64 P. 223 | Idaho | 1901
Prior to December, 1893, one E. B. True, purchased an undivided interest in some mining property from one A. T. Huffaker, paying part cash therefor, and executed one or more notes for the balance of the purchase price. Upon these notes one W. H. Pettit was surety. Thereafter suit was brought upon the last of these notes, it being overdue and unpaid; and certain property in the town of Hailey, owned by said True, was attached to secure the said debt to the said Huffaker. Thereafter, and to satisfy the debt sued upon, and to secure the release of the attachment upon the Hailey property, an arrangement was made between the parties whereby said True executed to the plaintiff bank a note for the sum of $1,000, dated December 22, 1893, due November 1, 1894, which note was also executed by the defendants, W. H. Watt and G. V. Bryan, as sureties. Upon the maturity' of this note, the same being unpaid, the said defendants executed a new note to the plaintiff, dated November 1, 1894, for the sum of $1,085.80, due ninety days after date. This note was not signed by the principal debtor, the said True. On May 1, 1895, the last-named note being unpaid, a new note was executed to the plaintiff by said defendants, W. H. Watt and G-. Y. Bryan, for the principal and interest then due, namely, $1,150.90, due ninety days after date, drawing interest at one and one-half per cent per month, after date, until paid; the same being the note sued upon in this action. The defendant Watt at the date of the execution of this last-named note was dissatisfied, and complained that the note was not executed by the principal debtor, the said True. Another note for the same amount and for the same debt was drawn and sent by mail by the plaintiff to the said True, the principal debtor, at Warrens, in Idaho county, who signed said note and forwarded it to the said W. H. Pettit, who also signed it and sent it to the plaintiff. After the maturity of both of these notes, which were for the same debt, the plaintiff commenced an action in the district court in and for Blaine county against said True and W. H. Pettit to recover upon the note last executed by them. In this action an attachment was issued and levied upon certain interests in some mining property owned by the
The first error assigned by the appellant is that the court erred in overruling the demurrer of plaintiff to the answer as amended. This assignment of error is well taken. The answer failed to show that the security secured by the plaintiff by levy of its attachment in its suit against True and Pettit Was of any value. Consequently it failed to show that the defendants here, as surety, suffered any loss by reason of the release of said attachment. Said answer was not specifically certain, in this: that it failed to allege that the release of said 'attachment was not made by or with the consent of the defendant. Said answer was also defective in this: that it ‘alleged, upon information and belief, that the note signed by Pettit and True had proceeded to judgment. This is not a good allegation. Matters of record in the courts of general jurisdiction in this state are within the reach of all litigants, and the fact of the existence of such record must be specific and certain, and not based upon information and belief. Said answer was defective in this: that, in attempting to plead a satisfaction of the debt evidenced by said True and Pettit, it 'avers that said obligation was since been fully discharged and liquidated,” which is too uncertain and too much in the nature
We have carefully considered all of the evidence introduced at the trial. The plaintiff never waived its objections to the sufficiency of the answer of the defendant raised by its demurrer. It objected to the introduction of any evidence under the answer on the ground that said answer was not sufficient, and failed to state a defense.
On behalf of the respondents it is contended that the first note executed by True, Watt and Bryan, to the plaintiff being a joint obligation, such relation continued as between the parties. Respondent contends that the plaintiff, by electing to sue upon the note executed to it May 1, 1895, by Tfue and Pettit, and by taking a judgment in said action upon said note, has, in law, released the defendants in this action. We cannot agree with this contention. An inspection of the note sued upon in this action shows that it is in form joint, not joint and several, as to the defendants, Watt and ’.lVynn, .TJ'h being true, the mere fact- thairtlie principal ctebtói <Nw-nr >3 i-ue note for the same-ddbt, and his sureties execute another note for the same debt, sfifficiently shows that, as between the defendants in this case, jheir obligations to plaintiff are joint, but, so far as the principal debtor is concerned, their obligation is several, or distjfict from his. It is undoubtedly true that the relation of pri/heipal and surety continues as between True and the deferí dants Watt and Bryan after the execution of the last two note's above described. We are constrained to hold that the action of the bank in suing True and Pettit upon their note b^íore described, and in obtaining judgment thereon, did not release the defendants in this action from their obligation upon Ahe note sued on here. It is true that the bank cannot collect /both notes. ' This would be collecting the same debt twice. H¡ would be a sufficient defense in this case for the defendants to plead and prove that the bank has collected this debt from said True and Pettit, or either of them.
Respondents also contend that the release of the attachment by the plaintiff upon the mining property owned by said True was a release of the defendants, they being sureties of
Many questions are presented in the record and in the assignment of errrors made by the appellant, but, in our opinion, what we have said herein is sufficient to a correct determination of this action, without reviewing in detail all of the specifications of error made by the appellant. The order denying a new trial and the judgment appealed from are both reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court, Wife-instructions to sustain the demurrer of the plaintiff to the answer "of"the"defendant'as'-amended, and to permit the defendant, if he so desires to do, to amend'his answer, and for further proceedings consistent with the views herein expressed.