72 S.E. 985 | N.C. | 1911
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE WALKER. There is but one question in this case. On 5 November, 1906, G. W. Presnell made his note to W. G. Hall for $135.96, payable 1 May, 1907, and indorsed by W. W. Presnell and E. F. Lovell (291) as sureties. This note was deposited by Hall with the Bank of Blowing Rock, as collateral security for a debt he owed the bank. Presnell, at the request of Lovell, gave a mortgage to Hall for $120.70 on a pair of horses, to secure the debt and indemnify his sureties, and it was duly registered. The note and mortgage were placed in the hands of an attorney for collection and he immediately pressed the defendants for payment. Lovell requested the attorney to take immediate steps to secure possession of the horses, for the purpose of selling them, we assume, under the power contained in the mortgage, and gave him $5 to pay his expenses. The attorney demanded the horses of Presnell, the debtor, who asked indulgence for several days, so that he might dispose of the horses and pay the debt, which was granted, and Presnell paid the attorney $5 for his expenses. The attorney afterwards sold the horses, but did not realize enough to pay the debt, and meanwhile *233 Presnell left the State. W. G. Hall had no knowledge of the transactions between Presnell and the attorney of the bank, and of course did not authorize the extension of time, nor did the bank. It was simply a slight accommodation given by the attorney to Presnell on his own responsibility, and without any express authority or any ratification afterwards of his act. It does not appear whether or not Presnell was solvent at the time the attorney granted the slight indulgence to him, and has remained so to this time, nor does it appear distinctly that the attorney extended the time for paying the debt, but it rather appears that the short extension was restricted to the time of seizing and selling the horses under the mortgage. Upon the facts admitted by the parties, the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant Lovell appealed.
We think the decision of the court below was right. It is not clear to us how the appellant was injured by the transaction of which he complains, but assuming that it was such an extension of the time for paying the note as would have discharged him, as surety, if it had been given by the plaintiff, we are of the opinion that the attorney had no express or implied authority to bind his client, the bank, or Hall, the payee, by the agreement. He was retained to collect the debt and not to release it or any party liable to Hall or the bank for its payment, and any one dealing with him was fixed, in law, with notice of (292) this lack of authority. As said in Bank v. Hay,
No one could reasonably suppose that it was within the scope of an attorney's authority to release a debt or any party to a note, or to do anything which would have that effect, when his commission extended only to the collection of the debt. It is stated in the books that an attorney has no implied authority to work any discharge of a debtor but upon actual payment of the full amount of the debt, and that in money. He cannot release sureties or indorsers nor enter a retraxit, when it is a final bar (Lambert v. Sanford, 3 Blackford, 137), nor release a witness (Ward v.Hopkins, 2 Pen. (N. J.), 689; Campbell v. Kincaid,
The cases cited by the learned counsel of the appellant are not in point. There the question was as to the authority of an attorney, in the actual conduct of a suit in court, whether in prosecution or defense, and in matters of practice and procedure, as in Black v. Bellamy,
Nor do we think Kesler v. Linker,
Our conclusion is that the defendant Lovell, as surety to the note, was not discharged by anything done by the attorney, nor did the latter intend to release him.
No error.
Cited: Bank v. McEwen,
(296)