The appellants, Harrison Dillingham, Bobert H. Dillingham, Glenn Dillingham, and others, were sued by Condie M. Parks, appellee, upon a promissory note and a mortgage on real estate given to secure payment of the note. The material facts on which the controlling questions arise were stated in a special finding substantially as fol
December 4, 1894, Harrison Dillingham, unmarried, conveyed the mortgaged land to Robert II. Dillingham, appellant, who by an agreement in the deed of conveyance assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage debt to the bank as part of the purchase money. January 28, 1899, Robert II. Dillingham and his wife, by warranty deed, conveyed the mortgaged land to Glenn Dillingham, appellant, who also assumed and agreed to-pay the mortgage debt to the bank as part of the consideration for the land^ A number of other persons who were made defendants held judgments rendered against Harrison Dillingham in the court below sub
Before this telegram was so sent, appellee Parks went to the office of the bank and there met the president of the bank, to whom he stated that the conveyance made by Harrison Dillingham to Robert II. Dillingham, and that made by the latter to Glenn Dillingham were fraudulent, and that he, as a creditor of Harrison Dillingham, and other creditors of said Harrison, proposed to attack the conveyances in court, and to have them set aside, and that he and said other creditors had the evidence at command to make their attack successful, and that the bank could not deal with the land with safety. The bank’s cashier; Tong, overheard parts of this conversation and thereby became advised that there was some controversy over the title of Glenn Dillingham to the mortgaged land, and that appellee Parks, for himself and others, was threatening to attack the title of the bank’s mortgagor. The bank continued to hold said sum of $2,140, and on September 16, 1899, appellee Parks called at the bank, having the note and mortgage in suit with him, and demanded payment thereof from the cashier Tong, who responded that the president of the bank was out of town, which was true, and that he would be at the bank on the next day but one, and that he, the cashier, knew little about the business on which appellee Parks had come, and requested him to call again on the next day but one, being September 18, 1899, and to see the bank’s president- To this, appellee Parks assented, and he returned September 18, 1899, to the bank, having with him the note and mortgage sued on, and also a written notice which he
It was further found that the several notes and judgments described in the said notice were valid and existing claims against Harrison Dillingham, and were unpaid; that at the time of delivering this notice, appellee Parks saw the president of the bank and presented his note and mortgage and demanded payment of the president, to whom, also, immediately thereafter, he presented the notice and correctly stated to him what it was. The president did not read it, but, on hearing what it was, proposed to appellee Parks that .they go to Plymouth, where the attorney of Parks and the agent and the attorney of the bank resided, and there endeavor to adjust matters. Parks consented, and the president took with him $2,140 in cash, and he and Parks went to Plymouth, where it was agreed between the bank and Parks that the matter might stand for a few days, during which the bank would make an effort' to adjust the business with Glenn Dillingham, so that the bank might turn back to him the $140 and deliver to him the note and mortgage of June 6, 1899, and cancel the mortgage, and thereby escape further liability or annoyance in the matter. Glenn Dillingham refused to receive the $140 and his note and mortgage, and insisted that the debt to Parks was paid by the deposit of the $2,140 with the bank. On the 24th of December, 1899, Parks, by his attorney, again demanded payment of his note of the cashier of the bank during banking hours, at the bank, but had not withdrawn and did not withdraw said notice, and had not and did not abandon, or state to the cashier that he had abandoned, his determination to bring and prosecute the threatened suit to set aside said deeds, and to enforce payment of the debts, mentioned in the notice, out of the mortgaged land. Ho other request or demand for payment was made by Parks from the bank, and none was made on any other consideration or under any other circumstances than herein stated.
It was found that no action had been commenced by appellee Parks or any of the other creditors of Harrison Dillingham named in the written notice to set aside said conveyance on the ground stated in the notice; that in August, 1899, an action was commenced in the court below in the name of David Ilingerman against said Dillinghams and said bank seeking to set aside said conveyance, but it had not been diligently prosecuted, and it had no deterrent effect on the bank as to the payment of the note in suit,
Giving the facts stated in the special finding a construction the most favorable to the appellants of which they are susceptible, they show that the person liable on the negotiable promissiory note in suit by reason of his having assumed the payment thereof, whose land was bound as security therefor, caused the bank where the note was made payable to hold the amount of the note in money for the special purpose of paying the note therewith, and caused the bank to notify the holder, immediately before the ma
The appellants, Harrison Dillingham and Robert H. Dillingham, each answered by general denial, and by a paragraph alleging payment by Glenn Dillingham. The answer of the appellant Glenn Dillingham consisted of a general denial and a paragraph setting up the payment of the money into the bank, and the notice thereof to the appellee Parks as constituting payment of the notes in suit before the commencement of the action. Our statute (§371 Burns 1901) provides: “In any action or defense, founded upon a bill or note, or other contract for the payment of money at a particular place, it shall not be necessary to aver or prove a demand at the place, but the opposite party may show a readiness to pay such demand at the proper place.” The showing of readiness to pay the demand at the proper place, as provided in this statute, will not consitute a bar to the cause of action for the recovery of the debt, but may be set up, together with the bringing of the money into court, as a- defense to the recovery of damages and posts, by way of showing tender. When a negotiable promissory note is deposited by the holder for collection at the bank at which it is made' payable, the bank is thereby made the agent of the holder with authority to receive the money in
Glatt v. Fortman, 120 Ind. 384, was an action on a promissory note payable at a named bank in this State. An answer was adjudged bad in which it was alleged that on the day the note became due the defendants, the makers,paid to the bank the principal and interest on the note and directed that the money so paid be applied to the payment of the note, qnd that at the time the money was placed in the bank the defendants did not know who were the holders of the note, and that long after the money was deposited .the bank became insolvent. In the opinion of the court, referring to the statute above quoted, it was said:- “As the law -provides that the holder is not bound to present the note to the bank for payment in order to charge the maker,
The court overruled the objection of the appellant Glenn Dillingham to' the introduction in evidence of the assignment of the mortgage by James II. Matchett to the appellee Parks, dated August 14, 1899, the ground of objection stated being that the revenue stamp upon the assignment was not sufficient. It is claimed in argument that as the mortgage at the time of this assignment secured the payment of the principal note for $2,000 and the last interest coupon note for $140, — in all $2,140, a revenue stamp for fifty cents upon the assigmnent was insufficient, and that
We do not find any available error. Judgment affirmed.