14 Nev. 191 | Nev. | 1879
By tlie Court,
It is alleged in tlie complaint that defendant made liis certain promissory note with plaintiff as surety, in words and figures following, to wit:
“ $450.
“On the first day of February next, for value received, we jointly and severally promise to pay Whitesides & Sacrider the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars in United States gold coin, with interest at two per cent per month, until paid.
Charles Henry,
Fred. Frevert.
“Genoa, September 28, 1865.”
“That said note was then and there delivered to the payees named therein, who indorsed and transferred the 'same to one Henry Epstein, by whom it was held and owned when it became due and payable, on the first day of February, 1866; that defendant failed and refused to pay the amount due on said note, or any part thereof, when it became due; that immediately thereafter said Henry Epstein duly notified plaintiff, as surety upon said note, that defendant had failed and refused to pay any part of said note; that both principal and interest remained due and payable from said maker to said indorsee; that he, the said indorsee, should look to plaintiff as such surety to pay the same, and then and there demanded of and from plaintiff the payment thereof; that subsequently, to wit, about March 16, 1866, plaintiff, as such surety, was compelled to, and did, pay to said Epstein, the lawful holder and owner of said note, the sum of one hundred dollars, United States gold coin, which sum, thus paid, was paid for and on behalf of defendant, on account of said note, and in part payment of the principal and interest; that subsequently, to wit, about the-day of May, 1866, plaintiff, as such surety, was compelled to, and did, pay to said Henry Epstein, who was still the*194 lawful holder and owner of said note, the further sum of four hundred and fifty dollars and fifty cents, United States gold coin, which said further sum thus paid, was paid for and on behalf of said defendant, and on account of said note, and in fall payment of the-priucipal and interest of said note, and thereupon said indorsee duly indorsed, assigned, and delivered said note to plaintiff, who is now, and ever since has been, the lawful holder and owner of the same; that no part has been paid, and there is now due from defendant to plaintiff, on account of said note and said moneys paid as before stated, with interest thereon, the sum of one thousand seven hundred dollars, in United States gold coin.”
Other facts are pleaded, showing that the action is not barred by the statute of limitation, and the prayer is for judgment for one thousand seven hundred dollars, besides interest upon the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars, at two per cent, per month, from the commencement of the action uiitil judgment, and costs of suit.
By his answer defendant admitted the making and delivery of the note as alleged, but denied payment by defendant, or that one thousand seven hundred dollars or any other sum was due as alleged or otherwise. He also pleaded entire failure of consideration.
Plaintiff recovered judgment for one thousand eight hundred and one dollars and fifty cents, with interest upon four hundred and fifty dollars at the rate of two per cent, per month from the date thereof until paid, and costs of the action.
Defendant moved for a new trial, which was denied; and this appeal is taken from that order and from the judgment. At the oral argument, counsel for plaintiff made several pre-. liminary motions, one of which was to strike out the statement on motion for a new trial, for reasons then stated. Inasmuch as our opinion will be based upon errors claimed by counsel for appellant to appear upon the judgment roll, •which will necessitate a reversal or modification of the judgment, it is unnecessary to pass upon the preliminary motions. In cases of this .character a judgment must
An objection that the judgment is not authorized by the pleadings may be taken upon the judgment roll alone, whether there is a statement on motion for a new trial or not. (Putnam v. Lamphier, 36 Cal. 158.)
Upon an appeal from a judgment, any error appearing in the judgment roll may be corrected in the appellate court without a statement on appeal. (Klein v. Allenbach, 6 Nev. 162.)
Let us ascertain, then, the full extent of relief to Avhich plaintiff was entitled, according to the case made by his complaint, and for what amount he could have taken a valid judgment, if defendant had failed to appear and answer. And first, what is the nature of this action ? Is it an action upon the promissory note proper, or is it to recover, on implied assumpsit, for money paid by plaintiff for defendant’s use and benefit, as surety, in satisfaction of the note? I think it is the latter. Plaintiff had no right to bring any other action, and all the facts necessary to support such an one are pleaded. It is true that there are certain immaterial allegations which are proper to be inserted, and are material, in an action upon a promissory note; but those allegations, when considered with previous ones, cannot be true in the sense apparently expressed, whether the action was intended to be upon the promissory note proper, or for money paid for-defendant’s use and benefit.
That is to say, plaintiff having alleged that he paid five hundred and fifty dollars and fifty cents, for and on behalf of defendant, on account of said note, and in full payment of said note, principal and interest, it is an insertion of mere surplusage to allege, in addition, “that Epstein then indorsed, assigned, and delivered said note to plaintiff; that plaintiff is and ever since then has been the lawful holder and owner thereof, and that no part has been paid.”
Plaintiff could not be the “owner and holder,” after
It is said by counsel for plaintiff that “ the complaint being verified and the defendant having failed to controvert specifically the assignment and indorsement to the plaintiff, his ownership thereof and non-payment, the judgment must be affirmed whether the statement be considered or not.”
It may be admitted, generally, that in an action upon a promissory note, an allegation of non-payment is a material averment, and consequently, in such an action, should be denied if the fact of payment be relied on. But here the allegations are that after payment had been made to Epstein by plaintiff, one of the joint makers, Epstein then assigned and delivered the note to plaintiff, and that defendant has not paid the same to him. Such an allegation, upon the facts disclosed by the complaint, falls of its own weight and requires no denial. Upon the facts stated, that plaintiff paid the note, principal and interest, to Epstein, the law declares that defendant need not pay, and cannot be compelled to pay, the note as such ; but that he ought to pay, and can be made to pay, to plaintiff, the amount due and paid by him.
In Holliman v. Rogers, & Tex. 97, the court says: “It will be recollected that the notes sued on in this case were the joint notes of the defendant Holliman, Grace, and O’Neal. The record does not disclose whether the two last-named were securities of the former or not. But to put it on the footing that Grace put it on himself, in speaking of the payment of the notes, which testimony w’as ruled out by the court, that he had paid the notes as
It has been held in some cases that when a note has been paid by one Avho is merely collaterally interested, as ah in-dorser, its negotiability is not destroyed, and the note remains good as against the maker. (Cochran v. Wheeler, 7 N. H. 202; Guild v. Eager, 17 Mass. 615.) In Davis v. Stevens, 10 N. H. 188, the court comments upon those cases thus:
“Where a note is taken up under such circumstances, it is not, in fact, paid. An individual discharges his liability as guarantee merely, but the general promise of the note remains unextinguished. But such is not this case. Here, if payment is made at all, it is made by a co-signer. But Avhere one of íavo joint promisors, Avho is liable directly upon the note for its whole amount, pays such note, the note is necessarily extinguished. Whenever he discharges himself from the note by such payment, the payment goes to the Avhole promise of the note, and Avhen the entire promise of the note is met and extinguished, it cannot afterwards be revived as a subsisting contract against a co-signer. NeAv rights and liabilities arise betAvixt the co-signers, but the original contract is at an end.” (See, also, Hopkins v. Farwell & Scott, 32 N. H. 429; Long et al. v. Bank of Cynthiana, 1 Little (Ky.) 291; Bryant v. Smith, executrix, 10 Cush. 171; Pray v. Maine, 7 Id. 253; Stevens & Pillet v. West & Hamilton, 1 Howard (Miss.) 310; Smith v. Johnson, 23 Cal. 64; 2 Pars, on Notes and Bills, 237.)
Upon the facts stated in the complaint, plaintiff Avas entitled to maintain an action of implied assumpsit for the amount paid, but he could not sustain an action upon the