39 Pa. 226 | Pa. | 1861
The opinion of the court was delivered,
That the notes taken from the contractor by the plaintiffs were not taken in satisfaction of the debt due from him, and for which the claim was filed, is established by the verdict of the jury. But it was thought, in the court below, that the receipt given for the notes amounted to an agreement to give time, and that therefore the church building, standing in the position of a surety for the contractor, was discharged from the lien. The receipt, however, contains no express engagement not to sue Nicholson upon the original account until the notes taken as a cumulative security should fall due. Was such a binding agreement implied in the transaction ? Does the receipt from a debtor of a promissory note, payable at a subsequent day, not in satisfaction of the debt, but to be satisfaction when paid, raise an implication that the creditor engages not to sue for the original debt until the note matures? Upon this question the authorities differ. In Okie v. Spencer, 2 Whart. 253, where the holder of a promissory note on the day that it became due, accepted from the maker a cheek drawn upon a bank by a firm, consisting of the maker and a third person, dated six days after-wards, which check was to be in full satisfaction of the note in case it was paid at maturity, it was held that this amounted to a suspension of the remedy against the maker, and discharged the endorser. The check was not the check of the debtor alone: and Judge Kennedy, in delivering the opinion, relied upon that as a distinguishing fact. He remarked, that “ had the drawer given his own check merely for the payment of the note at the expiration of six days, there might have been some colour for saying that he (the creditor) had not thereby precluded himself from bringing suit on it during that period; because it might then have been argued with great plausibility, if not correctly,
But tbe later Pennsylvania decisions take different ground, and follow tbe ruling in Bing v. Clarkson, 2 Barn. & Cress. 14, in which it was decided that the acceptance of a new bill from tbe acceptor of a former bill after it had become payable, for tbe payment of tbe same debt at a future day, could only be considered taking a collateral security, and therefore did not amount to or imply giving time to the acceptor, and consequently did not release the other parties to tbe bill first given. In Weakly v. Bell & Sterling, 9 Watts 273, Judge Kennedy, who also delivered the opinion in Okie v. Spencer, goes over the cases, and comes to tbe conclusion that “ taking a new note for tbe same debt mentioned in the old, without any agreement to give time to the drawer, or to deliver up the old note to him, or that the new shall be taken in satisfaction of the old note, has ever been considered a mere collateral security which does not affect or alter the original liabilities of the parties on the old note, in any respect whatever.” And in Bank of Pennsylvania v. Potius, 10 Watts 150, tbe doctrine asserted in Weakly v. Bell & Sterling, was reaffirmed. Ripley v. Greenleaf, 2 Vt. 159; U. S. v. Hodge, 6 Howard 279; and Wade v. Stanton, 5 Id. 371; as well as Elwood v. Diefendorff, 5 Barbour 298, are substantially to tbe same effect. All of these cases I understand as bolding that there is no implication that tbe creditor agrees to give time for the payment of tbe original debt, arising out of tbe fact that be takes a note payable at a future day on account of it. They maintain that the law raises no such agreement, and if there be one, it is to be proved as a fact, dependent for its existence on the understanding of the parties at the time when the security is given.
In the present case the receipt given by the plaintiffs to the contractor was for three notes, all payable before the expiration of six months from the time when the bricks were furnished, “ amounting to $1846.50, in full for bricks delivered to church in Race street, east of Seventeenth, north side.” As the jury have found that the notes were not received in satisfaction of the debt, they were of course collateral to the account, and therefore according to the doctrine of Weakly v. Bell & Sterling, the court could not say that the receipt amounted to an agreement to give time for the payment of the account. If this is so, it is unnecessary to inquire whether the church building is to be regarded as standing in the relation of a surety for the contractor, for it was not established that any time was given. This point does not
It is sufficient for our ruling now, that an agreement to give time for the payment of the price of the bricks was not found by the verdict, nor to be implied in law from the receipt given in evidence.
The judgment is reversed, and judgment is entered upon the verdict for the plaintiffs.