105 N.Y.S. 1060 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
The defendant cannot resist liability upon the ground that the time within which tó pay the liability guaranteed lias been extended by the'taking of the new note.. That extension was with the full consent of the sureties, and was in fact negotiated by the defendant McN aught, who is now defending, hi or can the defendant defend by reason of the failure to charge the indorsers at the time that the note became due. The indorsers thereafter waived notice of protest upon that note, and moreover a failure to charge indorsers is not such a release of security as will- discharge a guarantor. (See Deck v. Works, 18 Hun, 266.) Whether the guaranty was so delivered as to create a liability on the part of the defendant, and whether the second note was taken as full payment of the first note were matters properly submitted to the jury, and their determination thereof is, we think, fully sustained by the evidence.
A more difficult question arises over the ruling of the trial judge excluding the evidence of -the witness Wegner as to conversations had with the plaintiffs’ testator. Those conversations might have been material upon either of the questions submitted to the jury. As they were excluded they are presumed to have been material,, and if they were wrongfully excluded the. defendant .here would seem to be entitled to a new trial of the issues.
' Thé witness Wegner had been an indorser upon this first note, and was also an indorser upon the second note. He had been sued upon the second note by these plaintiffs in the State of Wisconsin. At the time of the trial he had waived the notice of protest upon the first note, and was, therefore, liable thereupon. The objection to his testimony was that he was incompetent to swear to a - personal transaction under section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The question is thus presented whether an indorser who is primarily liable on the note and, therefore, liableto the sureties who were behind him who are compelled to pay the note has such an interest that he cannot swear as to personal transactions with-one of the sureties deceased in an action for contribution between the representatives of that surety and another surety. In our opinion this question has already been determined in' the Court-of Appeals. In Wallace v. Straus (113 N. Y. 238) one W., plaintiff’s testator, a stockbroker, was carrying certain stock for- S. on a margin. The margin became made
All concurred.'
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event. .