185 P. 555 | Idaho | 1919
The facts of this case necessary to an understanding of the question of law decided are that W. H.' Horton purchased an automobile from Carl Snodgrass and in part payment therefor executed and delivered to him two conditional sale contracts incorporated in one of which was a promissory note for $300 and in the other a like note for $900. His wife, Hattie Horton, was a joint maker of the contracts and the one containing the $900 note was, some time after its delivery, indorsed by their sons, C. W- Horton and
“In case this property shall be taken back, Carl Snodgrass may sell the same at public or private sale without notice, and apply the proceeds on this note; or they may, without sale, indorse the reasonable value of the property on this note, and I, we, or either of us, agree to pay any balance due thereon after sueh indorsement, as damages and for the use of said property.”
Snodgrass sold and assigned thé contract containing the $900 note to respondent, and thereafter repossessed the automobile and indorsed, as its value, $250 on the contract containing the $300 note. Respondent commenced this action to recover according to the terms of the promissory note incorporated in his contract. Snodgrass failed to appear and his default was entered. The trial court awarded judgment in favor of respondent against W. H. Horton, Harry Horton and Snodgrass, and dismissed the action as against Hattie Horton, who, as above stated, was a married woman, and C. W. Horton, who was a minor. W. H. Horton and Harry Horton have appealed from the judgment.
The trial court found that Snodgrass repossessed the automobile and, without any attempt to sell it, “pretended to give credit on said $300 note for said automobile so repossessed, and the court finds that the said defendant Carl Snodgrass credited on said $300 note the sum of $250 as the value of said automobile; and the court finds that the value of said automobile was then $1,246; and the court finds that after said indorsement was made upon said note the said defendant Carl Snodgrass retained said automobile and appropriated the same to his own use, all of which was done without the knowledge or consent of the defendants except the defendant Carl Snodgrass.” As a conclusion of law the court decided that respondent was entitled to a judgment against appellants and
The contract sued on is non-negotiable (C. S., sec. 5868; Kimpton v. Studebaker Bros. Co., 14 Ida. 552, 125 Am. St. 185, 14 Ann. Cas. 1126, 94 Pac. 1039), and the liability of the makers is to be found in its terms and cannot be enlarged by the acts of others, without any act or agreement on their part. Respondent purchased with notice that he was not buying an unqualified promise to pay money and, as against appellants, he stands in no better position than does Snodgrass. Each of them was the owner of a contract which gave him an interest in the automobile and the right to take possession of it in case his debt owing from appellants was not paid. (Atkinson v. Japink, 186 Mich. 335, 152 N. W. 1079.) Each of these contracts might be satisfied, in whole or in part, by the recaption and sale of the automobile or, in case it was retaken and not sold, by applying its reasonable value toward the payment of the debt. The property was retaken and not sold and its reasonable value, as found by the trial court, was sufficient to'more than pay the debt so that, according to the terms of the contracts, nothing remains to be paid by appellants upon either of them.
The judgment is reversed, with 'direction to the trial court to amend the conclusions of law to conform to the views herein expressed, and to- enter judgment for appellants as prayed for in their answer. Costs are awarded to appellants.