150 N.W. 939 | S.D. | 1915
This action was- instituted by -pl-aintiff to recover from defendants, P. P. Ander-son and J. P. Anderson, the ■amount alleged to be due and unp'aid upon two negotiable pro-mis
“Pay M. Rumely Company, or order, without recourse. Advance Thresher Company,
“By S. N. Cole, Assistant Secretary.”
The defendant P. P. Anderson defaulted and made no answer. One of -the matters pleaded by defendant J. P. Anderson was-that said notes were assigned and indorsed to plaintiff long after the maturity thereof, ,a»d that he signed said notes as surety only, and- not as a maker, and that as such surety he had been exonerated from the ¡payment of such notes by the acts of the Advance Thresher Company, while it was the owner and holder of said notes. There was verdict and judgment in favor of defendant, and plaintiff appeals, assigning- various errors.
Defendant on the trial offered certain oral evidence tending to show that he executed said notes as surety only, and not as a joint maker thereof, to which -evidence appellant objected on the ground that the same was not binding upon .plaintiff as being hearsay and as tending to vary -the terms of a written instrument; it apparently appearing on the face of -said notes that defendant was a joint maker. The objection being overruled, appellant excepted, and now assigns such ruling as error. It will 'be- necessary, first, to- determine whether or not s'aid notes were- indorsed to plaintiff before maturity.
“But the presumption as to the time of acquiring the instrument is not a strong one. The indorsement is almost invariably without date and without witnesses. The transfer, by delivery merely, leaves no footprint upon the paper by which the time can be traced. And the presumption in favor of the holder as to the time of transfer, being without any written corroborative testimony, is of the slightest nature, and open to be blown away by the slightest breath of suspicion.”
Appellant objected to all this evidence offered by defendant on the ground that the aots, statements, and declarations of the Advance Thresher Company's Agent were not binding upon the plaintiff; that as to- plaintiff such acts were hearsay; and, the objections being overruled, plaintiff excepted. We are of the view that the objections were properly overruled. We are of the opinion that the said evidence strongly tended to show, not -only that the. said notes were transferred after maturity, but also- that the Advance Thresher Company, by its agents, was in possession and control of said notes at the times when said acts, statements, and declarations were made.
“One who appears to be a principal, whether by a written instrument or otherwise, may show that he is in fact a surety, except as against persons who have acted on the faith of his apparent character of principal.”
The original payee, who requested respondent to sign as surety, knew of the suretyship at the time the note was delivered to it. It was the original. payee, while it was owner and in possession before maturity, that committed the acts which created and constituted the defense. This valid defense was in existence against the Advance Thresher Company at the time it transferred said notes to plaintiff. In the case of Nichols v. Parsons, 6 N. H. 30, 23 Am. Dec. 706, where a note was. transferred after maturity, and by reason thereof becamt a discredited instrument, and after the transfer the assignee granted an extension of payment to one of the apparent joint makers; who was1 in fact 'the principal debtor, it was held that the other comaker, who was in fact a surety, was not discharged; it appearing that the subsequent, holder of the note had no notice of such suretyship. In that case the court, among- other things, said:
“It is true that he who takes a discredted note receives it subject to any defense which might be made to it in the hands of any previous holder. But -that principle is not applicable in this case. When Ingals received the note, it was justly due. The defense is, not that the defendant then had any answer to an action on the note, but that Ingals has since, by giving day of payment to the principal, discharged the defendant.”
In the case at bar, the 'defense existed against the Advance Thresher Company, at the time of the transfer to plaintiff, and
Appellant urges as error that the trial judge, to- some extent, himself examined and questioned some of the witnesses for respondent.' We have examined the record in relation thereto, and are of the opinion that no abuse of judicial discretion has been shown. All assignments of error have been carefully considered.
Rinding no prejudicial error in the record, the order and judgment appealed from are affirmed.