18 Wash. 407 | Wash. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought upon two promissory notes made by the defendants Wm. A. Jones and J. P. Hendricks in favor of the Puget Sound Uational Bank of Seattle. The notes were for $500 each, and matured, one in sixty, and one in ninety, days. Hpon one of the notes the sum of $279.25 was paid. Some time after their
For an affirmative defense to the remaining note the appellant alleged that at the date of the assignment thereof to the plaintiff the bank had in its possession and under its control sufficient funds to the credit of the appellant for the purpose of paying the note. The plaintiff demurred to each of these affirmative defenses. The demurrer was overruled and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff upon each of the notes, and from that judgment this appeal is taken.
We think the answer of the appellant was wholly insufficient to constitute a defense.
Section 758, 2 Hill’s Code (Bal. Code, § 5707), does not apply where the court has no jurisdiction to render a judgment against the principal; in other words, that section applies only where the parties are all before the court and the fact of one of the defendants being surety for the other can he determined in the same action without prejudice or delay to the plaintiff being occasioned thereby. It is true that an attachment was levied upon the interest of the defendant Hendricks in certain mining properties, hut it also satisfactorily appears from the record that he had no interest in the property so levied upon at the daté thereof.
2d. Nor do we think that the mere fact that the hank, at the time when it assigned the note to the plaintiff, had money in its hands to the credit of Hendricks, can avail the appellant. Second National Bank v. Hill, 76 Ind. 223 (40 Am. Rep. 239); Voss v. German-American Bank, 83 Ill. 599 (25 Am. Rep. 415); National Mahaiwe Bank v. Peck, 127 Mass. 298 (34 Am. Rep. 368).
The money deposited to Hendricks’ credit in the hank was his portion of the proceeds of a sale of certain mining claims and it appears that the same was deposited with the hank by the purchaser. Upon the trial appellant was permitted to introduce the deposition of Hendricks. As a part of his deposition he attached what purported to he a copy of a letter by him mailed to the hank, in which letter he gave instruction as to the disposition of the amount of his deposit with the hank. The letter is as follows:
*410 “ I am in receipt of notice from the U. S. Land Office of the favorable termination of the contest of A. Q. Komeran, Louis Bronson, etc., against J. P. Hendricks and wife, affecting Monte Cristo mining claims. A contract, deed and bond has been in your possession since April, 1893; I will ask you to refer to the provisions of the said contract and accept payment if promptly made as therein provided in said contract. You are authorized to make payment as follows: First, pay to Puget Sound National Bank, the amount of $461.95 and interest from October 9, 1893. This is the balance due from me on the notes of Jones and Hendricks. Second, pay to J. Compton, Commissioner, Kirkland Land & Improvement Company, $94.00 on the delivery of a deed to lot 15, block 186, Kirkland. The balance you will please forward to me.”
It is conceded that the sum which Hendricks by this letter authorized the bank to apply to the payment of the note was insufficient to pay it in full. Therefore the bank was not obliged to accept it. The note which it held contained the signatures of two parties, and until the full amount of the indebtedness represented by it was paid, the bank had the undoubted right to refuse to accept any less sum in discharge of the liability of either party. That, at most, is all that this evidence tended to show.
3d. What has been said concerning the so-called second affirmative defense to the first note is equally applicable to the defense urged to the second note. But in addition thereto it further appears that the sum which the bank had, belonging to Jones, was also $150, and was deposited at the same time that Hendricks’ was. In his deposition, which was read in evidence on'the trial, the appellant testified that he had requested the bank’s cashier “ to apply so much of the money due me as might be needed to pay any claims which the bank might have against me, in case the notes were not paid before the mining stock was taken out of escrow.” This was at most a mere request or authoriza
4th. We have thus far considered the case upon the assumption that the notes were assigned to the plaintiff merely for the purpose of collection, but the evidence overwhelmingly shows that the plaintiff was the absolute owner of the notes and had paid a good and sufficient consideration therefor. And while, in answer to the interrogatories propounded to the plaintiff prior to the trial, its president answered that the notes had been assigned to it for collection, conclusive evidence was given at the trial upon the part of plaintiff that the answers of its president in that respect were mistakenly made, and that the plaintiff was in fact the bona fide owner and holder of the notes at the time when the suit was instituted.
The verdict was therefore right under the evidence, and the only one which could he permitted to stand, and if there was any error committed in giving or refusing instructions it was harmless merely. Davis v. Gilliam, 14 Wash. 206 (44 Pac. 119).
We have carefully examined the entire record, and are led to the conclusion that upon the law and the facts of this case the judgment was right, and it must be affirmed.
Scott, 0.- J., and Aetdebs, Duwbae and Peavís, JJ., concur.