9 A.2d 607 | Md. | 1939
The parties to this appeal present the single question whether the giving of a note, payable on demand after date, for a pre-existing debt, discharged guarantors of that debt. In a suit by a creditor against the guarantors, a verdict for the defendants was directed at the close of testimony on the plaintiff's behalf, and from the judgment entered accordingly the plaintiff appeals.
The plaintiff is a dealer in gasoline, oils, and other merchandise, and in consideration of making a contract with William E. Cohee to sell its wares at a filling station, received from the defendants, on March 15th, 1934, a written agreement guaranteeing payment to the plaintiff of "any sum of money which may become due on account of stock shortage, cash shortage, or any form of shortage, that might occur due to the fault of William E. Cohee." The money limit of the liability was to be $1000. There was evidence of a shortage of $665.42 in the early part of the year 1937. The record contains a written statement by William E. Cohee admitting the shortage, and a note for the amount was given by him the same day, March 26th, 1937. The note is in a common form, reading that, "On Demand after date," the maker promises to pay the amount; and it provides for confession of a judgment.
The contention of the defendants and appellees is that by the taking of the note in this form there was a suspension of enforcement of the obligation for one day, until "after date," and that this was a material alteration *385
of the debt guaranteed which must release the guarantors. But that form, usually, and perhaps always, the result of writing the note on a printed blank, has been dealt with in a large number of cases in recent years, and there has been an almost unanimous opinion that the words "after date" do not give an extension of credit until the next day, and that a demand is not required to mature the note; in other words, that it is not to be distinguished at all from a note reading payable on demand simply. Hitchings v. Edmands,
A note payable on demand is payable immediately, without demand. Blick v. Cockins,
For these reasons it is agreed in judicial decisions that the obligation of guarantors is not discharged by the taking of a demand note. See review of decisions on "Taking a demand note in renewal as releasing surety or indorser," 48 A.L.R. 1222. And see the following cases in several of which the notes considered were made payable "On Demand after date." Continental Life Ins.Co. v. Barber,
There having been no discharge of the guarantors by this note, then, there was no lack of legally sufficient evidence for a verdict against them, and the direction of the verdict for them must be held erroneous. Other questions need not be considered.
Judgment reversed and a new trial awarded, with costs. *387