262 Pa. 130 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
In April, 1911, the Atkinson Construction Company owed the Edward E. Buhler Company, the appellant, $9,-171.85. On the 26th of that month Davitt D. Chidester, the appellee, gave to his friend, George H. Atkinson, his promissory note for $3,000, payable to the order of Atkinson some days after date. The note was made for the accommodation of Atkinson, to enable him to give it to the Edward E. Buhler Company on account of the indebtedness to it of the Atkinson Construction Company, of which Atkinson was treasurer. He endorsed the note as an individual and as treasurer of the construction company, and delivered it to the appellant. It was renewed from time to time, and this action is on the last renewal, dated March 26,1912. The defense made in the court below was that the original note had been given merely as security for a portion of the indebtedness of the Atkinson Construction Company to the appellant, and as the same had been paid or discharged, there was no further liability on it. This defense, allowed by the trial judge, prevailed in the court below, and from the judgment on the verdict in favor of the defendant, there is this appeal by the plaintiff, whose just contention is that, under the evidence, a verdict should have been directed in its favor.
The appellant dealt only with Atkinson in the negotiations which led up to his giving it the original note of the appellee, in April, 1911. From Atkinson’s own testimony, which we quote at length as conclusive upon the appellee, who called him as his main witness, it most clearly appears that the note was endorsed to the appellant by Atkinson, as a partial payment of its claim against the construction company: “Q. We want to take up the situation as it existed when this original note was given, 1911? A. At that time we owed Buhler $9,000, which he said was more than they could carry without some assistance. I asked Mr. Chidester- Q. What sort of business was the Buhler Company in, in 1911?
It is further contended by the appellee that by the terms of a composition made by the Atkinson Construction Company with its creditors, September 24 or 25, 1912, the entire claim of the appellant against it at that time was extinguished; that Chi (tester, the maker of the note in suit, was thereby discharged, as it had been given merely as security for a portion of such indebtedness, and the appellant had agreed to surrender it to the construction company. If the alleged agreement to surrender the note depended upon the oral testimony in the case, that question would have been for the jury, but the written evidence showed conclusively not only that there had been no such agreement, but that the obligation of the appellee to the appellant was to remain unimpaired by the construction company’s composition with its creditors. That composition left unpaid to the appellant a sum in excess of $3,000, the amount of the note in suit. It had been given to pay so much of the indebtedness of the.construction company to the appellant, and the clear understanding between the appellant and Atkinson, as appears from the documentary evidence, at the time of the composition, was that the appellant should continue to hold the appellee liable upon its note. On the day of
The ninth and tenth assignments of error are sustained, the judgment is reversed and the record is remitted with direction that judgment be entered for the plaintiff non obstante veredicto for $3,000, and the charges of protest and interest from June 26, 1912.