The cashier of a bank is not, by reason of his official
position, presumed to have the power to bind it as an accommodation
endorser on his individual note, and the payee who fails to prove
that the cashier, as such, had authority to make the endorsement
cannot recover against the bank.
Parmelee, cashier of the Shawnee County Bank, made his
individual note for $3,000, payable to the order of the West St.
Louis Savings Bank, endorsed it "G. F. Parmelee, cashier," and gave
as collateral security a certificate of stock in the Shawnee County
Bank, issued to and owned by him. The consideration of the note was
money lent to him by the payee, who was advised that he intended to
use it to pay for his stock in the Shawnee County Bank. He failed
to pay the note, whereupon this suit was commenced by the payee
against him as maker, and the Shawnee County Bank as endorser, of
the note.
Page 95 U. S. 558
The court passed a decree against Parmelee, but dismissed the
bill so far as it asked relief against the Shawnee County Bank.
The complainant then brought the case here.
The remaining facts in the case are stated in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The testimony in this case satisfies us beyond all doubt that
the liability of the Shawnee County Bank, if any liability exists,
is that of an accommodation endorser or surety for Parmelee, its
cashier, and that this was known to the St. Louis Bank when it made
the discount. The note itself bears upon its face the most
unmistakable evidence of this fact. It is made payable directly to
the St. Louis Bank, and the Shawnee Bank appears only as an
endorser in blank of a promissory note before endorsement by the
payee and while the note is in the hands of the maker. Such an
endorsement by a bank is, to say the least, unusual, and sufficient
to put a discounting bank upon inquiry as to the authority for
making it.
But we are not left in this case to inquiry or presumption. Both
the correspondence and the testimony of the cashier of the St.
Louis Bank show conclusively that this was the understanding of the
parties. Parmelee, in transmitting the note for discount, wrote for
himself, and not as cashier. He spoke of his own note, and
authorized a draft upon himself personally for the interest. He
pledged his own stock for the payment of the note. Wrens, the St.
Louis cashier, says the negotiations opened with an application by
Parmelee for a loan to enable him to pay for his stock in the
Shawnee Bank, upon the pledge of the stock as collateral. There is
not a single circumstance tending in any manner to prove that the
transaction was looked upon as a rediscount for the Shawnee Bank,
except the entries in the books of the St. Louis Bank, and these
are far from sufficient to overcome the positive testimony as to
what the agreement actually was.
Page 95 U. S. 559
This being the case, the question is directly presented as to
the liability of the Shawnee County Bank upon such an endorsement.
It is certain from the testimony that no endorsement of the kind
was ever expressly authorized by the bank. None of the officers,
except Parmelee, and Hayward, the vice-president, ever knew that it
had been made until long after the last discount had been obtained.
The books of the Shawnee Bank contained no evidence of such a
transaction, and the accounts of the St. Louis Bank, as rendered,
gave no indication of the actual character of the paper
discounted.
Ordinarily, the cashier, being the ostensible executive officer
of a bank, is presumed to have, in the absence of positive
restrictions, all the power necessary for such an officer in the
transaction of the legitimate business of banking. Thus, he is
generally understood to have authority to endorse the commercial
paper of his bank and bind the bank by the endorsement. So too, in
the absence of restrictions, if he has procured a
bona
fide rediscount of the paper of the bank, his acts will be
binding, because of his implied power to transact such business;
but certainly he is not presumed to have power, by reason of his
official position, to bind his bank as an accommodation endorser of
his own promissory note. Such a transaction would not be within the
scope of his general powers; and one who accepts an endorsement of
that character, if a contest arises, must prove actual authority
before he can recover. There are no presumptions in favor of such a
delegation of power. The very form of the paper itself carries
notice to a purchaser of a possible want of power to make the
endorsement, and is sufficient to put him on his guard. If he fails
to avail himself of the notice, and obtain the information which is
thus suggested to him, it is his own fault, and, as against an
innocent party, he must bear the loss.
Decree affirmed.