. Id., sec. 179. So, if consideration be illegal. Id., sec. 205. Even if given upon an award made-under an order of court. Haley v. Long, Peck, 93 ; Tain v. Headerick, 4 Coldw. 337. The tender was undoubtedly" good.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.