130 N.Y. 415 | NY | 1892
On or about February 11, 1884, the plaintiff was the owner and holder of an over-due promissory note for $10,265.65, made by one J.P. Hodgson and one F.W. James, and was insisting upon the payment thereof and threatening to bring suit thereon against the makers. The defendant thereupon, with a view to obtain an extension of time for the payment of said note, affixed his signature thereto under the signatures of Hodgson and James.
This action is upon the contract thus made, and the defense relied upon in this court to defeat a recovery is that no consideration for the defendant's contract was shown.
The referee found that the consideration consisted in the plaintiff's agreement to extend the time of payment of said note, and to delay proceedings for the collection thereof, but that it did not state or agree to extend for any definite period of time; and upon defendant's request he further found that "when the defendant signed the note in suit plaintiff did not waive its right to sue Hodgson and James, or either of them, upon the same whenever it saw fit."
If the latter conclusion is to be treated as one of fact, it is clearly in conflict with the other findings, as an agreement to extend the time of payment, which did not bind the plaintiff to withhold suit for some time, would be no agreement at all, and the defendant would be entitled to the benefit of the rule that when findings are so inconsistent that they cannot be reconciled, those which are most favorable to the appellant are controlling upon the appellate court. (Redfield v. Redfield,
But it is the duty of the court, if possible, to reconcile these findings. It is only when this cannot, by reasonable construction, be accomplished, that it is bound to accept the finding most favorable to the appellant. (Green v. Roworth,
The findings of the referee, taken together, are to the effect that while the plaintiff was to delay proceedings for collection of the note, and the defendant put his signature to it in consideration of the agreement of the plaintiff to give the makers further time upon the note, the plaintiff did not state or agree that it would extend for any definite time, nor did it waive its right to sue the makers, Hodgson and James, or either of them, upon the note whenever it saw fit. The latter findings were pursuant to request of the defendant, and the last one seems to import the effect of the former as the referee understood it. In that view the others represent the agreement as made between the parties, and the last one without qualification of their terms embraces what the referee seems to treat as the interpretation to which in his view they were entitled. While this does not seem quite consistent with the conclusion of law reached by the referee it is not necessarily inconsistent with the agreement between the parties as found by him. And, therefore, does not control the construction and effect to be given to those findings in support of the judgment.
While all the evidence taken upon the trial is not before us, there is a certificate in the record that the "case contains so much of the evidence as is material to the questions to be raised," and we may presume, therefore, that all the evidence bearing upon the question of consideration is in the case. Referring to the testimony we find that the defendant was a creditor of Hodgson one of the makers of the note. Hodgson was embarrassed financially and other creditors were pressing their claims against him. He was the owner of a herd of 13,000 sheep which were about to be sold at Colorado City, under a chattel mortgage. The defendant desired to purchase the sheep at the sale and wanted to borrow the money from the plaintiff to enable him to do so, and to have the proceedings for the collection of the note withheld. With this object in view he visited the plaintiff at San Antonio with James the joint maker of the note. The plaintiff refused to make the desired loan but it offered to extend the time for the payment of its note if the defendant would sign it. *419
Mr. Brownson, the president of the plaintiff bank, testified that he agreed to withhold suit on the note and extend the time of payment. Asked as to the time of the extension he said "I don't think any definite time was agreed upon; it was to depend very much upon the movements of the other creditors of Hodgson. The proceedings at Colorado City were to cut some figure in what we were to do; it was left somewhat to the wishes of Mr. Parker."
And it appeared that Parker thought that something on the plaintiff's debt might be realized out of the sale of the sheep and that he was to go to Colorado City which was about eighteen hours ride by railroad from San Antonio and attend the sale, and that it was contemplated by the parties that he should advise the plaintiff from that place, and that he did so, and that Mr. Brownson went there at his request, but he refused to advance money to buy the sheep.
Mr. Thornton, the cashier of the bank, testified that they were pressing Hodgson for a settlement and threatened him with suit. That it was about term time of the court and they had threatened to put the paper through at that term * * * and the proposition was made that if the bank was satisfied on the paper it would withhold suit. It thus appears that nothing was said about the right of the plaintiff to sue whenever it saw fit, and the conclusion of the referee that the plaintiff did not waive its rights is an inference from the evidence and was not an existing or independent fact itself and as was said in Green v.Roworth (supra), "it was in that respect rather a finding upon a question of law than one of fact." It certainly was the intention and agreement of the parties that sufficient time should be allowed by the bank during which the defendant could go to Colorado City and examine into the condition of Hodgson's affairs there, so that he might judge of the possibility of realizing something out of the sale of the sheep that could be applied to the payment of the plaintiff's note, and this was a matter of considerable importance and benefit to him. And it is clear, I think, that suit was to be withheld upon the note until after the sale at Colorado City, and whether *420 further extension should be given was to depend somewhat upon the defendant's wishes in the matter.
The period during which suit was to be withheld was not fixed at any certain number of days, weeks or months, but it does not follow that the plaintiff did not waive its right to sue immediately on the note, and the evidence leaves no doubt that it did waive such right until the defendant could go to Colorado City, and there make such examination as he desired and communicate the result to the plaintiff, and any prosecution upon the note during that time would have been a plain violation of plaintiff's agreement. Treating the finding I have quoted as an inference from the facts proven and not as a distinct fact of itself, we have no difficulty in affirming the judgment upon the facts found by the referee.
The appellant contends that because the plaintiff did not agree to extend the time of payment for a definite period, there was no consideration for defendant's contract and he cites AtlanticNat. Bank v. Franklin (
In the Atlantic Bank case, there was no agreement not to sue. The evidence showed indulgence merely. In Perkins v. Proud, the court said, to make forbearance a valid consideration, there must be a binding agreement to forbear either for a definite time or for a reasonable time.
Neither of these cases support the appellant's claim. On the contrary, the whole current of authority is to the effect that an agreement to withhold suit is a good consideration to support a promise to pay a debt, although no fixed and definite time is expressly agreed upon. (Rolles Abgt. 27, pl. 45; Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, § 8; 1 Parsons on Contracts [6th ed.], p. 444; Walker v. Sherman, 11 Metc. 170-172; Mecorney v.Stanley, 8 Cush. 85-88; Hakes v. Hotchkiss,
The legal effect of such an agreement is to bind the creditor to withhold suit for a reasonable time. What would be a reasonable time, if not always a question of fact, would at least be a mixed question of law and fact, depending for its solution upon the circumstances of each case.
The precise question at issue here was decided in this state inElting v. Vanderlyn (supra). There the judgment was attacked on the ground that the promise to pay was in consideration of an indefinite forbearance, and was void. The court said: "The consideration of forbearance generally is sufficient without setting forth a specific time. There was in fact a total forbearance for a long time, which brings the case within that of Mapes v. Sidney (Cro. Jac. 283)." This case has never been questioned or overruled.
In the case before us, there was total forbearance, as no suit was ever brought against Hodgson or James on the note.
The general rule is that the waiver of any legal right, at the request of another party, is a sufficient consideration to uphold a promise.
There was clearly such a waiver shown in this case, and the referee having found an express agreement to that effect, judgment in the plaintiff's favor necessarily followed.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur, except FOLLETT, Ch. J., and VANN, J., dissenting.
Judgment affirmed.