This suit originated in the county court of Deaf Smith county by the Western National Bank of Hereford, Tex., suing C. T. Dobbins, J. H. Barnum, and Bill Barnum, as makers, and H. H. Hawkins and C. P. Arthur, as indorsers, and H. H. Hawkins on a special contract of assumption, alleged to have been made by him, for the balance of principal, interest, and attorney’s fees due on a certain promissory note, originally payable on its face to H. H. Hawkins and C. P. Arthur, for tile sum of $750, and to foreclose the chattel mortgage executed by J. H. Barnum on certain personal property to secure the payment of the note.
The defendants J. H. Barnum, Bill Barnum, and O. T. Dobbins answered, admitting the allegations of fact contained in plaintiff’s pleadings, and further adopting the same as a cross-action against the defendant H. II. Hawkins, and prayed that in the event plaintiff recovered against them, or either of them, that they have judgment over against the defendant H. H. Hawkins on the special contract of assumption.
The defendants H. H. Hawkins and O. P. Arthur answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, a general denial, and special defenses to the effect that more than two terms of court had passed in which suit could have been filed on the note sued on since its maturity and before suit was filed, no protest having been had thereon; that at the time the note sued on was executed it was also secured by a lien on property, other than that covered by the mortgage sought to be foreclosed in this suit, amply sufficient to pay the note, and that the plaintiff had recklessly and carelessly permitted defendants O. T. Dobbins and J. H. Barnum to dispose of, use, and waste same and apply to the payment of other debts, and that plaintiff was thereby estopped from holding them (H. H. Hawkins and O. P. Arthur) liable on said note; that plaintiff was attempting to hold them for the debt of. another, contrary to the statute of fraud; that plaintiff had extended the time of payment of said note, for a valuable consideration, on a contract made with the makers thereof, without the consent of defendants H. H. Hawkins and C. P. Arthur, and prayed accordingly. O. P. Arthur also pleaded non est factum as to the indorsement on the note sued on. The trial court overruled some exceptions urged by H. H. Hawkins and G. P. Arthur to the pleadings of plaintiff, which will be discussed below.
A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant O. P. Arthur and for plaintiff against G. T. Dobbins, J. H. Barnum, Bill Barnum, and H. H. Hawkins, and in favor of O. T. Dobbins, J. H. Barnum, and Bill Barnum against H. H. Hawkins, and in favor of plaintiff for foreclosure of the mortgage, from which judgment H. H. Hawkins alone has appealed to this court.
The record shows that in 1909 O. P. Arthur and H. II. Hawkins sold a certain butcher business, fixtures, and other personal property to J. H. Barnum, C. T. Dobbins, and Bill Barnum, and that the note sued on was executed and delivered as a part of the purchase price therefor; that Hawkins, without the knowledge or consent of C. P. Arthur, sold the note to plaintiff before maturity, *724 and indorsed the note “Hawkins & Arthur”; that thereafter J. H. Barnum purchased the interest of Bill Barnum in said butcher business, and that thereafter he also purchased the interest of C. T. Dobbins therein, and that thereafter, and about May 30,1910, J. H. Barnum sold said business, as well, possibly, as a restaurant business, to H. H. Hawkins; it being claimed by J. H. Barnum that said Hawkins, as a part of the consideration for said last-mentioned sale, assumed and agreed to pay off and satisfy the note sued on, while Hawkins claimed that he assumed and agreed to pay other notes, but not the one sued on. The contract of sale last mentioned appears to have been an oral one.
As grounds for reversal, appellant urges the assignments of error hereinafter discussed.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the trial court will, in all things, be affirmed; and it is so ordered.
