Affirming.
The appellee brought this suit against B.T. Hash and the appellants, W.W. Reynolds, J.S. Marrs, and F.A. Hopkins, on a promissory note dated December 6, 1923, whereby Hash, as principal, and the appellants, as indorsers, agreed to pay to the order of the appellee the sum of $700 four months from its date. Hash did not answer, but the appellants defended upon two grounds. The first was that the appellee had theretofore sued Hash, the appellants, and J.W. Reynolds on a promissory note dated August 6, 1923, whereby Hash, as principal, and J.W. Reynolds and the appellants, as indorsers, had agreed to pay to the order of the appellee the sum of $700 four months from its date; that in that suit they had defended on the ground that the bank had accepted the note of December 6, 1923, herein sued on in lieu of and as a discharge of the August note; that the *Page 635 bank in that suit had denied that it had accepted the December note on any such terms, but that despite such denial the jury found that it had, and, on its verdict, judgment went for the appellants. There was attached to the answer in this case a transcript of all of the proceedings had in the suit on the August note from which it appeared that the only question submitted in that suit to the jury under the proof was whether the December note had been accepted by the bank in discharge of the August note. The other defense relied upon to defeat this note of December 6th was that, at the time the appellants signed the note for Hash, it was agreed between them and Hash that the note was not to become binding until he had also secured the signature of J.W. Reynolds who had been an indorser with these appellants on the August note, and that Hash had failed to do so. There was nothing said in the answer about the appellee being apprised of this arrangement. The appellee filed a demurrer to this answer, and it was sustained. The appellants declined to plead further, and judgment was entered against them on the note of December 6th. They have appealed.
That the court properly sustained the demurrer of the appellee to the defense that it was agreed between Hash and the appellants that the note sued upon was not to become binding upon them until he had secured the signature of J.W. Reynolds is settled by the case of Brown's Adm'r et al. v. Wilson et al.,
Its judgment is affirmed.
