
    (81 Hun, 33.)
    NEW YORK SECURITY & TRUST CO. v. MANHATTAN ATHLETIC CLUB et al.
    (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department.
    October 12, 1894.)
    1. Promissory Note—What Constitutes—Sale.
    An instrument which contains the requirements of a nonnegotiable-promissory note, and is described as such in the recitals thereof, is not. deprived of such character by the mere appearance of a seal thereon.
    
      '2. Same—Collateral Security Clause.
    The character of an instrument as a nonnegotiable promissory note is not affected by a clause pledging collateral securities and providing for the substitution of other collaterals under certain conditions.
    :8. Same—Liability op Indorser.
    One who writes his name on the back of a nonnegotiable note is liable either as a maker or guarantor according to his intention.
    
      4. Same—Pleading.
    Where the complaint in an action on a nonnegotiable note sets out the note, and alleges that defendant, for valuable consideration, placed his name on the note, and delivered it so indorsed to plaintiff, and that defendant thereby became liable to plaintiff for the payment thereof, is sufficient to charge defendant either as a maker or guarantor.
    Appeal from special term, New York county.
    Action by New York Security & Trust Company against Manhattan Athletic Club and others on a promissory note. From a judgment overruling a demurrer to the complaint, defendant Walton Storm appeals. Affirmed.
    Argued before VAN BRUNT, P. J., and PARKER' and BARRETT, JJ.
    Samuel R. Taylor, for appellant.
    Howard A. Taylor, for respondent.
   PARKER, J.

The complaint to which the defendant Storm has demurred upon the grounds which will be later considered alleges in substance: That the defendant corporation, for value received, at a certain date duly executed and delivered to the plaintiff a promissory note, of which a copy, with the names and indorsements on the back, is as follows:

“$25,000. New York, July 25th, 1892.
“Six months after date, without grace, we promise to pay to the New York Security & Trust Co., at the office of said company in the city of New York, twenty-five thousand dollars, for value received,” etc. [Here follow the ordinary clauses in a collateral note.]
“[Seal.] The Manhattan Athletic Club,
“By Geo. W. Carr, President.”

That prior to the delivery of the note the defendant Storm and 10 other individuals, “for valuable consideration, and for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to make said advance and accept said note, placed their names upon and delivered to plaintiff said note so indorsed, in order to secure payment thereof to the plaintiff, and for the purpose of becoming liable to the plaintiff for such payment, and said defendants thereby became liable to the plaintiff for the payment thereof. That plaintiff relied upon the obligations of the defendants, and was thereby induced to, and therefore did, make said advance and accept said note.” That thereafter the note was delivered to the plaintiff, which has ever since been the legal holder and owner thereof for value.

It is evident the instrument is not a negotiable promissory note. That it is a nonnegotiable promissory note seems equally clear. Daniel, in his work on Negotiable Instruments (volume 1, § 28), defines a promissory note as “an open promise, in writing, by one person to pay another person therein named, or to his order, or to bearer, a specified sum of money absolutely and at all events.” In Hall v. Farmer, 5 Denio, 484, a promissory note is stated to be “a written engagement by one person to pay absolutely and unconditionally to another person therein named, or to his order, or to the bearer, a certain sum of money at a specified time, or on demand, or at sight.” The appellant, however, insists that while this writing may contain all of the essentials of a promissory note, it also includes certain other elements which effectually deprive it of that character:

First. Because upon the face of the instrument there is a seal. The copy of the note set up in the complaint contains the word “seal,” but there is no other reference to it in the pleadings, either to show whose seal it was, or by whose authority affixed, nor does the note itself contain any reference to the seal. It may be further said that the note contains affirmative evidence that the parties to it did not intend to take away from it the character of a promissory note, because in the clauses—which we have refrained from quoting because of their length, and which are of the same general character as those usually found in collateral notes —the instrument repeatedly describes itself as a note. Under these circumstances it cannot be said that the mere appearance of the seal operates to deprive it of its character as a promissory note. Weeks v. Esler, 68 Hun, 518, 23 N. Y. Supp. 54; Bank v. Faurot, 72 Hun, 373, 25 N. Y. Supp. 447.

Second. It contains a provision pledging collateral, and for the substitution of other collateral under certain conditions. These clauses are usually found in notes secured by collateral, and do not change the character of the instrument. See cases cited in 1 Daniel, Neg. Inst. § 48.

One of the grounds of demurrer is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendant Storm. As to notes not negotiable in form it has been regarded since the decisions in Richards v. Warring, *40 N. Y. 576, and Cromwell v. Hewitt, 40 N. Y. 491, as authoritatively settled in this state that the payee or holder may charge the party who puts his name on the back of the note as either maker or guarantor according to the actual intention. These cases substantially proceed upon the principle that as to notes not negotiable no contract of indorsement, in a legal sense, can be presumed from the position of a person’s name upon the back of the notes, and, as he must have intended to bind himself in some capacity, the court will construe his contract to be that of either co-maker or guarantor of the maker. The effect of these decisions, it will be observed, is to hold him who writes his name upon the back of a nonnegotiable note to a greater, or at least different, liability than were he an indorser on a note negotiable in form; for in the latter case he only agrees that he will pay the note to the holder on receiving due notice that the maker, upon a demand made at the proper time and place, has neglected to pay it; while in the first case he is treated as co-maker with, or guarantor of, the maker,, and not entitled to notice of demand and nonpayment by the-maker in order to charge him with liability. These decisions have-been subjected to some criticism in other jurisdictions, but not in this state, at least by the court of last resort, and they are, of course, controlling. In Richards’ Case a recovery was sustained against George O. Warring, who wrote his name upon the back of a note which read as follows:

“One year after date we promise to pay Platt Richards eight hundred dollars, with interest. Value received.
“Amsterdam, April 1st, 1857. James E. Warring,
“James B. Chapman.”

