36 Kan. 471 | Kan. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action on a certain promissory note, which reads as follows:
“May 17,1879.— On or before the first day of September next, I promise to pay to Henry Eaymond, or bearer, the sum of two hundred dollars, for value received; to draw ten per cent, after date. Joseph Longley.
Henry Eaymond.”
In this form the note was received by J. P. McNeal, who was the owner and holder of the same at the commencement of this action. When the note became due it was not paid, and McNeal gave no notice at the time to Eaymond of its non-payment. Eaymond now claims that he was an indorser only upon the note, and that as no proper demand of payment was ever made of him, and as no proper notice of non-payment was ever given to him, he is discharged from all liability. It is contended that the judgment rendered against Eaymond is against the evidence; and further, that the court erred in refusing to permit Eaymond to show by Longley that he signed the note as indorser only.
These claims we cannot sustain. The note in the hands of Eaymond was a note against Joseph Longley only; it was payable to Henry Eaymond, or bearer; it was negotiable by delivery; Eaymond signed the note when he transferred it to McNeal, at the request of McNeal, under the name of Longley. Upon the face of the note Eaymond made himself jointly and severally liable, as maker with Longley, to the bearer.
“ I think we will be able to pay our note when due, but Mrs. Longley has not been able to get her money yet; but she tells me she has $900 that have been due over a year. She thinks she will get it by the time the note is due. I cannot let my name run as security, and will give my reasons for it; if they should lose one of those horses I sold him, I would have a fuss to get the matter fixed up; she is the one to sign the note, if she cannot get the money; and I will get it changed for you, if you write to me and say you want it done. Those horses are all right and have been all summer, only they are poor, and now is the time for me to have it fixed up. You can see that if I should let it run until spring and they should lose one of those horses, they would want me to stand part or all of the note, and I am not able to do so.”
Upon the trial Eaymond testified, among other things, that the note was given him by Longley, who owed him $200; that he then released Longley and turned the note over to pay McNeal for a debt that Houston, his brother-in-law, owed McNeal; that McNeal agreed to take Longley’s note, if he would go security; that before the note became due, he wrote to McNeal he would not be security on the note longer than when it became due, and gave him his reasons. The letter of Eaymond and his own evidence all tended to show that he signed the note as maker and not as indorser; hence the court in rejecting the evidence offered, committed no material error. Eaymond evidently did not want the note renewed, and was undoubtedly eager for McNeal to press Longley for the payment thereof as soon as it became due.
Upon the evidence introduced, Eaymond is liable upon the note as maker, and he is not entitled to be discharged for want of demand of payment, or want of notice of protest. (Partridge v. Colby, 19 Barb. 248; Cook v. Brown, 29 N. W. Rep. 46.)
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.