153 Iowa 369 | Iowa | 1911
In the year 1905 a corporation known as Shotwell, Davis & Co., which was then carrying on the commission business in Chicago, for the purpose of securing credit with the plaintiff, a bank: of that city, delivered to the plaintiff two guaranties signed, respectively, by these defendants, who were stockholders in said corporations; the undertakings of the guarantors, respectively, being to pay to the bank promptly at maturity, and without notice or demand, all debts and liabilities of the corporation then
The court found as matter of law, and instructed the jury, that plaintiff had a valid claim against the defendants on account of the indebtedness of the corporation to the bank when action was brought for $3,458, unless the obligations of defendants had been canceled and discharged by the settlement above referred to, and left for the determination of the jury the sole question as to whether such settlement had in fact been made, casting upon defendants the burden of proof to show that there had been such full
The contention for the appellant is that part payment of the existing indebtedness was not a sufficient consideration for the release of the whole, and that, therefore, the defendants as guarantors were not discharged. The soundness of this proposition as • a general rule can not be questioned, but it is equally' well settled that some additional consideration, even though of slight money value, is sufficient to sustain such a settlement and discharge. We find such additional consideration in the fa<3t that the notes released were not due at the time the settlement was made, and were therefore paid before maturity, and in the further fact that in effecting such settlement property was surrendered, the proceeds of which might have been retained by the corporation, and turned over to other creditors. That these additional elements of consideration were sufficient to sustain the agreement to settle and discharge the corporation and these defendants as guarantors is amply established by the authorities, among which we may cite the following cases decided in this court: Marshall v. Bullard, 114 Iowa, 462; Brown v. Jennett, 130 Iowa, 311; Kerr v. Topping, 109 Iowa, 150; Engbretson v. Seiberling, 122 Iowa, 522. The jury was correctly instructed as to the law and the verdict finds support in the evidence.
By stipulation on suggestion of the death of G. W. Nicholson, defendant, pending this appeal, his administrators, B. Y. Nicholson and May O. Nicholson, are substituted as of date October 17, 1911.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.