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(IGNACIO
BLANCO |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
(
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(NORMAN
HOARE
(ROYAL BANK OF CANADA
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DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 2 of 1984
7th March, 1984
Rajasingham, J., Q.C.
Mr. N.V.
Dujon for the Plaintiff
No appearance for the first Defendant
Mr. D.B. Courtenay for the second Defendant
Action
for balance due on a promissory note - Effect of the word
'cancelled' on face of promissory note - Sections 29 and
60 of Chapter 209 of the Laws of Belize as it relates to
the discharge of a promissory note.
J U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff's Action against the first Defendant is for
a sum of $612.44 being the balance due to the Plaintiff from
the first Defendant against a sum of $2,134.00 paid by the
Plaintiff to the second Defendant on a promissory note drawn
by the first Defendant. The Plaintiff has sued the second
Defendant in the alternative because he claims that the second
Defendant, when it stamped the word "cancelled"
on the face of the promissory note upon receipt of payment
from him, deprived him of a cause of action against the first
Defendant on the promissory note.
The evidence
is brief. The first Defendant Hoare wished to borrow $4,000.00
from the second Defendant Bank. The Plaintiff was himself
a client of the said Bank and the Bank was prepared to lend
the money to Hoare if the Plaintiff Blanco would agree to
endorse a promissory note, drawn in his favour by Hoare, over
to the Bank. The promissory note "I.B.1" was drawn
by Hoare in favour of Blanco and Blanco then endorsed it over
to the Bank. The Bank then made the money available to Hoare
by a simple book transfer on a debit note. Although all this
was done on the one occasion when the parties met to arrange
the transaction, the effect was a loan by the Bank to Blanco
against the promissory note, which Blanco in turn would make
to Hoare against the same note. The intention of all parties
was that Blanco would, in the words of the Bank Manager Martin,
"be indirectly responsible to the Bank although he did
not get the money." In fact Blanco as endorser became
directly liable on the promissory note.
The first
Defendant Hoare commenced direct payments to the Bank as agreed
between the parties, but after a few months defaulted on these
payments. The Manager Martin then went to see Blanco and told
him of the default and Blanco agreed to the Bank debiting
his account with the full balance due. Although the Bank was
entitled to call in the full balance, this, to my mind, appears
to be rather harsh treatment of a client who to their knowledge
was only an accommodating party; the Bank could, having included
the interest for two years in the sum being recovered, as
easily have continued to recover the sum in installments from
Blanco's account. Instead they chose to recover their entire
investment plus the two years interest which in any event
already worked out to about 18% per annum, in one year. Having
done so they stamped the word "cancelled" across
the face of "I.B.1" and returned it to Blanco. The
Manager Martin, who does not say he stamped this word on it
himself and who did not arrange the transaction or make the
endorsement in favour of the Bank on it, says that the Bank
did not, by stamping the word "cancelled" in large
letters across the face of the promissory note, "intend
to discharge the note". However he did say that he never
gave his mind at any time to just canceling the endorsement
and, after much cross examination, that he would never accept
a note with the word "cancelled" stamped across
it nor would any Bank. This to my mind, is a clear admission
that he does look on the stamping of the word "cancelled"
across the face of a promissory note as having the effect
of invalidating that note. Thus I am afraid I must conclude
that when he says he did not intend to discharge the note
when the word "cancelled" was stamped across it
by someone, he is speaking an untruth because he himself would
not accept such a note as still valid.
Mr. Courtenay
referred to section 60 subsection (1) of Chapter 209 of the
laws, arguing that the note was in fact discharged by payment.
Sub section (3) paragraph (b) of the same section, however,
states that that is not so in circumstances such as those
in this case.
Mr. Courtenay
also referred to section 29 of Chapter 209 and I agree that
in this case Blanco, the Plaintiff, is an accommodation party
and that payment by the accommodated party, which in this
case is Hoare, would discharge the bill; I do not agree, however,
with his submission that payment on behalf of the accommodated
party would have the same effect where the payment is made
by the accommodating party. Section 60 sub section (4) clearly
envisages payment by the accommodated party only and not payment
on his behalf by the accommodating party. I, therefore, find
that the promissory note was discharged by the stamping of
the word "cancelled" across the face of it because
it was done with the full knowledge that it could have that
effect.
The evidence
shows that the Bank refused to rectify its error and that
the first Defendant Hoare used this error to avoid payment.
The first Defendant's liability has been established by the
Bank's explanation of its actions.
I therefore
give judgment against the first Defendant in a sum of $612.44
with interest at 12% per annum from the 8th December, 1982.
I dismiss the alternative claim against the second Defendant.
I award costs to the Plaintiff against both the first and
second Defendants.
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