71 Mo. 465 | Mo. | 1880
This is a suit by plaintiff on a note executed by Pinger and Browne (a firm composed of John Pinger and Joseph I. Browne) and George M. Hauck for $7,500, dated March 29, 1872, and payable to — , name of payee not inserted, ninety days after its date. David Pinger, with the knowledge and consent of the makers, wrote-his name in said note as payee, and afterward indorse d and delivered it to the makers, who, on the 29th of March,, 1872, in accordance with a previous agreement between them and plaintiff, delivered it to plaintiff' to secure a loan of seventy-five hundred dollars made by plaintiff to Pinger .and Browne. Several payments were made on the note, leaving a balance of $2,975, for which plaintiff sued. Hauck’s answer denied what was not alleged, that -he was then, or at any time, a member of the firm of Pinger and Browne; alleged that at the time of the transaction, plaintiff' was an insurance company, empowered to transact business under the general insurance laws of the State of Missouri, that he signed the note merely as a security and for the accommodation of Pinger and Browne, and that this fact was known to plaintiff, who afterward, when the note became due and payable, agreed with Pinger and Browne and David Pinger, without the knowledge or con
The instructions of the court on that subject were as follows:
3. If the court believes from the evidence that Hauck signed the note sued upon as a surety, the court must further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff agreed with Pinger and Browne, for an extension of time upon said note after the same became due, without the knowledge or consent of Hauck; and the court must further believe from the evidence that such extension of time, in order to discharge Hauck as such surety thereon from further liability, must have been such as would have prevented the plaintiff from bringing an action thereon against Pinger and Browne, and that the taking of interest in advance and declaring to said makers of said note that plaintiff would wait on them to any definite time, will not constitute such a promise; and unless the court believes-further from the evidence that there was some other and further consideration than the taking interest in advance to a definite period to support said promise of plaintiff to wait-on said makers, the court will find for the plaintiff.
4. If the court should find from the evidence that when the note sued upon became due, the interest thereon was paid by Pinger and Browne, to a time ninety days, or any definite period ahead of said period at which said note became due, yet unless the court should further find that
5. [f the court finds from the evidence that the interest upon the note sued on was, after it became due, paid by the makers to plaintiff, in advance, to any definite time or times, that said payment of interest in advance and promise to wait upon the makers thereof so much longer did not preclude the plaintiff from commencing an action against the makers of said note thereon to recover the principal thereof at any time after takiug said interest and promise, and before the time to which said interest in advance had been paid ; and unless the court believes from the evidence that there was some agreement other than as above stated, supported by a valid consideration, he will find for the plaintiff.
The counsel for appellant is in error with respect to what was decided in Stillwell v. Aaron, 69 Mo. 539. It was not that the mere fact of payment of interest in advance by a maker of a note, would discharge the surety?' but that interest paid in advance for a definite period, was a sufficient consideration to support a promise by the holder of the note for forbearance during that period. The instructions given for plaintiff on that subject are in conflict with what was decided in Stillwell v. Aaron. They not only assert what is now to be regarded as the well settled law of this State, that the simple payment of interest in advance does not constitute an agreement for forbearance during the time for which interest in advance is paid; but that such payment of interest in advance, is not a sufficient consideration for an agreement for forbearance. This, as was held in Stillwell v. Aaron, is not the law.