4 S.E.2d 332 | N.C. | 1939
R. L. Hinton was an accommodation endorser on three notes of the defendant W. E. Hinton to the plaintiff bank, aggregating $14,500. The plaintiff elected to bring an action against R. L. Hinton alone (Bank v.Carr,
The plaintiff also brought a suit against W. E. Hinton upon the consolidated note of $32,728.01.
The two cases were consolidated for a hearing. Pending the hearing a compromise was effected between plaintiff and R. L. Hinton, whereby the latter paid the plaintiff $7,000 and conveyed certain lands at an agreed value in consideration of the cancellation of the judgment against him, and the judgment was accordingly canceled by order of the court. The defendant W. E. Hinton contended before the trial judge, and contends here, that he is entitled to have the entire amount of the judgment against R. L. Hinton — $14,500 — credited as a payment on his $32,728.01 liability to plaintiff. The trial judge took the view that he was entitled only to the amount actually paid the plaintiff and could not avail himself of the full $14,500 as a credit. This is the only question before the court.
The defendant W. E. Hinton had no interest in the judgment obtained by the plaintiff against R. L. Hinton and no equity in its enforcement, and his own obligations to the bank were neither determined nor affected thereby. Certainly any payment made by R. L. Hinton to the bank would inure to the benefit of both, since it reduced the debt; and, correspondingly, any payment made by the maker, W. E. Hinton, would have a like effect for the same reason. C. S., 3101. But while a release of the maker from his obligation releases the surety or endorser (Lumber Co. v. Buchanan,
The compromise arrangement between the plaintiff and R. L. Hinton was merely a release of the latter as endorser, and doubtless the inducement thereto on the part of the bank was that it was realizing all it reasonable could from the security. *161
Consolidation of these cases had no effect upon the individual rights of the parties. There is nothing affirmatively appearing in the record from which it could be inferred that the compromise was made in the interest of W. E. Hinton, and no presumption to that effect can be indulged.
The substitution, pro tanto, of R. L. Hinton for the bank as subrogated payee did the defendant W. E. Hinton no financial harm, since he is bound for no more than the actual sum paid by his endorser, and is credited by the same amount on his obligation to the bank. Pace v. Robertson,
The maker of the note, W. E. Hinton, should be morally gratified, and certainly must be legally content, that his accommodation endorser sustained no heavier loss through his default.
The defendant Hinton is entitled to credit only for the amount actually paid, and the judgment is, therefore,
Affirmed.