110 Cal. 13 | Cal. | 1895
Action on a promissory note made by defendant to said bank July 20, 1891, for the sum of five hundred and seventy-eight dollars and eighty cents, payable ninety days after date, with interest at the rate of one per cent per month from date. .
It is alleged in the answer of the defendant that this note was made by him as a renewal of a former note for the sum of five hundred dollars and interest, jointly made by him and one Hugh Burns to said bank, on which joint note he was a mere surety, of which the
The court below found as facts that the loan to Burns by the bank was solicited by Burns on January 21, 1890, he having been introduced to Collins, the president of the bank, by defendant; that at the time he solicited the loan Burns represented to the bank that defendant would sign a note for the money, if loaned, jointly with him, though defendant was not then present, and had not then promised the bank to sign the note; that thereupon the bank agreed to make the loan on the condition that Burns would procure the signature of defendant to the note as a joint maker; that Burns then signed the note and passed it to the note-clerk of the bank, promising that he would cause defendant to sign it, but the president of the bank then directed the clerk not to enter the note as discounted by the bank until it should be signed by the defendant, but at the same time advanced and delivered the five
Upon these findings of fact judgment passed in favor of plaintiff for the amount sued for. The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. Appellant contends: 1. That the findings of fact are not justified by the evidence; and 2. That the facts found do not warrant the judgment.
The only material controversy about the facts relates to the consideration for the first note. If there was a sufficient consideration for the joint note, the surrender thereof to defendant was undoubtedly a sufficient consideration for the individual note of the defendant upon which this action is founded.
In order to establish a sufficient consideration for the first note it was only necessary, in addition to the admitted facts, to find, as the court did find, an affirmative answer to the following questions: Did Burns, before he received the money, promise the bank that he would cause defendant to sign the note? Did the bank advance
The facts of this case plainly and materially distinguish it from that of Leverone v. Hildreth, 80 Cal. 139. In that case the note signed by the defendant had been completely executed by his father, and was two months overdue when defendant signed it, and there was no plausible pretense of any consideration moving to the defendant. By implication that case justifies the judgment in this. Speaking of the authorities cited by the respondent in that ease, the court, by the chief justice, said: “ They are to the effect that if the payee parts with his money on the faith of a promise by the borrower that he will procure the signature of a surety to his note, the surety is bound if he sign the note after the money is advanced; but such is not the case here.” Such, however, is the case at bar. The authorities referred to by the chief justice, so far as reported, are McNaught v. McClaughry, 42 N. Y. 22, 1 Am. Rep. 487, and Harrington v. Brown, 77 N. Y. 72. In the first of these cases the court said: “ The authorities are clear upon the two propositions involved in the question: 1. If Abram had given his note to the plaintiff, and the same had been accepted in performance of the contract without further condition, and the note was yet unmatured, the obtaining an additional indorser Avould have been a gratuitous act on the part of Abram, and the indorser would not be bound.....On the other hand, if Abram had originally agreed with the lender that he would obtain the new indorser, and had obtained the money upon the faith of that promise, then his finding the additional indorser was based upon a valid consideration, and the indorser was held by his signature. To this precise point is the case of Moies v. Bird, 11 Mass. 436,
I think the judgment and order should be affirmed.
Searls, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., Van Fleet, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.