131 P. 1006 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of. the court.
It may be conceded that as to the bank the plaintiff, who signed the writing on the back of the note, and the defendants in this action, all of whom signed the note as makers, were all directly liable. Such is the doctrine taught by all the cases cited in the defendant’s brief: Hungerford v. O’Brien, 37 Minn. 306 (34 N. W. 161); Hecht v. Acme Coal Co., 19 Wyo. 10 (113 Pac. 786); Walter A. Wood Co. v. Farnham, 1 Okl. 375 (33 Pac. 867); Roberts v. Hawkins, 70 Mich. 566 (38 N. W. 575), and other cases. The question, however, here to be determined is not between the bank and the parties to this suit, but it is for us to decide what is the relation existing between the plaintiff, who signed the instrument on the back of the note, on the one hand, and the defendants here, who signed as makers, on the
Turning to the answer of the defendant Smith, we find it to be utterly silent about any agreement between himself and Noble about the relation to be sustained between each other as to the note, independent of the effect of the note itself and the contract indorsed thereon by Noble. All that the answer alleges in that respect is that Noble, at the time he executed the written guaranty on the note, knew that Smith was a surety or an accommodation maker and not a principal. Not having alleged any special agreement taking it out of the ordinary category, whereby Noble’s liability would be subsequent to that of Smith, the latter could not resist the action of Noble against him on that point. Moreover, if this were an open question on the pleadings, the trial court found in accordance with the allegations of the complaint in that respect, and this amounts to a verdict which we cannot disturb, unless we can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support it. Evidence of a nature tending to support the findings of the court in this particular is found in the circumstance that Noble was a stranger to the corporation, while Smith himself was a director and interested therein; that Smith signed as a maker, while at best Noble was only an indorser. The result is the same whether we consider the matter as one of pleadings or one of evidence.
16. It is lastly contended that Noble was not entitled to recover from Smith any attorneys ’ fees, and this will be considered in determining what judgment should have been entered in the court below, as we are empowered to do under Article VII of the Constitution. Without having taken an assignment of the note, Noble is not the owner or holder thereof in the true meaning and intent of the law. In legal effect he is not bringing an action upon the note. It is said in Section 5954, L. O. L., that: “Where the instrument is paid by a party secondarily liable thereon it is not discharged, but the party so paying it is remitted to his former rights as regards all prior parties, and he may strike out his own and all subsequent indorsements and again negotiate the instrument” — with certain exceptions not here material. It is argued that the right of again negotiating the instrument includes the right to bring an action upon it, from which it would follow that the present proceeding is directly upon the note entailing the allowance of attorneys’ fees. Manifestly, this section refers only to indorsers for value and not for mere accommodation. An indorser for value at some time prior to his indorsement owned the note with the right to sue upon it at maturity. With this right he parted when he discounted the paper by indorsement to a purchaser for value, who in turn by like process may transfer the title becoming liable by his indorsement to the
The case is entirely different, in reason, concerning an accommodation indorser or a guarantor. Neither of them has any “former rights,” nor, indeed, any right whatever, until he pays the note or bill, and then it is the right of contribution or of reimbursement according to whether he is liable jointly with the others as among themselves or liable after them. So it is with the plaintiff here. He has performed his contract as a guarantor and is contending, not for the principal and interest and attorneys’ fees provided for by the note, not for contribution from a cosurety, but for reimbursement or, as some authorities term it, “exoneration” for the amount which he paid for the defendants in execution of his contract of guaranty. As against the apparent makers of the note, he has no cause of action, except that arising upon the contract which he carried out. This contract with them does not provide for an attorney’s fee. As we have seen, he is not an accommodation party, being neither a maker, a drawer, acceptor, nor indorser. By his contract he excludes himself from all those classes who alone, under Section 5862, are accommodation parties. Strictly speaking, he cannot enforce the terms of the note. He can only rely upon the contract which he himself made, and cannot extend its terms to matters not included therein. He is entitled to reimbursement and no more.