79 Ind. 103 | Ind. | 1881
— Samuel Moore, John O. Morgan and North
The complaint states that on the 20th day of June, 1874, one William D. Kolb, by his note of that date, promised to pay to the order of the appellant, two years from date, the sum of one hundred dollars, with interest at ten per cent, per annum, payable annually, and with attorney fees; that the appellant assigned said note by blank' endorsement to one George Marlott, who transferred the same by delivery to'the appellees as collateral security for a debt which he then owed and still owes them; that a reasonable attorney’s fee for collecting said note is twenty-five dollars; that the note is. due and remains unpaid, except $32 which had been paid and endorsed on the same.
It is also alleged that when the note became due the maker,. Kolb, was, and ever since has been, and now is, notoriously, wholly and totally insolvent, having no property subject to' execution, out of which their claim could be made.
It is also stated that the appellees received said note from said Marlott on the 18th day of April, 1875; that suit was commenced on said.note by the appellees, as against the maker and the appellant, in the Fountain Circuit Court, for the1 May term thereof, 1877, that being, as alleged, the first term of said court held after the appellees received said note; that they recovered in said court a judgment on said note against Kolb for $104 and costs, on the 2d day of June, 1877, and afterwards dismissed the suit against the appellant; that execution was afterwards duly issued on said judgment against said Kolb and duly returned by the sheriff of Fountain county, endorsed, “ No property of any description whatever found whereon to levy.” George Marlott was made a defendant to answer as to his interest in the suit, but the action was dismissed as to him. The appellant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was overruled. He then answered by a general denial. The cause was submitted
The rulings of the court upon the demurrer to the complaint, and the motions for a new trial, and in arrest of judgment, are assigned as errors.
'We think the complaint was sufficient. The averment that Kolb, the maker, was, at the time the note matured, and continued to be until the commencement of the suit, totally insolvent, “having no property subject to execution, out of which their claim could be made,” excused the delay in proceeding against the maker. Where the maker is insolvent at. the time the note becomes due and so continues, having no property subject to execution, it is not necessary, in order to-charge the. endorser, to institute legal proceedings against him.. Kestner v. Spath, 53 Ind. 288; Roberts v. Masters, 40 Ind. 461.
The appellant insists that the complaint is fatally defective,, because it does not aver that the note is unpaid. In this-counsel are mistaken. The complaint does aver that the-note, except the sum of $32 endorsed on it, is unpaid.
The motion in arrest of judgment is not discussed, and will not, for that reason, be considered.
It is insisted by counsel for. the .appellant, that the court below erred in overruling the motion for a new trial, because-the verdict was not sustained, by sufficient evidence.
The appellees read the noté sued on and the appellant’s endorsement thereon in evidence. They also read in evidence a transcript from the Fountain Circuit Court, from which it appeared that on the 26th day of-April, 1877, the appellees commenced a suit in the Fountain Circuit Court on the note now in suit, against William D. Kolb, as maker, and the appellant as endorser; and that’ on the 2d day of June, 1877, they recovered in said court a judgment on said note against said Kolb for $104 and costs, the . 'suit being subsequently dis
The note sued on matured June 20th, 1876. The suit against the maker was not commenced for more than ten months after its maturity, and execution was not taken'out until five months had elapsed from the rendition of the judgment. The facts show an entire want of that reasonable diligence which the law requires in order to charge the appellant as indorser of the note in suit. If the judgment below can be sustained, it is because the evidence in the case shows, -or legally tends to show, that proceedings by suit against the maker, commenced within a reasonable time after the maturity of the note, and prosecuted with diligence, would have been unavailing.
We have examined the testimony and think that it tends to -show that the maker of the note was, from the time of its maturity until the commencement of this suit, a householder, and -entitled under the law to $300 of property free from sale on execution, and that during that period he had not, aside from liens, that amount of property. He had forty acres of land, worth as he swears, $13 per acre; it and another forty acres .adjoining it, which he testifies to have been worth less, was encumbered by a mortgage of $800, with interest thereon at ■eight per cent, from 1870. It is true, that he further testifies •that one Payne had assumed and agreed to pay off this mortgage. In addition to the land he had personal property, household furniture, etc., worth $100. The land, that is, the ■eighty acres, was, according to his testimony, worth less than the debt for which it was mortgaged. It is obvious, therefore, that the maker of the note, 'from the time of its maturity until the commencement of this suit, according to his testimony, had no property subject to execution, out of which
Pee Cueiam. — It is ordered, upon the foregoing opinion, that the judgment below be affirmed, at the costs of the ap•pellant.