delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action on a promissory note. There was-a default as to the defendant Coontz, and a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant Brown, from which this writ of error is prosecuted by the plaintiff.
The defence of Brown was that he was merely a. surety on the note, and that he had been discharged from liability as such by two extensions of time given by the plaintiff to Coontz, in consideration of the payment by Coontz of interest to a date in advance.
The evidence was to the effect that there had been, several previous renewals of the indebtedness which had taken the form of the giving by Coontz of a new note with Brown as surety (he signing as a co-maker), Coontz. paying the interest in advance. When the note sued on fell due, the plaintiff sent Coontz, by mail, a notice of the fact, as he had been accustomed to do in the case of former renewals, enclosing a new note to be executed in renewal of the old one. The defendant did not execute- and return the renewal note, but, on the twenty-fifth of November, 1882, eight days after the maturity of the note sued on, wrote to the .plaintiff: Enclosed please find check for interest on note. Will send note this evening or Monday.” The check'was for a sufficient sum to pay interest on the indebtedness until the twentieth of March, 1883, a period of four months and three days, the
This was the substance of the evidence, uncontradicted on any material point, save for discrepancies in the plaintiff’s own statements as above pointed out. From what above- appears, there was no agreement be-.
The court submitted the case to the jury on the following instruction, requested by the defendant, to the-giving of which the plaintiff excepted: “If the jury find, from the evidence, that the defendant Brown was a surety on the note in suit, and that the plaintiff having notice of that fact, did, at any time after the maturity of said note, without the knowledge of defendant Brown, by agreement with defendant Coontz, accept from said Coontz any interest in advance on said note to a certain day in the future, and in consideration of such payment of interest extend the time of payment of such note to the time to which such interest was paid, then by such extension the defendant Brown was discharged from further liability on said note, and the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant Brown.
“To prove such agreement as above stated, it is iiotr necessary that the jury should find, from the evidence, that such agreement was made in express terms by and between the plaintiff and the defendant Coontz; but the-jury, in determining the question of such agreement, may take into consideration all the facts in evidence in the case, and may infer such agreement, by implication, from the facts in evidence in the case, if, in their opinion, considering all the facts in the case, admitted in evidence,, such implication can be justly and reasonably made.”
This instruction, though correct as an abstract proposition of law, is not correct in its application' to the evidence in the case. The sole question for decision is. whether the facts above detailed amount to evidence of a binding agreement between the plaintiff and Coontz to extend the payment of the note to each of the two periods to which the interest was paid, or to either of them. It there was such an agreement as estopped the plaintiff
Were any other facts disclosed by the above evidence which, taken in connection with the fact of the payment of the interest in advance, would warrant the court in leaving it to the jury to say whether there was not an agreement between the plaintiff and Coontz to extend the time of the payment of the note ? We can not see that there were. The taking of the interest in advance, while not of itself sufficient to show such an agreement, is no doubt a relevant circumstance which, taken in connection with facts and circumstances which may exist in particular cases, would be sufficient to warrant this conclusion. We do not suppose that it is necessary that such an agreement should be shown to have been made in express words. We do not doubt that there may be circumstances which, without any express words, will lead irresistibly to the conclusion that such an agreement was made. We
It is to be observed that the above evidence does not show that any request was ever made by Coontz for an extension, or that any intimation was ever made by the plaintiff to him that an extension would be accorded, except upon the terms upon which the previous .extensions had been accorded, namely, upon the giving of a new note indorsed by Brown, and the payment of the interest or discount in advance. In the case of the first indulgence which is here in question, a renewal was tendered by the plaintiff to Coontz on these terms, but he failed to comply with the terms proposed to him, and what followed until the twentieth of March, 1883, was manifestly nothing more than a mere indulgence, such as did not •estop the plaintiff from bringing and maintaining an .action upon the note during the intermediate time. In respect of the second renewal, nothing appears but the transmission by Coontz of a check which included money to pay the interest in advance for another four months, without a distinct request for an extension of the time to which such interest would have been paid had the check "been honored, but which check was dishonored, and was not, in fact, paid until about three months thereafter; there being at no time an intimation on the plaintiff ’ s part that the payment of the interest would work an unconditional renewal until the twenty-third day of July,
The burden of proof was upon the defendant Brown to make out his special defence. He failed to introduce any substantial evidence to sustain it. The plaintiff was, therefore, as a mere conclusion of law, entitled to a judgment on the note against him, as well as against the other defendant.
It is, therefore, ordered that the judgment of the circuit court be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment against both of the defendants for the amount of the note with interest.