Court Opinion

ID: 3960231
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:20:41.837845+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:24:22.793240
License: Public Domain

On October 5, 1914, the Commercial Guaranty State Bank of Nacogdoches, Tex., instituted this suit in the county court of Nacogdoches county on a promissory note for $400, dated May 21, 1913, due seven months after date, with 10 per cent. interest and 10 per cent. attorneys' fees; said note being signed by James W. Truitt, Lem Hill, E. S. Hicks, and H. C. Parker, in favor of said bank, and indorsed by J. P. Clevenger. Truitt and Clevenger filed no answer to the bank's suit. E. S. Hicks, Lem Hill, and H. C. Parker duly filed an answer, the contents of which it is not necessary here to state, except in so far as it affects the appellant, J. P. Clevenger. There were three paragraphs to this answer, numbered, respectively, 1, 2, and 3, and the court sustained demurrers to paragraphs 1 and 3, leaving paragraph 2 in said answer, and upon which the cause went to trial. That paragraph reads as follows:
"Further answering herein the defendants E. S. Hicks, Lem Hill, and H. C. Parker say that at the time they signed said note as surety for said J. W. Truitt and J. P. Clevenger, Joe P. Clevenger, and J. W. Truitt represented to them it was only a matter of accommodation to them to enable them to close up a piece of business; that they nor either of them should ever suffer any loss by reason of signing as surety the said note. And J. P. Clevenger especially represented to these defendants that he would hold these defendants absolutely harmless on said paper, and that he, himself, would pay off and settle said note when it became due, and especially guaranteed these defendants against any loss in the premises. J. P. Clevenger at the time was and is yet wholly solvent, and these defendants pray for a judgment over and against the defendants Joe P. Clevenger and J. W. Truitt, and each of them for the amount the plaintiff may recover against these defendants, if the court should hold that these defendants, under the facts, are joint signers, and primarily liable on said note."
The appellant, J. P. Clevenger, filed the following demurrers to paragraph 2, which were overruled by the court:
"Now comes the defendant, J. P. Clevenger, and says that the matters and things alleged in paragraph 2 of the answer of said defendants are wholly insufficient in law; and especially excepts to the same because it contradicts the written contract of said defendants; and especially excepts to said answer because the promise referred to therein is not alleged to have been in writing; and especially excepts to the same because no consideration for said promise is shown."
These demurrers were overruled by the court,
The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the Commercial Guaranty State Bank against all of the parties, for the amount of the note sued on, and in favor of Hill, Hicks, and Parker for the same amount against Truitt and Clevenger, and in favor of Clevenger over against Truitt. The appellant, Joe P. Clevenger, excepted to said judgment, and has perfected his appeal to this court.
There is no statement of facts in the record. The only question presented which we can consider is that attacking the judgment of the court on the rulings to the special exception of appellant to paragraph 2 of the answer filed by Hicks, Hill, and Parker.
It is a settled law of this state that parol evidence is admissible to show the relationship of principal and surety, or principal and guarantor, between the makers of a note, notwithstanding the form of the note. Burke v. Cruger, 8 Tex. 66, 58 Am.Dec. 102; Wylie v. Hightower,74 Tex. 306, 11 S.W. 1118; Yeary v. Smith, 45 Tex. 56; Zapalac v. Zapp,22 Tex. Civ. App. 375, 54 S.W. 938. Where a person not the payee signs his name on the back of a promissory note at the time of its inception, without any words to explain the nature of his undertaking, he is liable as an original promisor or as surety; but it is competent for the person so signing to show by oral or other evidence the real obligation intended to be assumed at the time of the signing. Cook v. Southwick, 9 Tex. 615, 60 Am.Dec. 181; Barton v. American National Bank, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 223,29 S.W. 210; Latham v. Houston Flour Mills, 68 Tex. 127, 3 S.W. 462; Kellogg v. Iron City National Bank, 26 S.W. 856.
The grounds upon which parol proof of intention or agreement in such cases is admitted is that the position of the name on the paper is one of ambiguity in itself; that it is not a complete contract, as is the case of an indorsement by the payee, which imports a distinct and certain liability, but rather evidence of authority to write over it the contract that was entered into; and that parol proof merely discloses and brings to light the terms of the unwritten contract that was made between the parties. Heidenheimer Bros. v. Blumenkron, 56 Tex. 308; Barton v. American National Bank, 29 S.W. 210.
And in the case of Citizens' National Bank v. Cammer, 86 S.W. 625, it was held that a witness may testify that when he signed a note it was understood he was not to be liable on the same, and that the payee should not hold him responsible, and would indemnify him against loss.
A contemporaneous agreement of that nature would not be admissible for the purpose of contradicting or disputing the legal effect of a note, but it may be introduced for the purpose of proving a parol contract of indemnity between those jointly liable on the *Page 67 
note. Such an agreement is not within the statute of frauds. Hall v. Taylor, 95 S.W. 755.
An agreement by one surety or guarantor to pay a note in case the principal refuses to pay the same, made as an inducement to the others to sign it, is supported by consideration. Hall v. Taylor, 95 S.W. 755.
The allegations in the paragraph of the answer excepted to specifically allege that the promises made by Clevenger and Truitt to the other makers of the note, E. S. Hicks, Lem Hill, and H. C. Parker, were made at the time they signed the note.
We see no error to the court's rulings on these demurrers.
In entering up the judgment, the court did not make an order directing the sheriff to levy the executions as provided for under article 6332, Vernon's Sayles' Texas Civil Statutes. The judgment will therefore be reformed by adding thereto the following provision:
"Execution on the judgment herein rendered in favor of the Commercial Guaranty State Bank shall first be issued directing the sheriff to levy the same upon the property of the principal, J. W. Truitt, subject to execution; and in the event the property of the principal, J. W. Truitt, in an amount sufficient to satisfy said judgment, cannot be found, then execution shall issue directing the sheriff to levy the same upon the property of the defendant, Joe P. Clevenger, and in the event property of sufficient amount cannot be found to satisfy said judgment, then the same may be levied upon the property of the defendants E. S. Hicks, Lem Hill, and H. C. Parker. The levies of the executions herein provided for to be made on so much of the property of the principal as may be found, if any, and upon so much of the property of the said Joe P. Clevenger as may be found, and as may be necessary to make the amount of the execution, and then upon so much of the property of the sureties herein named as may be found and as may be necessary to make the full amount of said judgment."
The judgment is reformed and affirmed; and it is so ordered.
MIDDLEBROOK, J., not sitting.