21 Ind. App. 287 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1898
The complaint in this action alleges that on the 11th day of February, 1892, appellee and appellant executed a note for $600 to the Old National Bank of Ft. Wayne; that he signed the same as surety, and received no part of the consideration thereof; that appellee failed to pay said note when due; that he paid the same, and that appellee has failed to repay to him any part of the sum, so paid by him.
Appellee’s answer is in four paragraphs. The first paragraph is the general denial. In the third paragraph she says that it was she who signed the note mentioned in the complaint as surety. In the fourth paragraph she says that she is the widow of William Malloy, who died intestate on the 17th day of October, 1891, leaving as his only heirs at law this defendant and one child about three years of age; that after the death of her said husband it was discovered that his estate was wholly insolvent, and worth less than $500, and, upon the application of this defendant, all of the' property of his said estate was duly inventoried and appraised, and, by and under the order of the circuit court of Allen county, was on the 16th day of No
Appellant filed a reply in two paragraphs to the amended second, third, and fourth paragraphs of answer. The first paragraph is the general denial. In the second paragraph it is averred that “on the 9th day of November, 1891, the plaintiff and the defendant executed to the Old National Bank of Ft. Wayne, Indiana, their promissory note for the sum of $600, identical in all respects with the note set forth as Exhibit A to plaintiff’s complaint, except as to the date; that on said day said last mentioned note was taken to said Old National Bank by the defendant, and by her delivered to said bank, who paid to the defendant thereon, as a loan to her, the sum of $600, by depositing to her credit in said bank said sum of $600, less the interest thereon for ninety-three days, amounting to the sum of $12.40; that at said time said Old National Bank held a note dated the 7th day of September, 1891, executed to said bank by William Malloy, the husband of the defendant, and this plaintiff, for the sum of $600, with eight per cent, interest until paid, and due ninety days after date, the form of said note being in all respects like the note set forth in plaintiff’s complaint, except as to date thereof and the parties executing the same; that the interest on said note had been paid to maturity; that plaintiff had executed said note simply as surety for the said William Malloy, the whole consideration thereof having been paid to the said William Malloy, and no part thereof being
Appellant’s learned counsel first discuss the second assignment, the overruling of the demurrer to the fourth paragraph of answer. It is averred in said paragraph that William Malloy, husband of appellee, in his life executed a note for $600 to the Old National Bank; that appellant executed this note as surety for Malloy; that, after Malloy’s death, appellee and appellant executed a note for $600- to said bank in renewal of said William Malloy’s note, and that this second note was renewed by the note mentioned in the complaint; that appellee was surety on the notes so executed by her. Counsel contend that a person cannot, by giving his own note, renew the note of another person, because “to renew is to make new again,” “to re-establish,” “to restore to vigor,” etc., and that the note of William Malloy could not have been made new or re-established by the note of appellee and appellant. This objection is based on phraseology rather than substance. Anderson’s Dictionary of Law defines “renewal” as “the substitution of a new right or obligation for another of the
Counsel further charges as superfluous the allegation in said answer that appellee’s husband died, leaving appellee as his widow with an estate worth less than $500, all of which was set off to her under the statute, and that the note of her husband is not shown to have been worthless. The averments show as to the appellant, the estate of the maker being insolvent, that the note was worthless. This paragraph is manifestly intended to set out the facts attending and reasons for the signing of the notes from appellee’s standpoint. Its evident purpose was to show that, after her husband’s death, appellant was primarily liable, because William Malloy did not leave an estate sufficient to pay the same or any part of it. When appellant requested appellee to join with him in a new note, to be substituted for that debt, he asked her to secure, not her debt, but his own. Appellee signed the note to substitute for the one upon which he was liable. She did this at the request of appellant, who at the time he made the request knew, as is alleged, that the estate of his principal was worthless, and that he alone was liable therefor. As between these parties, appellant alone secured the benefit of the consideration, that of time within which to pay his own debt, Such new note did not secure appellee’s debt or one which she was bound to pay. The averments make appellee surety.
It is true, as claimed by appellant’s counsel, if appellee desired to pay her husband’s note, she “had the right to do so; and if in doing so she had borrowed of the bank $600, and gave her note therefor to the bank
Counsel next discuss the third specification in the assignment of error, the overruling' of the demurrer to the amended second paragraph of answer. The appellant’s counsel point out as defects in the answer that it contains no averment that there was any fraud practiced upon appellee, nor any reason suggested why she did not know the legal consequences of her acts; again denying that her note could have been a renewal of her husband’s, and asserting that, if a consideration passed from the bank to her or appellant, both are liable on the note to the bank, citing Wheeler v. Barr, 7 Ind. App. 381. It is apparent that this paragraph does not proceed upon the theory of fraud. It counts only upon a failure of consideration to bind appellee. In Wheeler v. Barr, supra, Owendorff, a surety on the note in suit, answered that “he executed the note sued on without any consideration whatever to him moving.” The court held the answer insufficient, because the issue tendered was personal (citing Anderson v. Meeker, 31 Ind. 245; Bingham v. Kimball, 33 Ind. 184; Meyer v. Brand, 102 Ind. 301); adding that “whether there was a consideration moving to the appellee Owendorff or not is immaterial. If there was a sufficient consideration for the note, whether the same moved to Owendorff or the principal maker, or any other person, it is all
The facts pleaded show that appellee’s husband borrowed of the bank $600. Before the debt matured, he died intestate, leaving appellee, his widow, with an insolvent estate. After his death she executed her note for that debt. That she is not bound by that obligation has been settled by numerous decisions. The case of Ferrell v. Scott, 2 Speers’ Law 344, 42 Am. Dec. 371, is one where a widow with an insolvent estate executed her note for the debt of her deceased husband. On page 374 the court says: “It cannot be pretended that the defendant derived any benefit from her incurring a liability to pay $300, from which she was entirely exempt before she gave her note. It was not urged that she gave her note to relieve herself from any legal obligation. Place it in the most favorable point of view, it was a voluntary undertaking on her part to pay a debt for which she was not liable, and for the collection of which the plaintiff had no possible legal remedy. And the question recurs, did the plaintiff give up any right that was worth anything, or suffer any loss by discharging a demand against a deceased pauper? It seems to me it was no more than discharging a debt against a fictitious person, against whom it might have been charged, by way of exercise, in a book kept for the purpose of learning the art of
The action of the court in overruling appellant’s motion for judgment in his favor for $601.20, with interest from May 23, 1892, upon the answers of the jury to the interrogatories, is challenged by the fifth, sixth and seventh specifications in the assignment of errors. The verdict and answers to interrogatories were returned, and judgment rendered, under the acts of 1897, p. 128. This verdict is not a special verdict. Neither party was bound to propound interrogatories with a view of eliciting all the facts relied upon. In their answers to interrogatories the jury found that on the 11th day of February, 1892, appellee and appellant signed, a note for $600, payable to the Old National Bank, and due in ninety days; that, after said note was thus signed, appellee took said note to, and delivered it to, said bank; that the bank thereupon paid to her $600 by deducting $12 as interest on
The fourth specification of the assignment of errors, the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial, is the last error discussed. The reasons for a new trial numbered from one to six are not discussed, and, under the rule, are therefore waived. The reasons numbered from six to twenty-six, inclusive, relate to instructions given by the court at the request of appellee. The instructions contain some repetitions not to be commended, but, upon the facts found, appellee was not liable, and therefore, even if the instructions complained of were clearly favorable to her, we would not be justified in disturbing the judgment. Judgment affirmed.