115 Va. 350 | Va. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill in this suit was filed by the appellant for the purpose of obtaining releáse from his liability as endorser upon a certain negotiable note. The ground upon which the
It appears that in March, 1907, E. F. O’Brien executed a note for $3,200, payable to the appellant, J. W. Lynch, and E. W. Tinsley sixty days after date. This note was endorsed by the payees and discounted for O’Brien by the First National Bank of Boanoke. In the body of the note it appeared that thirty-two shares of Boanoke Knitting Mills stock was deposited therewith as collateral. The note was curtailed by O’Brien and renewed from time to time in the same shape, and with the same endorsement, until it was reduced to $2,100. The renewal for $2,100 was in the shape of a plain negotiable note without mention of collateral. At the time of this last mentioned renewal O’Brien withdrew seven shares of the stock, leaving with the bank the remaining twenty-five shares. O’Brien made no further payment. The note was, however, subsequently renewed from time to time, with same endorsement, until it was reduced to $1,800 by payments made by the endorsers.
The evidence is beyond dispute that, when appellant endorsed the several renewals of the $1,800 note now held by the appellee bank and from which he seeks to be released, he had full knowledge of the fact that the seven shares of stock had been withdrawn by O’Brien. Having repeatedly renewed his endorsement of the note after full knowledge of the defense available in respect to the original note, appellant must be held to have waived such defense and to be estopped from availing himself of it as to the renewal. This principle is elementary. Joyce on Defenses to Com. Paper, sec. 649; Building Asso. v. Blair, 96 Va. 490, 495, 36 S. E. 513; University Va. v. Snyder, 100 Va. 567, 579, 12 S. E. 337.
The decree denying the relief asked in this case is plainly right and it must be affirmed.
Affirmed.