135 S.W. 1108 | Tex. App. | 1911
Contemporaneously with the execution of the note, appellant also executed a mortgage in favor of the bank on certain real estate to secure the payment of the note. Thereafter he sold the real estate to T. W. *1109
Reedy, who assumed payment of the note as a part of the consideration for the sale. Appellant then informed the officers of the bank of the transaction with Reedy, telling them at the same time that they must look to Reedy as the principal obligor and to appellant as surety only. After the maturity of the note, appellant served upon appellee a request in writing that suit be instituted forthwith upon the note; but appellee failed and refused to sue thereon until after two terms of the district court of Potter county had convened. Upon the facts so pleaded, appellant alleged that T. W. Reedy became the principal obligor, and he a surety, and that he had been discharged from all liability on the note, evidently invoking the benefit of Sayles' Rev.Civ.St. 1897, arts. 3811, 3812. There was no error in sustaining appellee's special exception to that plea, as it contained no allegation that appellee in any manner consented or agreed to look to Reedy as the principal obligor on the note. Shapleigh Hardware Co. v. Wells Chestnutt,
In his answer appellant further alleged that since the maturity of the note the real estate conveyed to Reedy had depreciated in value to such an extent that it was not worth more than the mortgage indebtedness against it and T. W. Reedy had become insolvent; that when the note matured Reedy was solvent, and the equity in the real estate conveyed to him by appellant was of sufficient value to liquidate the note. With these allegations of fact as a basis, appellant by plea in reconvention sought a judgment against appellee for the value of the equity in the real estate so lost to him by reason of appellee's failure to institute suit upon the note in compliance with appellant's written request so to do. The cause of action here asserted is necessarily predicated on the contention that by reason of the facts alleged in the first special plea, noted above, appellant was a surety only upon the note, and, as that contention cannot be sustained, it follows that the trial court did not err in sustaining appellee's demurrer to the plea in reconvention.
The foregoing is a disposition of the only assignments of error presented, and the judgment is affirmed.