Court Opinion

ID: 9831827
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 21:24:04.436028+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:38.412913
License: Public Domain

RICE, J.
R. E. Medford, on the 18th day of June, 1909, made, executed, and delivered his two certain promissory notes for the sum of $352 each, payable to the order of B. H. Derrick on the 18th day of June, 1910, and 1911, respectively, each bearing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and providing for the payment of 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, and further providing that a failure to pay either of said notes, or interest thereon, when due, at the election of the holder, should mature either of them, both of which were secured by a vendor’s lien. J. M. Smith, defendant in error, brought this suit on the 14th of September, 1910, in the Nineteenth district court of Mc-Lennan county on both of said notes against Medford, the maker, and Derrick, the in-dorser, alleging that the former resided in Fannin and the latter in McLennan county, and that said notes had been theretofore duly transferred and indorsed to him, and no part thereof had ever been paid, praying for judgment and foreclosure of his vendor’s lien.
Derrick alone answered, urging a general and special demurrer to plaintiff’s petition; the latter in effect asserting that, since it appeared from the face of the petition that he was sued as indorser, and said notes were not protested and suit was not filed on the same before the first term of the court to which said suit could have been brought, nor at the second term, showing good cause why suit wás not instituted before the first term next after the right of action accrued, he was therefore entitled to judgment.
This demurrer having been sustained, plaintiff was granted leave to file, and did file, his first and second trial amendments, the substance of which was that, after the maturity of the first note, he began correspondence with Medford for the purpose of collecting same; that Medford acknowledged liability and began negotiations of settlement with plaintiff, which continued for some time, offering in compromise part payment in property, which he finally declined to accept; that during the progress of said correspondence, which lasted until the 14th of July, Derrick was informed of Medford’s default and payment demanded of him; that plaintiff, in good faith, expected Medford to pay the note, for which reason suit was not sooner instituted. Plaintiff in error renewed his exceptions to said trial amendments, but the same were overruled, to which he excepted.
There was a jury trial, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendant in error against both Medford and Derrick, from which the latter alone prosecutes this writ of error, assigning error on the action of the court in refusing to sustain said exceptions.
[1-3] The first term of the McLennan county district court which convened after maturity of the first note was that of the Nineteenth district, which began on the 4th of July, 1910; and the first term of the Fannin county district court convened on the third Monday in August, 1910, the 22d of said month; and there was 'a term of the Fifty-Fourth district court in McLennan county, which convened on the third Mon*1175day in September, 1910; but this suit was brought to the October term of the Nineteenth district court of McLennan county, which convened on the first Monday in October, 1910.
In this state the liability of an indorser on any promissory note may be fixed, without protest, by instituting suit against the maker of such note before the first term of the court to which suit can be brought after the right of action shall accrue, or by instituting suit before the second term of said court after the right of action shall accrue, and showing good cause why suit was not instituted before the first term next after the right of action accrued. Article 304, Rev. Civ. Stat.
Without undertaking to indicate what may or may not constitute good cause for failure to bring a suit to the first term of the court, as contemplated by the statute, still we believe that whether or not the pleading sets up such good cause is, in the first instance, a matter for the determination of the court, and hold that the reasons set forth on the part of plaintiff in this case did not constitute good cause; and even if the suit had, in this instance, been brought to the second term the reasons stated would clearly have been insufficient. But, in addition to this, it appears that three terms of court elapsed after maturity of the note before suit was in fact brought against the maker, for both of which reasons we think the court erred in failing to sustain defendant’s exceptions. Seguin Mill & Power Co. v. Guinn, 137 S. W. 456. In Elliott v. Wiggins, 16 Tex. 596, in passing upon this statute, it was held that, since the same dispensed with the ordinary method by protest and notice, and allowed the fixing of liability against an indorser by suit against the maker, the statute must be strictly complied with; and if the suit was not brought to the first term the reasons for so omitting to commence the suit before the second term should be both alleged and proven. We therefore hold that the court erred in overruling said exception and rendering judgment in favor of plaintiff upon said first note.
[4] However, plaintiff in error contends in his.sixth assignment that the court likewise erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff against him for the principal, interest, and attorney’s fees called for in the second note described in plaintiff’s petition, because said petition did not show said second note to be due, asserting by his proposition thereunder that an agreement in a series of notes for maturity of all, at election of holder, upon failure to pay one, does not ipso facto mature all upon such failure. But defend-, ant in error insists that, where a condition precedent is made to appear on the face of the pleadings, such as in the present case, the filing of same is prima facie evidence of the election. The petition with reference to this matter alleged a full description of the note, giving dates and maturity, and then recited the following provisions: “It being provided that a failure to pay any of the aforesaid notes, or interest thereon, when due, shall, at the election of the holder of any of them, mature the notes herein described, as aforesaid. Your petitioner further shows that on or about the 14th day of August, 1909, the said Derrick transferred and assigned by indorsement to your petitioner, for a valuable consideration, the notes herein described. Wherefore petitioner shows that one of the notes, as aforesaid, fell due on the 18th day of June, 1910, and that the said defendants, although so indebted to your- petitioner, have not paid said notes or any part thereof.”
We are inclined to believe that the allegations above mentioned, together with the filing of the petition, in the absence of a special exception, were sufficient' to show an election on the part of plaintiff, whereby the second note became due and payable at the time suit was filed, for which reason this assignment will be overruled. See Luzenburg et al. v. Bexar Building & Loan Ass’n, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 261, 29 S. W. 237.
Believing, however, that the court erred, as heretofore indicated, in rendering judgment against plaintiff in error on the first note, said judgment is in this respect reversed and rendered in behalf of plaintiff; but in all other respects the same is affirmed.
Affirmed in part, and reversed and rendered in part.