148 Mass. 596 | Mass. | 1889
The plaintiffs, who compose the partnership of William Lanahan and Son, brought suit against Fred L. Porter and Mary Porter on a promissory note, and recovered judgment against them on December 29, 1884. The defendants thereupon filed a petition for setting aside this judgment, pursuant to the Pub. Sts. c. 187, § 17, and gave, with sureties, the bond on which the present suit was brought. See Pub. Sts. c. 187, § 19.
The judgment was vacated on December 13, 1886, and the plaintiffs thereafter filed in the original suit, by the consent of the defendants in that suit, an amended declaration, on which the case was again tried, and a judgment rendered for the plaintiffs, which remains wholly unsatisfied. In the present suit the defendants are the defendants in the original suit and two other persons who signed the bond as sureties, and they contend that the allowance of the amendment to the plaintiffs’ declaration in the original suit discharged them, or at least the sureties, from their obligation on the bond.
Prior - to the St. of 1874, c. 404, Fred L. and Mary Porter would have been held to be joint and several makers of the note. By that statute Mary Porter is “ entitled to notice of the nonpayment thereof, the same as indorsers.” Pub. Sts. c. 77, § 15. Without deciding, we assume that, for the purposes of pleading, it is now to be considered that she is an indorser. The original declaration alleged in the first count that Fred L. Porter made the note and Mary Porter indorsed it before delivery, payable to the order of the plaintiffs, and that they owe the plaintiffs the amount of the note; and in the second count, that, at the maturity of the note, the plaintiffs caused demand for payment to be made upon the defendants, which they refused, and that they owe the plaintiffs interest on the amount of the note from the date of the demand. The third count is for costs of protest. The amended declaration is in two counts, and declares against Fred L. Porter as maker, and against Mary Porter as an indorser, whose liability has become absolute by due demand and notice, (Pub. Sts. c. 167, § 4,) and it is for the amount of the note, interest, and costs of protest.
It is plain that both declarations were intended to be for the same cause of action; the defect in the first declaration is, that, although setting out the facts, except notice to the indorser of non-payment, it is in form a declaration against the two defendants as joint makers of the note. The amendment did not introduce any new or additional claim or cause of action, or any new party; the rights of the defendants, as between themselves, were not affected by it; the effect of it was to set out accurately the cause of action informally described in the original declaration, and this would not discharge the bond or release the sureties. Kellogg v. Kimball, 142 Mass. 124.
Judgment for the plaintiffs affirmed.