176 Mo. App. 704 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
This is a suit against the guarantors on a promissory note. A jury was waived and a trial had before the court. The finding and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
It appears that the Flake & Neilson Company, incorporated, was engaged in a mercantile business in Winona, Mississippi. On December 4, 1902, this concern, the Flake & Neilson Company, executed its promissory note to the plaintiff bank, whereby it promised to. pay, for money borrowed from the bank, $5000 four months after date. The two defendants, E. E. Evans and J. J. Jacobs, both residents of St. Louis, Missouri, by a proper indorsement on the back of the note, made at the time, guaranteed its payment. By such indorsement, the defendant guarantors waived notice and protest and guaranteed the payment of the note “at maturity or at any time thereafter.” Interest at eight per cent from date is stipulated for in the note. It appears that the principal—that is, the Flake & Neilson Company—paid the interest .on the note from time to time during the several years, but the note itself remained unpaid on October 1, 1905. On that date, the principal obligor, the Flake & Neil-son Company, paid the interest then accrued, and there appears a credit on the back of the note therefor, as of date October 1, 1905, to the amount of $1,134.45. After having thus settled the matter of accrued interest, the plaintiff bank and the principal debtor, the Flake & Neilson Company, through its president, Mr. Flake, drew up two new notes, both of date October 1, 1905,
Both of these notes were indorsed by Mr. Flake, the president, and Mr. Kelso, a stockholder of the Flake & Neilson Company. But these defendants—that is, Evans and Jacobs, the guarantors on the original note—were in nowise apprised of the transaction and did not consent thereto. Thereafter, on May 12, 1906, the principal debtor, the Flake & Neilson Company, through its president, Mr. Flake, took up the two notes last described,, and for the same indebted- . ness executed to plaintiff two other notes on that date for $2500( each, payable,, respectively, on , the twelfth day of February, 1907 and the twelfth day of March, ,1907. It appears the plaintiff bank required a higher rate of interest at that time, and the Flake & Neil-son Company paid the interest at ten per cent in advance on the two last mentioned notes. Both Mr. Flake, the president of the Flake & Neilson Company, and Mr. Kelso, a director therein, individually indorsed the two last, mentioned notes as well, and, as before said, those theretofore given, of date October .1,1905, were taken up. All'of these notes—that is, the two notes executed October 1, 1905 and the two executed May 12, 1906—-contained a stipulation . to the effect that they were secured “by collateral security • by note of E. E. Evans and others”—that is., according to all of the testimony, the original note here in suit, executed December 4, 1902, and on which defendants Evans and Jacobs are guarantors.
It is conceded throughout that neither of the defendant guarantors consented to or were even apprised
It is urged the court erred in the matter of giving and refusing declarations of law, but, in the view we take of the case, we regard the arguments touching this matter as wholly immaterial. It is obvious that no right of recovery appears on the original note against these guarantors, who were in nowise advised of, nor consented to, the subsequent transactions involving the same indebtedness. There can be no doubt that, when a precise and definite time is given to the principal debtor by a valid agreement which ties up the hands of the creditor from enforcing the debt, though it be for only a single day, the surety is discharged. [Johnson v. Franklin Bank, 173 Mo. 171, 73 S. W. 191.] Though it be that the taking of a new note does not in
Considerable stress is laid in the argument on the fact that the bank at all times retained possession of the old note and -did not surrender it to the Flake & Neilson Company. Obviously this was as it should be in order to effectuate the pledge provided for in the new notes and contemplated by the parties. The principal debtor, the Flake & Neilson Company, in
Furthermore, there can he no doubt that the execution of the new.notes, after the prior note was overdue, operated as an extension of the time of payment of the original debt for a definite and fixed period, which, together with the payment of interest in advance, afforded a sufficient consideration. Otherwise no consideration whatever obtained for the new.notes, and it is certain that plaintiff was not entitled to hold and enforce both at the same time. [See Bank v. Freund, 80 Mo. App. 657.] The right of action must have been suspended on the original note during the time, for plaintiff had received the interest in advance to forbear payment of the identical indebtedness represented in the first note evidenced likewise by the subsequent notes. [See Bank v. Leavitt, 65 Mo. 562; Ogden, Neg. Inst., sec. 227; Bank v. Freund, 80 Mo. App. 657.]
The law is thus stated in Daniels, Negotiable Instruments, vol. 2 (5 Ed.), sec. 1272:
“There is no doubt a negotiable bill or note given for or on account of a contemporaneous or pre-existing debt, and whether or not it be in renewal of a previous bill or note, suspends all right of action on such debt during its currency; that is until it is dishonored by nonacceptance or nonpayment. If this were not so, the creditor who took the additional security in the form of a bill or note might in consequence of its negotiable character transfer it to a bona fide holder and subject the debtor to the payment of both the original and the new debt.” [See, also, Keyser v. Hinkle, 127 Mo. App. 62, 75, 106 S. W. 98.]
It is entirely clear that the defendants were discharged, through the operation of law, both by, first,
The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.