1. Where a person purchases land from the owner and as a part of the consideration of the purchase assumes a loan secured by a security deed executed by the owner, if the lender knows of the relationship of the parties or has sufficient notice to put it upon inquiry, an extension of the time of payment of some installments operates to discharge the original owner, where the contract provides for the acceleration of the maturity of the notes not due, where the original owner does not consent to the grant of the extension. Under the facts of this case the jury was authorized to find that the lender had sufficient notice to put it upon inquiry as to the relationship of the parties to the two sales of the land and the assumption of the loan by the two purchasers.
2. Code § 14-902 does not apply to such a case of suretyship as is referred to in the preceding headnote.
3. Where the lender extends the time for certain payments to the first purchaser upon the condition that the original borrower should consent thereto, and the bank accepts payments from the purchaser without inquiring whether the original borrower consented, it is estopped to deny that the extension was in fact granted.
4. Where a series of notes is given as evidence of debt, and an extension is granted to a maker under the facts of this case as to a part of the indebtedness, and where the privilege of accelerating the maturity of the notes not due is provided, the extension extends the whole debt and a surety not consenting thereto is discharged by such extension.
1. It is not disputed that as to the amounts actually involved in the extensions, in the absence of consent to the extensions and in the absence of effective reservations as against them, they would be released by such extensions if the bank granted the extensions with knowledge of the facts or notice sufficient to charge them with such knowledge. Stapler v. Anderson,
2. The letter from the bank evidencing the consent for Mrs. Bush to assume the loan and to grant her certain extensions is as follows: "The time for payment of the above items will be extended over a period of two years on the following basis: the extended items shall be liquidated by your paying annually on January 1 of each year, beginning on January 1, 1938, one-half of the amount of said items, plus accrued interest thereon. The plan of extension is subject to the following terms, conditions, and reservations: 1. The other terms, provisions, covenants and obligations of the note and/or mortgage and/or deed of trust and/or loan deed evidencing and securing this loan, shall in no manner be affected *Page 688 hereby. 2. The bank expressly reserves all of its rights and remedies against all persons liable for the payment of the loan, as well as the rights and remedies of all persons not parties hereto who are liable for the payment of the loan." It was held in Stapler v. Anderson, supra, that such an agreement did not bind anybody but the parties to the agreement and those who assented thereto. The evidence in this case was that Mr. Lane did not assent to the provision. The reservation in number 2 of the plan of extension in the above letter of consent was ineffective because Mr. Lane did not consent to it, and the provisions of the negotiable-instruments law, Code, § 14-902; "A person secondarily liable on the instrument is discharged: . . (5) By a release of the principal debtor, unless the holder's right of recourse against the party secondarily liable is expressly reserved; (6) By any agreement binding upon the holder to extend the time of payment, or to postpone the holder's right to enforce the instrument, unless made with the assent of the party secondarily liable or unless the right of recourse against such party is expressly reserved," were held in Stapler v. Anderson, supra, not to apply to suretyship arising upon equitable principles under such circumstances as appear in this case.
3. The letter from the bank agreeing to extend the time of payment of the loan, addressed to Mr. Lane, recited the following: "Subject to the approval of the Bainbridge National Farm Loan Association and with the agreement of the others, if any, liable for the payment of this loan or who own any part of the mortgaged property, and subject to all the conditions and terms of the original note and mortgage (or loan deed) the time for payment of the indebtedness listed above will be extended over a period of five years on the following basis: the postponed payment shall be made by paying at the time each succeeding January 1st installment is due, beginning with the January 1, 1934, installment, one fifth of the amount of the postponed payment, plus accrued interest." The bank contends that since Mrs. Drake's approval of the extension was not obtained there was no extension as to Mr. Lane. The jury was authorized to find that the bank made no effort to ascertain whether Mrs. Drake had consented or not as there was no evidence that it did. It accepted payments on the extensions from Mr. Lane, and is estopped now to say that it granted him no extension because Mrs. Drake had not consented. *Page 689
4. The contention that the extensions would release the sureties only to the extent of the amounts as to which the extensions were granted is without merit. The effect of the extension agreements was that the loan would not be foreclosed against the one to whom the extension was granted during the time covered by the extensions, provided, of course, that the terms of the extension agreements were complied with, and also provided that other provisions of the original contract were complied with. The notes and deed between the bank and Mrs. Drake contained provisions for acceleration of the maturities of the notes as to which no extension was granted. The result of the extension agreements was that the sureties could not have paid up the loan and foreclosed as to all notes not due according to their dates. The privilege of accelerating the maturities of notes not due was closed as to the sureties as it was to the bank. While some other jurisdictions hold to the contrary the principle above set forth has been established in this State in the case of AlropaCorporation v. Snyder, supra.
There was no error in overruling the bank's motion for new trial.
Judgment affirmed. Stephens, P. J., and Sutton, J.,concur.
