Court Opinion

ID: 6619135
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:27:21.018624+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:38.598828
License: Public Domain

Gill, J.
This is a suit brought by one of two co-sureties for contribution. At the close of the evidence the court gave a peremptory instruction for defendant, and from a judgment following this direction plaintiff has appealed.
statement.' The question then is whether or not there was-substantial evidence upon which plaintiff was entitled to have the case submitted to the determination of the jury. The pvidenee tended to prove about this state of facts: On September 1, 1894, George Ryan (who is a son of the plaintiff and a son-in-law of defendant) for money borrowed of Heaton, a banker at Craig, Missouri, gave his note to said Heaton for $1,000 due one year after-date, with plaintiff and defendant as sureties. When, the note matured,-and the principal being insolvent and failing to pay, plaintiff Charles Ryan, one of the sureties, agreed with Heaton, the payee and holder, to execute his (plaintiff’s) individual note for the $1,000, due two. hundred and ten days after date, and thereby take up and pay off the original note. On the seventh day of September, 1895, plaintiff went to Heaton’s bank, executed his individual note as agreed and took up the originaLnote which was then and there marked paid. In due season plaintiff paid this last note and defendant refusing to stand his half of the loss this suit was brought. From the testimony given by plaintiff at the trial, it seems that within a day or two and very *499shortly after plaintiff had given his individual note to Heaton in settlement of the first note, the latter called George Ryan into the bank and had him likewise sign this last note, so that when it was produced in evidence at the trial said last note had the signatures of both Charles and George Ryan. In reply to the question as to whether or not George Ryan’s name was placed on this new note according to an understanding had with Heaton the payee, plaintiff testified that he thought not — that by agreement with Heaton he, plaintiff, simply paid off the original note then past due by delivering his individual note in its stead, that he gave the one and took up and canceled the other.
Psure"Asurety>s noteTcontnbution of co-surety. In Brandt on Suretyship [2 Ed.], vol. 1, sec. 285, the rule is well stated: “If two co-sureties are bound for a debt, and one of them pays it by giving his own note for it, which is accepted by' the creditor as payment, the . surety thus paying may at once, and before paying the note so given as payment, sue his co-surety for contribution, the same as if he had paid the debt in money.”
The case in hand belongs to a class even stronger for the plaintiff than those covered by the above quotation. For not only does the evidence tend to prove that the plaintiff gave his individual note, and that the same was accepted by the creditor in actual payment and satisfaction of the original note, but more than this the evidence shows that plaintiff subsequently, but prior to the institution of this action, paid said individual note. Plaintiff was entitled to have this case go to the jury on the theory, which his evidence tended to establish, that he, as a co-surety of the defendant, paid off the debt for which they were jointly responsible by giving his individual note therefor. If the plaintiff did so pay the joint obligation then clearly he was *500entitled to recover the one half thereof from defendant, his co-surety. Smith v. Mason, 44 Neb. 610, and authorities cited. Bell v. Boyd, 76 Tex. 133.
’ ' ' If however the original note was not paid off by the execution and delivery of plaintiff’s individual note, but that by agreement with Heaton, the payee, plaintiff and George Ryan the insolvent principal, made and delivered their joint note in payment of the original obligation, then plain-, tiff has no legal' claim against defendant for contribution. In such case plaintiff can not be treated as discharging the first note by giving his own individual note. In that case the form of contract is merely changed — the principal in the old note remaining primarily liable while the plaintiff would in fact be surety. The case above cited from Texas was one of the characters just alluded to. It was there held, that “where an insolvent principal and one of several sureties executed their note instead of a former note, the surety upon such new note would not be entitled to contribution from the other sureties upon the old note for which the new note was executed.”
evidenceToTthe puacytum.dum The evidence shown in the record before us justified a submission to the jury on both of. the aforesaid theories — to wit, did the plaintiff pay off the original note by giving Heaton, the holder, his (plaintiff’s) individual note, or was the-transaction the mere execution of a new note-by George and Charles Ryan and so understood by the parties at the time? If the individual note of Charles Ryan was, by agreement with Heaton taken as payment for the old note with no-arrangement or understanding that the new note was to be signed by George Ryan, then the signing thereafter by the latter would accomplish nothing, would have no consideration to support it and the instrument as to *501said George Ryan must be treated as a nullity. The rule is well settled, that where one signs a note after delivery and after the consideration between the original parties had passed, the obligation as to such subsequent signer is a mere nudum pactum and can not be enforced. McMahan v. Geiger, 73 Mo. 145; Burrus v. Davis, 67 Mo. App. 210.
The judgment must be reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
All concur.