178 S.W. 620 | Tex. App. | 1915
John Naylor instituted this suit against T. M. Anderson upon a promissory note executed by Anderson and W. D. Phy, payable to plaintiff, and from a judgment in favor of defendant, plaintiff has appealed.
In the petition plaintiff alleged that Phy was not sued because he was insolvent and a nonresident of the state, and that his residence was unknown.
The trial was by the court without the aid of a jury, and the following are the findings of fact and conclusions of law filed by the trial judge:
"Second. Said note was executed in taking up another note, made by E. V. Glover as principal and T. M. Anderson as surety, and payable to Sam Earnest, which was given for a span of horses bought by E. V. Glover from Sam Earnest, who retained a mortgage on said horses from Glover to secure the payment of the note.
"Third. On the execution of the note sued on the chattel mortgage was not renewed.
"Fourth. When the note sued on became due T. M. Anderson wrote to Homer Lee, president of First National Bank of Munday, who was holding said note for collection, that he was only surety on said note, and that W. D. Phy, the principal, had property, subject to execution, sufficient to pay off said note, and that he wanted him (Homer Lee), to collect the money from Phy to pay off the note. This letter was in reply to a letter from Homer Lee to T. M. Anderson, calling Anderson's attention to the date the note would become due and requesting payment.
"Fifth. After the letter written by T. M. Anderson to Homer Lee, suit was not instituted till the second term of county court of Knox county, Tex., which was the court of proper jurisdiction to bring the suit in, the first term having convened on the second Monday in January, 1913.
The facts so found were specially pleaded by Anderson, who further alleged, in substance, that at the time he wrote the letter to Homer Lee, mentioned in the findings, Phy resided in Knox county, where the suit was instituted, and owned seven head of horses and nine bales of cotton, all of which was legally subject to the payment of the note; that in the letter mentioned Anderson informed Homer Lee of those facts, and requested him to proceed at once against Phy to collect the note, but that plaintiff and his agent, Homer Lee, both negligently failed to comply with the request, and permitted Phy to dispose of his said property and to move his residence to the state of Oklahoma.
The note sued on purported to be the joint and several note of Phy and Anderson, and contained the following stipulation:
"The makers and indorsers severally waive presentment for payment, protest, and notice of protest and the bringing of suit at the first term of court upon nonpayment of this note after maturity, and also consent that time of payment may be extended without notice thereof."
Articles 6329, 6330, Vernon's Sayles' Tex.Civ.Stat., provide that a surety by notice in writing may require the holder of a contract for the payment of money forthwith to file suit thereon, and a failure of such creditor to institute suit thereon, at the first term of court convening thereafter, or at the second term, with a showing of good cause why suit was not filed at the first term, will discharge the surety. But the notice to the creditor contemplated by the statutes must be equivalent to an explicit and peremptory *621
demand that suit be instituted forthwith. The letter which Anderson addressed to Homer Lee, as found by the court, did not constitute such notice. National Bank of Commerce v. Gilvin,
From the findings copied it will be noted that the court accorded to Anderson full benefit of the statutes referred to, and rendered judgment in his favor solely upon that statutory defense, without reference to any question of equities between the parties aside from the statutes. For the erroneous conclusions so reached, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.