delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, Gano, and nine others executed a writing to the end that one P. T. Pullen might obtain the sum. of $10,000 with which to run a milling business in Georgetown, Ky.
The appellant bank on the strength of this writing furnished $5,000, which was used to pay off a debt then owing the bank by Pullen, and also $5,000 which was used in the business. After a time, Pullen being insolvent the bank called on the obligors in the writing for a discharge of their undertaking. All seemed to have paid their respective shares demanded by the writing except the appellant, who tendered certain issues of law and fact "in defense of the action which followed Ms refusal to pay Ms share.
The writing which forms the basis of action is as follows:
P. T. Pullen, of Georgetown, Ky., contemplating the leasing of the. Thompson Mills and carrying on the. milling business, and being in need of capital with which to buy stock and run the same as it should be run successfully, now, in order to aid him, we, W. E. Pullen, George Carley, George V. Payne, T. T. Hedger, J. M. Penn, James W. Craig, Buford Hall, Daniel Gano, S. B. Triplett and Warren C. Graves, whose names- are hereto signed agree
And others named in the writing.
The paper, as we have already indicated, was taken by
“If a note be purchased by a party, with notice that one of the obligors is surety merely, and that the sale and purchase will defeat the purpose for which it was executed by him, or will violate any understanding or agreements between him and his principal, then the purchaser will be affected by such notice and can not hold the surety liable on the note to compel him to pay it.” Here the bank has notice that Gano was surety merely on the writing taken as collateral by the bank to secure the new note. And it had notice that the sale and purchase of this new note and application of its proceeds to pay off the old debt would defeat the sole purpose for which the writing was executed by the surety, namely, “to raise the sum of $10,000, buy stock and run the same.”
This would seem sufficient to bring the case within the principle announced in the cited case. For it is manifest that if one-half the capital needed to carry on the milling business and “run the same successfully” was to be taken to pay off an old debt, the business must suffer and likely not be run successfully. But this is not all. The bank had
Other obligors who lived in or about Georgetown, the scene of this transaction, seem either to have had knowledge of these material facts at the time or obtained it shortly afterwards, and having that knowledge, still paid off their shares; but the appellant was an old man, some eighty-ñve years of age, living quite a distance from the town and visiting there only a few times within a year. There is no doubt of his entire ignorance of the material facts indicated. He was not even apprised of the fact that the writing had been used by Pullen with the bank or any one else and money obtained thereby. It seems to be clear that he was entitled to this notice. He had merely offered his name with that of others as surety to whomever might accept the offer and loan of money. He was therefore entitled to notice of acceptance. In Steadman v. Guthrie 4 Met., 148, it was held that “when the-offer is to guaranty a debt for which another is primarily liable in consideration of some act to be performed by the creditor- mere per, formance of the act is not sufficient to fix the liability of the guarantor; but the creditor must notify the guarantor of his acceptance of the offer or of his intention to act upon it. That the guarantor might, by inquiry from the person in whose favor the guaranty was given, have learned what had passed between the guarantees and himself, will not dispense with notice . A person thus proposing to become surety for another is not bound to inquire as to the accept
The writing, the contents of which the bank had notice because they accepted and acted on it, entitled the obligors to have a mortgage on all the property the debtor had or might acquire and we do not see that because one was in fact executed of which no notice whatever was given to the appellant can take the place of the notice to which
Actual notice is what the law requires and notice or knowledge of this ,new mortgage might have been sufficient, but this the appellant did not have.
We think the plaintiff's petition should have been dismissed and the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent with this opinion.