43 Neb. 238 | Neb. | 1895
This was an action by the plaintiffs below, who are also plaintiffs in error, against Fred Stoll and one Feitz, as .
The issues as thus stated fairly indicate the evidence of the respective parties. Feitz testified, in behalf of the defendant, that he refused to secure said note, or ask the latter to sign with him, and cautioned him (defendant) against signing the note, if requested to do so by plaintiff. He is, in that respect, corroborated by Stoll, who also testified that the sole inducement for the execution of the note was the representation made by one of the plaintiffs, to the effect that Feitz had requested him to become surety thereon. The above is explicitly denied by the plaintiff named in the testimony of the witnesses, and who is, to some extent, corroborated by admitted facts of the case. It cannot be denied that a finding for the plaintiffs upon the evidence in the record would have been more satisfactory to us, al
It is, however, argued by plaintiffs that privity between principal and surety is not essential to the liability of the latter, but that a creditor may obtain the undertaking of an entire stranger to the transaction as security, without even consulting the debtor. That proposition, it is true, has the support of respectable authority, and may for the purpose of this case be accepted as sound law (see Brandt, Suretyship, 127, 358; Hughes v. Littlefield, 18 Me., 400; Talmage v. Burlingame, 9 Pa. St., 21; Peake v. Estate of Dorwin, 25 Vt., 28), although it can have no application to the facts as found. In every ease, we believe, which appears to support the foregoing proposition the surety voluntarily assumed the obligation sought to be enforced for the accommodation of the beneficiary; and the rule, as thus qualified, we regard as altogether sound and reasonable. In this instance it appears that Stoll was willing to accommodate the principal, who is a near relative, and that he signed the note in the belief that he was doing so at the request of the latter, and for his benefit. He did not, according to the finding, assume the relation of surety for Eeitz on any other terms, or for. any other consideration, certainly not for accommodation of the plaintiffs. We have no difficulty in agreeing with counsel in their contention that the facts, as found by the jury, are a complete defense to the plaintiffs’ action. The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.