157 N.E. 551 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1927
On August 27, 1920, Fred D. and John Zabel executed their promissory note whereby they agreed to pay to Wilbur D. Smith $3,000 on March 1, 1921. This note was dated at Cooksville, Illinois, and was payable at the State Bank of Cooksville, Illinois. It contains a power of attorney authorizing any attorney at law to appear in any court of record and confess judgment against the makers in favor of the payee or holder. Following this power of attorney is the provision that, "No extension of the time of payment, with or without our knowledge, by the receipt of interest, or otherwise, shall release us, or either of us, from the obligation of payment."
Before maturity, the payee, Wilbur D. Smith, and appellee Tazewell J. Geyer, the latter being an accommodation indorser, for value, assigned and indorsed the note to appellant. On the day the note became due, it was presented to Zabel and Zabel at the State Bank of Cooksville for payment, and payment being demanded, was refused. The note was then protested and returned to, and received by, appellant, as he says, March 3, 4 or 5, 1921. As soon as appellant learned the note had not been paid, he notified appellee Geyer of the nonpayment and dishonor of the note and demanded payment of him. Appellee Smith at that time was in California. On March 14, 1921, Zabel and Zabel commenced an action in the circuit court of White county against appellant Ward A. Smith and appellees Wilbur D. Smith and Tazewell J. Geyer and the bank which, as appellant's agent, had forwarded the note to the Cooksville bank for collection, asking that the note be declared void, that it be canceled because of fraud in its procurement, and asking that the defendants therein be restrained and enjoined from taking any steps to enforce collection. A temporary restraining order was issued on March 14, 1921, and by agreement this order *314 was continued in force until further order of the court. On April 29, 1921, appellant filed a cross-complaint against the two Zabels, the makers of the note, and Wilbur D. Smith and Tazewell J. Geyer, indorsers, alleging the execution of the note, its assignment and indorsement to him, and asking judgment against the makers and indorsers for the amount of the note. Wilbur D. Smith and appellee Geyer answered the cross-complaint by a general denial, while Zabel and Zabel were defaulted, they having theretofore dismissed their action to have the note canceled and to enjoin its collection. There was a finding and judgment in favor of appellant against Wilbur D. Smith, Fred D. Zabel and John Zabel for the amount of the note, and a finding and judgment in favor of Geyer that appellant take nothing as against him.
The cross-complainant, hereafter referred to as "appellant," filed a motion for a new trial as to all of the defendants named in his cross-complaint. This motion was overruled; hence this appeal. The error assigned is that the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial, the specifications of which are that the decision of the court is: (a) Not sustained by sufficient evidence; and (b) that it is contrary to law.
The cross-complaint sets out a copy of the note and the law of Illinois on negotiable instruments and alleges that under the law of that state as pleaded, the note was negotiable as an inland bill of exchange. The correctness of this theory or the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action as against the indorsers Smith and Geyer was not raised by demurrer, nor was the right of appellant to sue the indorsers and the makers of a nonnegotiable promissory note in the same action presented by any answer or motion prior to trial.
The note in question being an Illinois contract is governed by the law of that state. The indorsement is *315 an Indiana contract, distinct and independent of the 1, 2. note itself, and is governed in all respects by the law of this state.
The liability, if any, of appellee Geyer as indorser, is in no way connected with the liability of Zabel and Zabel as makers of the note. The liability of Geyer is entirely independent 3, 4. of the cause of action alleged in the complaint of Zabel and Zabel to enjoin the collection of the note. A decree in favor of or against the plaintiffs on their complaint would not have affected the right of appellant to recover from appellee Geyer on his indorsement. As was said by the Supreme Court inWainwright v. P.H. F.M. Roots Co. (1912),
As between appellant and the Zabels, the plaintiffs in the original action, appellant's so-called cross-complaint was, as a matter of law, a counterclaim, and in order to do full and 5. complete justice to all of the parties before the court, in respect to the cause *316 of action upon which the complaint of the Zabels rested, appellees Smith and Geyer were neither necessary nor proper parties. In so far as this cross-complaint sought a recovery against the indorsers on the note, it was an original and independent action, and as to the issue thus raised between appellant and the indorsers, it was not germane to the issue presented by the original complaint for injunction.
