This is the defendant's appeal from a judgment entered upon a verdict directed for the plaintiff below.
The facts are not in dispute: One Jennie Carroll made and executed to William F. Farrell her promissory note dated September 8th, 1916, for the sum of $1,500, payable on demand, which note was on the same day endorsed over by the payee to F. Robert Young, the defendant herein. At the same time and in the same transaction Jennie Carroll, the maker, executed a bond and mortgage to Young to secure the same debt. On October 25th, 1916, for a valuable consideration, Young assigned the bond and mortgage and endorsed the note over to the plaintiff, and delivered them to him. The assignment contained this covenant: "And I do hereby covenant, promise and agree, to and with the said party of the second part, that there is now due and owing upon the said bond and mortgage the sum of $1,425 and interest from October 8th, 1916." After default, a suit in chancery was begun by the plaintiff to foreclose the mortgage, and a decree was entered therein for the defendant, upon the ground that the mortgage was given by a married woman in which her husband did not join, and that it was executed as surety without any benefit or consideration therefor to her or her separate estate. It is not denied that the decree was right and the mortgage null and void. Thereupon, the plaintiff brought this suit setting out in his complaint two causes of action, one on the defendant's endorsement of the note, and the other for the breach of the covenant contained in the assignment of mortgage to the plaintiff. The trial judge directed a nonsuit as to the first count, from which no appeal was taken, and directed a verdict for the plaintiff on the second count; and the only question before us is the liability of the assignor of the mortgage on his covenant. *Page 30
We are of the opinion that where, as here, the holder of a note secured by a bond and mortgage given by the maker thereof, which had been transferred to him by assignment from the payee, assigned the note and bond and mortgage by an instrument containing a covenant that there was then due and owing thereon a certain sum, with interest from a certain date, an action can be maintained against him by the assignee for such sum and interest under such express warranty contained in the assignment, after such mortgage, in a suit brought by the assignee to foreclose it, had been decreed to be void because it was made by a married woman and not joined in by her husband, and was given as surety without any benefit to her or her separate estate, where, as here, there was no proof that such invalidity was known to the assignee.
In Beuhler v. Pierce,
The judgment will be affirmed, with costs.
