Notice given to the holder and owner of an accommodation note,
under § 17 of the Act of June 22, 1874, of composition proceedings
in bankruptcy by or against the payee and endorser for whose
accommodation the note was
Page 116 U. S. 606
given, is notice of the original bankruptcy proceedings to the
accommodation maker, and notice that the payee may be discharged
thereby.
A lawful composition with creditors under § 17 of the act of
June 22, 1874, and its performance by the party, has the effect of
a discharge in bankruptcy.
This was an action by the maker of an accommodation note against
the payee for whose accommodation it was made. Judgment for
plaintiff below, which this writ of error was sued out to
review.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, in
the State of Missouri.
The defendant in error brought his action in the Circuit Court
for the City of St. Louis against the plaintiffs in error, Liebke
and Schrage. His petition alleged that on the 8th day of August,
1877, he executed and delivered to defendants, who were partners in
trade, his promissory note, payable to their order, for the sum of
$500, in three months after date; that the defendants sold said
note to the Mullanphy Bank of St. Louis, to which plaintiff, on the
14th day of November, paid the amount of it, less a small sum
credited on it as paid by defendants. The sum paid by plaintiff
when he took it up from the bank was $435. He alleges that the note
was made and delivered to defendants for their use and
accommodation, and it was agreed that they would take care of and
pay the same when it became due, and hold plaintiff harmless in
regard to it. He further alleges that defendants have failed and
refused to pay him any part of said $435, and still refuse to do
so, wherefore he prays judgment for the $435, with interest and
costs.
The answer of defendants sets up an adjudication of bankruptcy
against them October 13, 1877; a composition in bankruptcy under
the act of Congress, duly agreed upon at a
Page 116 U. S. 607
meeting of the creditors, and confirmed by the court, in which
compliance with the requirements of the law as to such composition
is fully set out, and they plead this, and the payment of the
composition note, in bar of the plaintiff's action.
A general denial was made for replication, and the case was
tried by the court without a jury. The circuit court gave judgment
for plaintiff, and, on appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals,
this judgment was affirmed.
That court, in its opinion, found in 9 Mo.App. 424, bases its
decision mainly on the proposition that Thomas, the present
plaintiff, was entitled to notice of the composition meeting, and
had no such notice.
The facts in the case are that the composition proceedings took
place before or about the time of the maturity of the note. The
note was then the property of the Mullanphy Bank. This bank had
notice of these proceedings, accepted the composition note of
defendants for thirty percent of the amount of the debt, according
to the terms of the composition, and received the money paid on
that note. We think the bank was the owner of the note, the party
entitled to be dealt with in the composition proceedings, to take
part in them, and receive the money paid under them. All this it
did.
Mr. Thomas must be held in law to have had notice of the
original bankruptcy proceedings, and that the defendants might be
discharged under those proceedings. If he preferred to take part in
them, rather than entrust the claim to the bank, he could have paid
the note and set up his claim as provided in § 5070 of the Revised
Statutes. He did not do this, but permitted the bank to represent
that debt, which, as owner of it, it had a right to do, and to
receive the composition money. Mr. Thomas has not been hurt by
this, for there is no reason to believe that he would have
successfully opposed the composition, or received anything more
under it than the bank did. It can hardly be held that Mr. Thomas
stood in any better condition than a person liable for the bankrupt
as bail, security, guarantee, or otherwise, who has not paid the
debt. Section 5070 Revised Statutes.
It is of the essence of the bankrupt law that when the
bankrupt
Page 116 U. S. 608
has complied with all the conditions of the statute, and
surrendered his property, he should be released from all his debts,
except those of a fiduciary character or founded in fraud, of which
this is not one. And the case of
Wilmot v. Mudge,
103 U. S. 217,
decides that though no written discharge be granted, a lawful
composition, and its performance by the party, has the same effect.
That case holds that section 17 of the act of 1874, which governs
this case, is a part of the bankrupt law, and the proceedings under
it discharge all debts which can be discharged under the law, as to
creditors
"whose names and addresses, and the amount of the debts due to
whom, are shown in the statement of the debtor produced at the
meeting at which the resolution shall have been passed."
As evidence that it is the
holder of the promissory
note who is to be named in the schedule as one meeting, the
statute, 18 Stat. 182, § 17, meeting, the statute, 18 Stat. 182, §
17, says:
"When a debt arises on a bill of exchange or promissory note, if
the debtor be ignorant of the holder of such bill of exchange or
promissory note, he shall be required to state the amount of such
bill or note, the date on which it falls due, the name of the
acceptor and the person to whom it is payable, and any other
particulars within his knowledge respecting the same, and the
insertion of such particulars shall be deemed a sufficient
description by the debtor in respect to such debt."
As the statute requires that the composition resolution, to be
valid, "must be passed by a majority in number and three-fourths in
value of the creditors of the debtor," the above mode of
identifying the creditor and the amount of his debt shows that it
is not indispensable that every person contingently interested in a
debt of the bankrupt should have notice or take part in the
composition proceedings.
It is argued that the liability of defendants to Thomas is not
on the note, but on their promise to pay it at maturity. We cannot
take this view of it. The note is the essential part of the
transaction, and without its payment by Thomas he had no cause of
action against defendants. They were both parties to the note, and
both liable on it to the bank who held it when it became due. Which
was principal and which security could be
Page 116 U. S. 609
shown as between themselves by parol, and their liability to or
for each other grew out of that transaction.
As parties to it, the defendants brought it into bankruptcy that
its holder might share in their assets or in the composition, and
that they might then be discharged from any obligation on account
of it.
The case is strikingly similar to that of
Hatch v.
Hatch, 28 Law Times N.S. 506, Exch.Ch., in which a composition
under the English bankrupt law was held to discharge the debt.
The judgment of the St. Louis court of appeals is reversed,
and the case remanded to that court for further proceedings in
accordance with this opinion.