96 S.E. 43 | N.C. | 1918
This is an action on a note executed by the defendant, the W. M. Absher Company, a corporation, and indorsed by the defendants, F. D. Forrester and J. H. Johnson. The Absher Company makes no defense.
The defendants Forrester and Johnson rely on the defenses of failure to give them notice of dishonor and the statute of limitations.
A jury trial was waived and his Honor found the following facts:
"1. That W. M. Absher Company, on 21 April, 1910, executed the following note to W. W. Barber, to wit:
"$800 — One year after date, with interest from date, we promise to pay to W. W. Barber or order eight hundred dollars, for value received — interest due and payable semiannually.
THE W. M. ABSHER CO. (Seal)
H. O. Absher, Pr. Treas.
"2. That defendants F. B. Forrester and J. H. Johnson endorsed their names in blank on the back of said note before its delivery to W. W. Barber.
"3. That there was no notice of dishonor given to J. H. Johnson and F. D. Forrester.
"4. That the summons in this action was issued and delivered to the sheriff of Wilkes County on 27 July, 1915.
"5. That more than three years elapsed after the maturity of said note prior to the beginning of this action.
"6. That the maker of the above note made the following payments on the dates named as follows: $48 interest to 21 April, 1911; May, 1912, or $48; May, 1913, or, $48; May, 1914, or, $48.
On 20 July, 1912, the Absher Company executed a mortgage to the defendants Forrester and Johnson by which was conveyed (604) a tract of land in which there is the following provisions:
"This mortgage is given to secure the parties of the second part for endorsing a note of $1,000 executed on 20 July, 1912, by the W. M. Absher Company, payable one year after date to J. H. Carrigan, and is intended to and does cover any endorsements now made or may hereafter be made by all or any one of the above named parties of the second part."
Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants and the plaintiff appealed.
The findings of fact by the judge, a jury trial being waived, are as conclusive as the verdict of a jury (Matthews v. Fry,
The statute (Revisal, sec. 2239) provides that notice of dishonor must be given to the drawer and each endorser, and any drawer or endorser to whom such notice is not given is discharged," and following the statute, it was held in Perry v. Taylor,
It is also settled that a payment, to have the effect of repelling the statute of limitations, must be made by one in the same class, and that a payment by the maker does not continue the right of action against the endorser.
"To give this effect to the act of one, there must be a community of interest and a common obligation among them. They must be obligors in a bond, makers of a promissory note, drawers or acceptors of a bill, or joint endorsers of either. An admission, direct or involved in the act of payment by one of either class, under the same measure of responsibility, becomes the legal act of all that class, but does not revive the liability of others of a different class. Thus if one of several joint acceptors promises to pay as directed in the statute, (605) or makes a payment, his associate acceptors are bound by what he does; but the drawers are not, because there is no such common interest and responsibility as gives legal force to the act, and so of other classes who may be bound in like manner." Wood v. Barber,
To the same effect, see Le Duc v. Butts,
In the last case the Court says: "It is true that it is well settled in this State that a payment by the principal on a note before the bar of the statute operates as a renewal of the debt as to himself and also to the sureties on the note. At one time this was true as to endorsers *643
likewise, as an endorser was regarded as a surety. Green v. GreensboroCollege,
"While the law remains the same as to a surety, and a payment by the principal will operate as a renewal of the debt as to the surety, who is regarded as a maker of the note, an endorser is no longer so regarded.
"There is a broad and well recognized distinction between a surety and an endorser, as is pointed out clearly in Le Duc v. Butler,
The plaintiff, conceding these positions to be sound, contends, however, that the execution of the mortgage of 20 July, 1912, to secure the defendants on their endorsement, has changed the status of the parties, and that now they are principals and not entitled to notice of dishonor, and that the payment made prevents the bar of the statute of limitations, and he relies on the case of Denny v. Palmer,
We have given careful consideration to the reasoning and the decision in the case cited, and are of opinion that it is an authority for the defendants, and not against them.
In the Denny case Rawlins and Coleman were largely indebted to various parties, and there were several endorsers for them on different notes, among them the defendant Palmer. In 1837 they executed a deed of trust to secure the payment of their debts, and in 1842 the debts remaining unpaid, the defendant Palmer, being dissatisfied with the delay in disposing of the trust property and with having his security in common with so many other persons, proposed, and it was finally agreed by the bank, Rawlins and Coleman, the trustees, and Palmer, that the trustees should reconvey to Rawlins and Coleman certain real estate in Danville, Richmond, and Greenbrier County, in Virginia, estimated as of the value of $8,180, that Rawlins and Coleman should give new notes endorsed by Palmer for the said debts (606) (which had been suspended about five years), pay off the arrears of interest and thereafter keep active the new notes by paying the discount every 60 days, and from time to time pay installments until the debts should be fully paid; and that Rawlins and Coleman should convey the said estates and others to one William Lynn, of Danville, in trust to indemnify the said Palmer as endorser, and to secure the payment of the said notes, so to be given, and any others that might be given in renewal of them. *644
On the maturity of these last notes there was failure to give Palmer notice of dishonor, and upon the trial the judge presiding charged the jury "that the mere fact of the insolvency of the makers of the notes, and the further fact that the defendant had taken the deed of trust of their property as an indemnity, did not dispense with notice to the defendant of the default of the makers, in order to charge him as endorser."
This charge was affirmed on appeal, and the conclusion reached by the Court is that the acceptance of an indemnity or security by the endorser does not dispense with notice unless the endorser has, as a consideration for the security, assumed the payment of the debt. "Such an obligation (the Court says) we conceive to be the true test of the endorser's being entitled or not entitled to notice," and it was held that the endorser was discharged from liability on account of the failure to give notice, although the deed in trust was made to secure the payment of the notes on which was his endorsement, and to protect him as endorser, and this is the question now before us, as the defendants have not assumed payment of the debts except by reason of their endorsement.
No question is raised by the appeal as to the right of the plaintiff to proceed against the land conveyed in the mortgage under Ijames v. Gaither,
Affirmed.
Cited: Dillard v. Mercantile Co.,