14 Wash. 677 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was delivered by ■
This action was brought by the appellant against defendant W. J. Jennings and respondent F. H. Whitworth, on a promissory note. Judgment
The plain and only issue in this case was whether or not the plaintiff, for a valuable consideration, extended the time of payment of the note without the consent or knowledge of the surety. It was alleged in the answer that such was the case. There was testimony to sustain the allegations of the answer, and the jury having passed upon the sufficiency of the testimony, it is not subject to review here. It is argued by the appellant that a surety is not discharged by a mere extension of the time of payment without his consent, unless there is a valid agreement to extend, based on a legal and valuable consideration, precluding the creditor from suing as soon as he has a right to sue under the original contract. This proposition is not disputed by the respondent, and as far as we are able to ascertain, it is not involved in this case. The consideration here was the payment of interest in advance.
“ It is a valuable right to have money placed at interest, and it is a valuable right to have the privilege at any time of getting rid of the payment of interest by discharging the principal. By this contract the right to interest is secured for a given period, and the right to pay off the principal and get rid of paying the interest is also relinquished for such period. Here then are all the elements of a binding contract.”
This is the general rule announced by the author, who admits, however, that in spite of the reasonableness of the rule and the cogency of the reasoning above quoted, many courts have held that the promise to pay interest for an extended period creates no additional obligation, for the reason that the payor would have been obliged to pay the interest without any new agreement if the time had been given. The author very pertinently remarks, however, that this reasoning ignores the fact that if there is no new agreement the debtor may at any time pay the debt and stop the interest.
This rule is also announced in 24 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, p. 826, where a great number of cases are collated and cited which sustain the doctrine.
But, notwithstanding the fact that some of the authorities have decided to the contrary, it is not an open question in this state, for we expressly held in Warburton v. Ralph, 9 Wash. 537 (38 Pac. 140), that where a contract for the extention of the time of payment of a promissory note is made by the principal and not assented to by the surety, it would result in the discharge of the surety; and substantially the same rule is followed in Culbertson v. Wilcox, 11 Wash. 522
It is alleged that the court erred in instructing the jury that there was evidence tending to show that the appellant extended the time of the payment of the note in consideration of the payment of interest in advance from month to month, as being in violation of the constitution of the state in that it commented on the facts. If the court had given the instruction as alleged in the brief of the appellant, it probably would have been error, but an examination of the record shows that no such instruction was given. The court was simply rehearsing to the jury the respondent’s theory of the case, as set forth in his answer. That the jury could not have been misled by this language of the court is evident from the fact that the court, after using the words objected to, continued as follows:
“This defense as alleged by the defendant Whit-worth is denied by the plaintiff. As to whether or not there was any agreement of that kind is the principal issue in this case which you are called upon to try.”
We think no error was committed by the court in any particular and the judgment will therefore be affirmed.