The referee found that:

“On the 6th of April, 1857, James E. Warring and James B. Chapman made the note in suit, and on the same day, before delivering the same to the payee, James E. Warring took the note to George O. Warring, to obtain his signature thereto, and thereupon George O. Warring wrote his name across the back of the same; and that afterwards, on the same day, the note so signed was delivered by Warring & Chapman to Platt Richards, the payee, and he thereupon advanced to Warring & Chapman the amount of the note on the credit thereof.”

Upon these facts the referee held that George O. Warring signed the note with the intent to become liable to pay the same to the payee, and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover against all the defendants the amount due on the note, and ordered judgment accordingly. In affirming the judgment, Judge Hogeboam, who delivered one of the opinions of the court of last resort, after discussing the relation between Warring and the other parties to the paper, which his signature entailed upon him, said:

“What precise name such a relation entitles him to it is perhaps not indispensable to determine, as I think a complaint setting out the circumstances under which the note was executed, the manner of the signature, and the intent of the party to become liable thereon, would show a cause of action which would entitle the plaintiff to recover.”

We have referred thus fully to the facts found by the referee, and to the comment of the court touching the allegations in a complaint necessary to charge one who indorses his name upon a nonnegotiable note, because it is claimed that if it be assumed that a complaint could be so framed as to charge the defendant Storm under the decision in Richards’ Case, this complaint is nevertheless demurrable because of the insufficiency of its allegations. How, turning to that portion of the complaint which we have already quoted, we find alleged not only the circumstances under which the note was executed, and the manner of the signature, but that the defendant wrote his name upon the back of the note in order to secure payment to the plaintiff, and for the purpose of becoming liable to the plaintiff for such payment, and that thereby he did become liable to the plaintiff. Without further comment, it is sufficient to say that under Richards’ Case this pleading is ample to charge the defendant with liability on the note. It is not likely that the point would have been made but for Cawley v. Costello, 15 Hun, 303, in which the court said:

“The complaint seeks to charge the defendant only as an indorser, but, the note not being negotiable, the defendant Costello can only be made liable as maker or guarantor; and, if the plaintiff seeks to charge the defendant Costello in either of those characters, he must aver that he wrote his name on the back of the note with intent to become liable thereon in such, character.”

If this decision should be regarded as in conflict with Richards-v. Warring and Cromwell v. Hewitt, it would not embarrass us-in the disposition of this case, because, while a later decision, it does not, of course, overrule them. But we think the court did not intend to say anything in conflict with the views expressed in those cases which were cited by it in support of the-decision made. The additional step taken was doubtless due to> the failure of the author of the opinion to keep clearly in mind the different senses in which certain words and terms are used when applied to parties to promissory notes. The complaint, so-says the opinion, charged the defendant with being an indorseron the note, which was not negotiable, and the judge, having' in mind that the legal relation of one who thus writes his name-upon the back of a nonnegotiable note is not that of an indorser,, proceeded with an argument intended to show that a different" legal relation must be, in effect, charged,—a proposition undoubtedly sound, and yet that may be done even when it is alleged that the party sought to be charged indorsed the note; for im a physical sense he indorses the note when he wiites his name upon the back of it. So, if the allegations of indorsement be-accompanied by a history of the circumstances attending the execution and delivery of the note, and a charge that the indorsement was made upon the back with the intent to become liable to the payee thereon, a different legal relation to the other parties to it than that of indorser on a negotiable note is charged. We cannot know precisely what was stated in the complaint, but it is quite evident that it was not alleged that he wrote his name-on the back of the note with “intent to become liable thereon,’7 for the court asserted the necessity of such an allegation, and" caused the words to be italicized in the published opinion. This-was, of course, in accordance with the rule in Richards’ Case, and required the decision made. But in giving the reason for it the-court, losing sight for the moment of the fact that the word “indorser” could be employed in more senses than one, was led to the use of language which will admit of the construction that, in addition to pleading all the facts, and alleging that the act off indorsement was done with intent to become liable thereby to-the payee, the pleader must assert in effect that the so-called “indorser” understood the legal relation which he wanted to assume-towards the other parties to the note, and therefore signed it with intent to become liable thereon as co-maker, or surety for the maker, as the case might be. The proposition needs but to be stated to insure the conviction that such a ruling was not intended, or, if intended, that it was error.

There are other grounds of demurrer," but with their consideration at special term we are content. The interlocutory judgment should be affirmed, with costs, but with leave to the defendants to answer within 20 days, upon the payment of the costs in the judgment and of this court. All concur.  