189 Ky. 115 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
This was an action by Henry E. Bills, now deceased, against the appellant, Fred Tross, upon a negotiable promissory note, for the snm of $6,000.00, and which was executed by the Globe Furniture Company, on April 5, 1911, to Bills, and by which it promised to pay the sum named f.onr months, thereafter, and was endorsed by Tross and one John Rohrman. The principal obligor in the note and Rohrman, one of the endorsers, have since the execution and delivery of the note, both, received discharges in bankruptcy, and hence the action for recovery upon the note was instituted against Tross, alone. Tross filed an answer and counterclaim on June 17, 1916, and an amended answer and counterclaim on November 27, 1917, and after the conclusion of the evidence at a trial had on January 15, 1918, he offered a second amended answer, which the court refused to permit to be filed. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment rendered upon the verdict, Tross has appealed. Since the trial, Bills has died, and the action has been revived in the name of his executrix. The complaints made of the trial court, by the appellant, are, that it erred to the prejudice of appellant:
First, by refusing to permit the amended answer offered on January 15,1918, to be filed.
Second, by peremptorily directing a verdict for the plaintiff.
To an understanding of the questions involved, a statement of the facts, alleged as a defense and counterclaim, as well as the evidence offered in support will necessarily be considered. The original answer and counterclaim was set out in four paragraphs, but the matters alleged in the first and third paragraphs were either withdrawn or eliminated, and hence the cause went to trial upon the second and fourth paragraphs of the original answer and counterclaim and the amendments to same of November 27, 1917, and the denials of same made by Bills in his replies, thereto. The same state of facts were pleaded in the second paragraph of the orig
(a) Putting aside the question as to whether the evidence supported the averments of the answer and
(b) It is insisted, however, that the facts pleaded constitute a valid counterclaim in favor of Tross- as against Bills, especially, as alleged in the amendment of January 15, 1918, which was rejected and of which ruling of the court Tross complains. It was held in Murphy v. Hubble, 2 Duv. 247, that if an obligue in a note induces another to become a surety of the principal obligor by a verbal promise to secure some other to also become a ■surety upon it and fails to keep the promise and the surety is required to pay the entire sum of the note, when otherwise, he would have had a right of contribution from the promised co-surety, the surety would have an action against the obligee for the damages sustained. This doctrine was placed upon the ground that the promise of the obligee to one as an inducement to become a surety did not in any way restrain or impair the latter’s obligation upon the note and the proof of it did not
, The rejection of the second proposed amendment left the original counterclaim and its first amendment,
The judgment is therefore affirmed.