Citation Numbers: 22 N.Y.S. 610, 68 Hun 100, 75 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 100, 52 N.Y. St. Rep. 226
Judges: Brien
Filed Date: 3/17/1893
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The action was brought to recover upon promissory notes made by the defendants to the order of one Thomas Bracken,
It is insisted that the court erred in directing a verdict in plaintiff’s favor upon the'pleadings, and reference is made to the case of Garfield Nat. Bank v. Colwell, 57 Hun, 169, 10 N. Y. Supp. 864, in support of this contention. That case is authority for the proposition that “where, at the time that a note is discounted, there is a distinct understanding between the maker of the note and the payee, which is stated to the bank at which it is discounted, that the maker should incur no liability by the signing of the note, he will not be held liable thereon to the bank which has discounted it;” that “such paper is not mere accommodation paper, and is under such circumstances unenforceable against the maker thereof.” The distinction between the defenses set out in that case and in this is marked. In the Garfield Nat. Bank Case the defense and proof were that the note was discounted by the bank under an agreement that the makers should not incur any liability upon the note; whereas the allegation here is that the note was made for the accommodation of Bracken, at the request of the North River Bank. It is true there is a further allegation that there was a distinct understanding that the payee should take up and pay the same at maturity; but by and between whom such understanding was arrived at or made is not alleged, and it cannot be assumed, in the absence of any allegation to that effect, to have been made with the bank. The construction of the answer is susceptible of the conclusion that, so far as these defendants are concerned, it was a pure accommodation note given to Bracken, under an understanding with the latter that he was to take it up. But this is very different from an allegation, which appeared in the Garfield Nat.Bank Case, that there was a distinct agreement with the bank that the makers were to incur no liability whatever upon the note. The fact that they were mere accommodation makers cannot relieve these defendants from liability, as shown by the very case relied upon of the Garfield Nat. Bank, which holds “that the mere fact that it was accommodation paper would in no way affect the right to recover, because- the "giving of the note as an accommodation, if no recovery could be had upon it by the holder of the note, would not be any accommodation to anybody, because nobody could use it.” It may well be that the bank Imew that it was accommodation paper, made by these defendants for the benefit of Bracken, but this in no way prevented their being liable thereon. The allegation, therefore, that they were accommodation notes given to Bracken at the request of the North River Bank does