56 Tex. 75 | Tex. | 1881
Loving claimed that he signed the note with the understanding and upon the agreement that he was not bound thereby, unless D. P. Terrell would sign the same. This was one of the contested issues in the court below, and much, of the evidence found in the record was addressed to it. In the bill of sale from
It is claimed that the charge, in view of the case made by the evidence, was erroneous and misleading. If, as contended by Loving, the note was only to be binding upon him in the event Terrell’s name was secured to the same, then the failure to secure Terrell’s name to the note did not simply release Loving, for he had never been bound,-—-the contingency in which he was to become liable had not occurred. And if Loving, after he ascertained that Terrell had failed to sign it, had promised to pay the same, this would have been but a promise to pay the debt of another, for prior to such promise he was not bound
In Dennison v. League, 16 Tex., 408, the court observed that “there is no rule that has been so stringently enforced in this court as the- rule that the allegation must be broad enough to let in the proof, and that no evidence, not supported by the allegata, can sustain a verdict.”
Upon a careful examination of the record, we are not able to say upon what view of the case the jury found their verdict. The evidence shows, that notwithstanding the note upon its face was joint and several, that in fact Loving was but a surety for Dyer, and had the right to plead and prove the fact so as to secure the benefits of art. 4786, Pasch. Dig. Burke v. Cruger, 8 Tex., 57.
It would seem that if the jury found that Loving was originally bound by the note sued on, that they would have found against him as surety for Dyer, and not as principal.
In Markham v. Carothers, 47 Tex., 22, the court say that it is error to charge upon an issue not made by the pleadings. It is also said in H. & T. C. R. W. Co. v. Terry, 42 Tex., 451, that when a charge presents a question outside of the case as made by the pleadings, and upon which the verdict might have been found, a judgment based upon such verdict will be reversed.
The evidence we find in the record as to the admissions made by Loving, and to which evidently the court directed the charge under consideration, were nothing more or less than promises to pay; there is no evidence as to any admission upon his part that he signed the note otherwise than upon the conditions claimed by him.
If the jury regarded the charge as submitting to them the subsequent promises of Loving to pay the note, as sufficient to render him liable upon it if made with the knowledge that Terrell had not signed it, and found accordingly, it would be error. And we cannot say, from an inspection of the record, that it was not so considered by the jury, and that their finding was not based upon a matter outside of the case as made by the pleading.
The special charges asked by appellant upon this point presented the law of the case, and should have been given.
For the errors indicated, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.