128 A. 536 | Pa. | 1925
Argued February 2, 1925. The Catasauqua Silk Company was a closely controlled corporation, the stock being in the possession of W. J. and E. J. Smith, brothers, and a brother-in-law, James J. Seyfried. The latter was also a director of the Lehigh National Bank, whose place of business was in *3 the same town. At various times, loans were negotiated by the former company, represented by notes, all of which were drawn to its own order, and endorsed by the parties named. The last, a renewal, was dated July 7, 1914, payable ninety days thereafter. This obligation was signed as before, except that the personal representatives of Seyfried, whose name was first, but who had died in the meantime, appeared. Payments on account had reduced the balance due to somewhat less than $6,000. The silk company became insolvent, and efforts were made by the bank to have those liable pay the amount still due. In 1917, it brought suit against all endorsers.
On behalf of the estate of Seyfried, a statutory demurrer was filed, denying that the obligation was joint, and insisting that, as a result, there was a misjoinder of parties. Expecting that some adjustment might be made, the legal question raised was not brought up for argument until 1923, or definitely disposed of until a year later. The court was then of opinion that the legal position urged should be sustained, and suggested an amendment, striking the names of the living defendants from the record. In the absence of proper averments showing joint liability, it was correctly so ordered (Wolf v. Hostetter,
A second statement of claim was substituted, to which also an affidavit of defense was interposed by the same counsel, averring, contrary to the former contention, that the liability was joint, and therefore the suit against the representatives of the one endorser alone could not be brought. It was likewise insisted that the amendment, made by direction of the court, was, in effect, the institution of a new proceeding, which was barred by the statute *4 of limitations. The demurrer was upheld, and from the order made the present appeal is taken.
There is no sufficient averment of fact in the original statement of claim, or the amended one, that the obligation of the three endorsers was joint. They were all liable to the bank which discounted the notes, though primarily the first named was required to pay, and this happened to be the decedent, Seyfried. If there was any agreement between him and his brothers-in-law as to the ultimate division of responsibility, that must be settled between themselves, but in so far as the bank, which is the plaintiff here, is concerned, any such understanding cannot defeat its right to recover against the first endorser.
We cannot agree that the amendment made more than six years after the maturity of the notes, with permission of the court, — the original suit having been instituted within that period, — bars the rights of the plaintiff here. It has been held frequently that such action is not permissible where, in reality, the purpose is to introduce a new cause of suit (Rochester Borough v. Kennedy,
It cannot be successfully contended that the order striking off the names of the second and third endorsers, and allowing the action to stand against the estate of Seyfried alone, had the effect of altering the cause. The liability of the latter was fixed and legally asserted by the bank when it brought its suit in 1917. Removal of the names of the subsequent signers as parties worked no harm to it: Hardie v. Bateson,
We are convinced the amendment originally allowed was proper, and that the learned court below fell into error in striking off the second statement, which it had directed to be filed. It follows that the only assignment of error must be sustained, and the record remitted to the court below so that an affidavit of defense may be submitted, if desired, and a trial had on the merits.
The judgment is reversed; the costs of this appeal to abide the final determination of the case.