80 Ky. 309 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion oe the court.
The appellant filed his petition the 26th of October, 1876,’ on a note which W. R. Covington, as principal, and theappellee, Carson, and another, as surety, executed to him? on the 3d day of June, 1869, and due six months after date, for the sum of $1,500. The evidence tends to- prove that about the time the petition was filed, the- appellee, Carson, went to his principal and told him that they had better
Consequently, and in pursuance of the agreement, no process was issued on the petition, but the appellee, protracting, through feigned excuses, the disclosure of his intention not to confess judgment until the last day of the term, when, for the first time, he made known his purpose to disregard the agreement which he initiated, and apparently with good faith had entered into with the appellant, whose assent, thereto was thus obtained by the appellee.
Process was thereafter issued on the nth day of December, 1876, seven days after the expiration of seven years from the time the note became due.
The appellee pleaded that he was only surety, and relied upon the statute of limitation of seven years in bar of the action.
The parties, by inartificial pleading, joined issue upon the facts above stated, which were relied on by the appellant in avoidance of the plea of limitation.
The court peremptorily instructed the jury, after the evidence was in, to find for the appellee; and from the judgment rendered on the verdict, which the jury found in obedience to that instruction, the appellant prosecutes this appeal.
In the case of Kennedy v. Foster’s ex’r, 14th Bush, 481, the surety verbally asked for time, and promised to pay
But the facts of that case presented a ■ totally different question from the one involved in this.
Here no delay was asked for or assented to; the agreement only dispensed with the necessity of issuing a summons on the petition which had been filed, and therefore furnished a legal basis for an agreed judgment. The terms •of the agreement import a desire upon thé part of the •appellee to facilitate the recovery of the judgment by removing all obstacles to its rendition rather than a purpose to obtain delay. And to countenance such chicanery as the making and violating of such an agreement as this, would invite into the sacred precincts of a court of justice the arts of the deceitful, and furnish forth a well appointed place and secure mode of perpetrating frauds.
■ Besides these reasons, this agreement falls within the main rule applicable to the validity and sufficiency of the consideration necessary to every simple contract, which rule is, that where a benefit results to the promisor, or to another at his request, or where any loss or inconvenience is sustained by the promisee at the instance of the promisor, the latter is bound to perform the agreement whether the consideration is sufficient or not, if the contract be otherwise free from illegality. '
And if upon a new trial it appears from the evidence that such an agreement as is alleged by the appellant, ■whose amended petition ought- to have been permitted to !be filed, was made with him or his agent by the appellee, .the period of the delay resulting therefrom should be excluded from the time pleaded in bar of the action by the surety.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with directions to grant appellant a new trial on principles .consistent with this opinion.