delivered the opinion of the Court.
This petition was brought in the name of J. N. Evans, as assignee of Hugh Levi, upon a note of the following tenor: “On or before, &e. we or either of us promise to pay,” &c. and signed by Pleasant Lilley and William Lilley, as obligors. The note was dated in September, 1841, payable .in January, 1842, and assigned in November, 1841.
The defendant, Pleasant Lilley, pleaded that after he had executed and delivered the note to the payee, and after it was assigned to the plaintiff, the signature of William Lilley, as a co-obligor, had been procured by the plaintiff, without the knowledge, consent, or approbation
1. The note having been originally drawn in the form of a joint and several obligation, so that the addition of a second obligor did not vary its original import, we are not prepared to concede that its obligatory effect, ■ as the deed of the first obligor, could be impaired by the mere addition of another name at the bottom, even against his consent. But without deciding this point, we are clearly of opinion that the execution of a note in this form, is of .itself, such evidence of authority or assent to the procurement of an additional signature, as to. require of the obligor, who would discharge himself on the ground of its being unauthorized by him, to show an actual dissent or circumstances equivalent thereto. And as we do not doubt that the authority implied in- the form of the note, to obtain an additional signature, would pass with the note itself to the. assignee, we are of opinion that the fact of his having procured such signature, after the assignment of the note to him, did not invalidate it as to the original obligor.
2. Upon the plea of no consideration by the new obligor, as the execution of the note by him implied a con. sideration, the burthen of disproving a consideration de. volved upon the party denying it, as well from the state of the question as by the direct provision of the statute authorizing the plea. And as, notwithstanding the fact of William Lilley’s having executed the note some time after it had been executed by Pleasant Lilley and assigned to the plaintiff, there may have been a sufficient consideration to make it obligatory upon him, either then arising or existing from the commencement of the transaction ; the mere fact as to the time of his executing the note,
The judgment is, therefore, affirmed.