109 S.W. 1129 | Tex. App. | 1908
This suit was instituted in the court below on September 25, 1906, by the appellant, against appellee and J. G. Jobe and H. L. Brown, on two promissory notes executed *301 on January 8, 1904, by W. P. Watson in the sum of $250 each, due in one and two years, respectively, after date, bearing 10 percent interest per annum from date and providing for 10 percent attorney's fees. The suit was by appellant dismissed as to the defendants Jobe and Brown, and appellee Terry was sought to be held liable for the full amount of the notes, interest and attorney's fees by reason of the following obligation alleged by appellant to have been executed by appellee on the sale and transfer of the notes by him to the appellant, that is, appellant alleged that appellee made and executed the following on the back of each note, viz.: "On demand I promise to pay in full the within note." The appellee answered in the court below, first, by general denial; second, specially under oath, that being the owner of the notes on October 20, 1904, he assigned them to appellant "by simply endorsing his name in blank thereon and that on the same day he delivered the notes so endorsed to the plaintiff" and if there is any other endorsement or any other writing on said notes save that of appellee's name, purporting to have been executed by him, that any such endorsement or writing was made after the notes were delivered to plaintiff, and without defendant's knowledge or consent and without his authority; third, that he had made himself liable on said notes as endorser, and that appellant had not sued therein within the time required by law and therefore this liability had been lost; fourth, that the contract of endorsement on the notes had been materially and fraudulently altered, and by reason of such fact, the appellee was released from all liability as an endorser in blank; fifth, that his codefendant, H. L. Brown, purchased the land for which the notes were given as a part of the purchase money, and assumed and agreed to pay said notes and that by reason thereof, Brown became primarily liable therefor. In a supplemental petition appellant replied: first, by a general denial, and second he alleged that appellee ought to be estopped to disclaim liability as an endorser of the notes because if suit had not been filed thereon within the time prescribed by law that appellant had not done so and had refrained from doing so at the repeated requests of the appellee.
A trial before the court without the intervention of a jury resulted in a judgment for defendant to which judgment appellant excepted and perfected an appeal to this court.
The trial judge filed the following conclusions of fact:
1. I find the existence of the two notes sued upon as described in plaintiff's petition; that they were given for the purpose as alleged, and subsequent to their execution they became the property in due course of trade of J. M. Clymer, now deceased, and on the division of his estate among his legal heirs, these notes were set apart to Mrs. Terry, wife of J. L. Terry, the defendant, as a portion of her share of her father's estate.
2. Subsequent to the time that these notes became the property of Mrs. Terry, the plaintiff, E. T. Clymer, and the defendant, J. L. Terry, made a land trade and as a part of the purchase price for land conveyed to him by plaintiff the defendant transferred the two notes in suit.
3. I find that on each of the notes in question the signature of *302 J. L. Terry was written thereon by himself and above this signature on each of said notes is written the following language: "On demand I promise to pay in full the within note."
4. On the issue as to whether or not the language written above the signature of the defendant Terry, quoted above, was there before he signed his name upon the notes or was written there afterwards without his knowledge, consent or authority, I find that the plaintiff, Clymer, testified that the language was in his handwriting but was written there by him before the defendant wrote his name across the back of the notes; the defendant Terry, while admitting his signature, testified that he endorsed his name in blank across the back of each of the notes at the time of their transfer to the plaintiff, but denied that the language above his signature was written there at the time he signed, and testified that the same was written there without his knowledge, consent or authority.
5. I find from an inspection of the signature of the defendant and the language written on the back of the notes above the same that no change or alteration is apparent and as to whether or not the same was made by Terry as testified to by Clymer or was simply signed in blank as testified to by Terry, I make no finding, in other words, in my view of the law the court is not called upon to decide this issue of veracity between the parties.
Opinion. — The contention is here made that the trial court erred in holding the burden of proof to be upon plaintiff. Appellant, in support of his contention, cites the cases of Muckleroy v. Bethany,
This court held that where a plea of failure of consideration of the note sued on is filed by defendant, the burden is on plaintiff to show a consideration. Gutta Percha Rubber Mfg. Co. v. City of Cleburne,
In the case of Clark v. Hills,
Again, appellant contends that under the facts as found by the trial court, the appellee was liable as guarantor on the notes and appellant as holder had the implied power to write over his signature the most absolute terms of guaranty. The notes at the time appellee wrote his name on the back thereof were the property of Mrs. Terry, wife of appellee, and they could be transferred by the husband's endorsement. Appellee did not endorse the notes until long subsequent to their execution and after they had been in circulation. We do not think he should be treated as a stranger to the notes.
But if it be conceded that he became liable as guarantor, still the judgment must be sustained. The petition does not charge the appellee as guarantor and does not seek to hold him liable as such. The pleadings of plaintiff seek to recover against appellee by reason of the contract endorsed on the back of the notes. The supplemental petition does allege that defendant repeatedly requested plaintiff not to institute suit on the notes. This was in reply to defendant's answer wherein defendant alleged that he endorsed the notes and that plaintiff had *304
failed to institute suit on the same either at the first or second term of court, and claimed that thereby he was released from liability. Again, if appellee was a stranger to the notes and his liability thereon was that of guarantor, and appellant had the implied authority to write over his signature the most absolute terms of guaranty, this did not authorize him to make a new contract. He could only write thereon a contract of guaranty. Chandler v. Westfall,
Affirmed.