Geyer, hereafter referred to as "appellee," is the only appellee who has filed a brief, and he contends that the provision in the note relating to extension of time of 6. payment makes the time of payment uncertain and thus renders the note nonnegotiable. The Supreme Court of Illinois in Stitzel v. Miller (1911),
The note in suit is negotiable under § 11342 Burns 1926, to the extent that the written indorsement on the back thereof vested title in appellant. It is not negotiable, however, as 2, 7-9. an inland bill of exchange. An indorser of such a promissory note undertakes that he will, upon certain implied conditions, pay the note; not at the place where the note is payable, but generally; and his contract is governed by the law of the place where it is made, and not by the law of the place where the note is payable. Hunt v. Standard (1860),
Appellee, in order to sustain the decision of the court holding him not liable, says: (1) The complaint and evidence show that the makers of the note in suit were nonresidents of the state at the time of the transfer and the assignment of the note to appellant, and that appellant must pursue the makers with due diligence or show that such diligence would have been unavailing in order to maintain his suit against him (Tazewell J. Geyer), which was not done; (2) that since the power of attorney, which was a part of the note, authorized any attorney at law to appear in any court of record, in or out of term, and confess judgment against the makers in favor of the payee or holder of the note, diligence required that appellant should have taken judgment against the makers in Illinois on the date the note *318 was presented to them for payment; and (3) that a joint suit cannot be maintained against the makers and indorsers of a nonnegotiable note except where an excuse exists for the failure to bring a separate suit against the maker or where there are facts which render the indorsers immediately liable to the holder of the note, and no facts justifying a joint action against the makers and indorsers are alleged or proved.
The Supreme Court, in Mix v. State Bank (1859),
If the maker of such a note be alive in the state where he resided when the assignment was made, and be liable on the note, and has any property subject to execution, he must be sued 10. before the holder can sue the indorser; and if the maker die a resident of the state where he resided when the assignment was made, leaving property out of which the note or some part of it might be collected, his estate, if the maker was liable when living, must be proceeded against before *319
suing the indorser. Huston v. Fatka (1903),
In Couch v. First Nat. Bank (1878),
The cross-complaint in the instant case, whereby appellant sued the makers and indorsers in the same action, was based upon the theory that the note was negotiable as an inland bill of 11. exchange. No question as to the negotiability of the note or the sufficiency of the complaint to justify a joint action against the makers and the indorsers was raised by demurrer or answer. But a failure to so raise that question did not dispense with the proof necessary to maintain such an action.
Appellant concedes that, in actions at law upon a nonnegotiable instrument, the maker must first be exhausted, or a reasonable excuse, such as insolvency, given for not so doing, before suit can be brought *320 against an indorser. He contends, however, that this rule is limited to actions at law upon such instruments; that the present action, as originally instituted by the makers of the note to enjoin its collection, invoked the equitable jurisdiction of the court; that when he filed his cross-complaint, the rules of equity applied to the issues presented by such cross-complaint and the answers thereto, and that, notwithstanding the original complaint had been dismissed, the action on the cross-complaint remained and continued an action within the jurisdiction of equity, so that it became the "duty of the court to settle all of the rights of all of the parties, in all of their relations to the subject-matter, in order that the entire controversy may be settled completely."
If it be conceded that the issues presented by the cross-complaint remained in equity after the dismissal of the complaint, it does not mean that appellant is entitled to 12. prosecute a joint action against the makers and the indorsers of the note without showing diligence or an excuse for not first exhausting the makers before proceeding against the indorsers. The rights of the parties upon the dismissal of the complaint were such rights as would have been presented if the cross-complaint had been filed as an original action. The rights of appellant as presented by his cross-complaint were legal rights and, in determining such rights, if the action be considered as remaining in equity, under the maxim that "equity follows the law," the rules of law as applied in an action at law by an indorsee against an indorser would be applicable, and appellant would still be required to show a good excuse for joining the makers and indorsers in the same action.
In Brown v. Bunn (1861),
Rose v. Park Bank (1863),
And in Buchanan v. Berkshire Life Ins. Co. (1883),
Appellant concedes that, upon the evidence, the note in question is not negotiable. This being true, his right to recover a judgment against appellee as indorser depended upon 13. proof of diligence or an excuse for not first proceeding to execution against the makers. If it be conceded that, under the facts as disclosed by the record, appellant was diligent in suing the makers, there is no evidence tending to show the insolvency of the makers, which must be shown in order to authorize a recovery against the indorsers in a joint action against the makers and the indorsers. This being true, the decision of the court in favor of appellee Geyer was correct, and the motion for a new trial properly overruled.
Appellant's motion for a new trial was joint as to all four defendants. Appellant makes no claim that the decision was not correct as to three of the defendants. The decision of the 14. court being correct as to three of the defendants, there was no error in *322 overruling the motion asking for a new trial as to all defendants.
Judgment affirmed.
Dausman, J., absent.