Goldman v. Goldberger
Goldman v. Goldberger
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff in error and defendant in error were respectively plaintiff and defendant below. The action is for moneys paid by plaintiff by reason of his indorsement of a note given to the Citizens’ Savings Bank, of Detroit, Mich., by the Globe Brass Works as principal maker, and indorsed by plaintiff and defendant. Upon the trial verdict was directed for defendant. The facts
Defendant, who was a creditor of the Globe Brass Company, purchased its assets under statutory receiver’s sale for $20,000. For the purpose of making payment of the purchase price, he borrowed from an Indiana bank $5,000, borrowing the remaining $15,000 from the Citizens’ Savings Bank. He gave the latter bank his notes for $15,-000, also a bond to pay the bank (which was a creditor of the Brass Company) the difference between the bank’s claim and the dividends which should be paid by the receiver, securing the notes and the bond by a chattel mortgage upon all the corporate assets of the Brass Company so purchased, as well as by an assignment to the bank of the dividends receivable by defendant on his claim against the Brass Company. The evidence tended to show that defendant then proposed to sell to plaintiff (who had been an unsuccessful bidder for the Brass Company’s assets) one-half of those assets for $10,000, being one-half of the amount bid therefor by defendant, later proposing to let plaintiff have a one-third interest at $6,666.66, and to sell to one Matthews a one-quarter interest and to one Graham a one-twelfth interest at an aggregate price of $6,666.67; that this later proposition was accepted and a new corporation organized, plaintiff advancing the funds and materials for operation, amounting to $3,536.45, for which the new corporation (the Globe Brass Works) gave plaintiff its note; that plaintiff paid the purchase price of his share by giving to defendant the note of the Brass Works mentioned, a note of one Prince for $2,-500, both being indorsed by plaintiff, and his own note for $630.21, all bearing interest. The latter two notes were paid in full. The former was ultimately paid in part by the Brass Works. The subject of plaintiff’s liability as indorser upon the Brass Works note so turned out to. defendant is not involved in this review.
Graham and Matthews gave defendant their individual notes for the purchase price of their respective shares of the corporate kssets. Arrangement was thereafter made by which the bank discharged its chattel mortgage, talcing the note of the Brass Works for $12,000 (which included the deficiency on the bank’s claim against the Brass Company), indorsed by plaintiff and defendant; the defendant being in form the first indorser and the plaintiff the second indorser, and the Prince note and defendant’s claim against the receiver being also pledged as collateral. Defendant then gave the Brass Works a bill of sale of the old Brass Company’s assets, with full warranty of title. There was testimony tending to show that, in consideration of plaintiff’s indorsement, defendant agreed to personally pay the note given the bank, using for the purpose, so far as necessary, the notes of Graham and Matthews. The note to the bank was not paid at maturity, and thereafter two successive renewals were had, through direct relations between defendant and the Brass Works. Both these renewals were indorsed by plaintiff and defendant, but in the opposite order from the indorsement upon the first note; that is to say, plaintiff appeared in form the first indorser and defendant the second indorser. Plaintiff testified he did not see the renewals after their indorsement
As already stated, this suit is to recover the net amounts paid by plaintiff upon the judgment, the principal of such payments amounting to upwards of $5,000. The direction of verdict for defendant was upon the grounds that presumptively plaintiff and defendant were liable as indorsers in the order of their indorsement; that this presumption can only be overcome by proof of an agreement between them overthrowing the presumption arising from the order of indorsement; that while there was evidence that defendant agreed, when the original note was indorsed, that he would take care of the note, his obligation was not thereby extended, because he was only agreeing to do what the order of indorsement imported he must do; that there is no evidence that defendant made further agreements with plaintiff regarding their relative responsibility on the note; and thus that the presumption afforded by the order of indorsements on the renewal note was controlling.
“As respects one another, indorsers are liable prima facie in the order in which they indorse; but evidence is admissible to show that as between or among themselves they have agreed otherwise.”
Such is the generally accepted rule in the absence of statute. The burden is, of course, upon plaintiff to show the alleged agreement.
We think the plaintiff’s evidence, if believed, would have justified a finding of an implied agreement that the arrangement made when the original note was indorsed should continue with respect to renewals, and that the change in the order of indorsements occurred through a mistake of fact on his part or through the actual fraud of defendant. True, there was evidence that when the original note matured defendant asked the Brass Works to have plaintiff indorse the renewal note, as well as to sign it as treasurer, and to indicate where he desired defendant to indorse; but there is no evidence that plaintiff ever so indicated, as indeed there would seem no occasion' for his doing, if ignorant that the order of indorsement had any significance. Nor is there any affirmative evidence that plaintiff was informed of such request. But, even had he been so informed, a failure to so indicate is not necessarily fatal to, or even inconsistent with, his claim that the original agreement still continued.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered. .
Reference
- Full Case Name
- GOLDMAN v. GOLDBERGER
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published