Bank of Limestone v. Penick

21 Ky. 25, 5 T.B. Mon. 25, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 31, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Ky. 25 (Bank of Limestone v. Penick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Limestone v. Penick, 21 Ky. 25, 5 T.B. Mon. 25, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 95 (Ky. Ct. App. 1827).

Opinion

Jutge Owsley

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This was an action of deist, brought by the Bank of Limestone against Penick, upon the following writing:

“ Dollars 5500. Sixty days after dale, we, Richard L. Watters, William Penick and Israel Jennings, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of the President, Drioctors and company of the bank of Limestone, fifty five hundred dollars, for value received; negotiable and payable at said hank, without defalcation. Witness our hands, April 11th, 1820.
Richard L. Walters,
Win. Pcnick,
Israel JennhgsP

Penick pleaded four pleas: 1st, Payment with notice of set oil': 2nd, That the writing sued on was obtained by fraud, covin and collusion of the bank: 3rd, Non est factum-. 4th, That the writing declared on, was obtained from Penick, by fraud, covin and misrepresentation; that is to say, by the plaintiffs and others in collusion with them, falsely and fraudulently representing to him, the said Penick, that the said writing obligatory was executed and delivered to them, the said plaintiffs, by Richard L. Watters, for the purpose of obtaining the signatures of the saicl Penick and Israel Jennings, one of the obligors in said writing, as the sureties of the said Richard L. Watters in the said joint and several obligation sued on ; by which false and fraudulent representation, the said Pcnick was induced to affix his signature to the said writing, when, as he, the said Penick, avers, the said writing was not executed and delivered to the said plaintiffs, by the said Richard L. Watters, for the purpose of obtaining the signature of him, the said Penick, and Israel Jennings as sureties for said Watters in the said joint and several obligation in the declaration mentioned ; wherefore, lie, the said [26]*26Penick, says, that the said writing obligatory, is void in law, &c. &c.”

Verdict and judgment for Penick. Instructions of the court for Penick. 2nd Instruction. 3rd Instruction. ■4 th Instruction.

Issues were made up to each of these pleas, and verdict and judgment recovered by Penick.

On the trial, the court instructed the jury—

1st. That if they were of opinion, from the evidence in the cause, that the plaintiffs filled up the blank of Richard L. Watters without his consent, binding him in a manner different from what was contemplated and authorized by hin*when he delivered the blank with his name thereto affixed, that the obligation thus taken by the plaintiffs, payable to a different party, is not the deed of said Watters, but void as to him; unless they should be of opinion he re-acknowledged and confirmed the same after it had been filled up: and any act which clearly indicates the assent of the mind to stand to and perform a contract previously entered into, amounts to a confirmation.

find. If the jury should be of opinion, that the plaintiffs, or their agent, did not inform the defendant Penick, who signed the writing as surety for Watters, that the said writing was filled up as above supposed, (provided the jury shall be satisfied from the evidence, it was so filled up,) it was a fraud upon Penick, and renders the obligation void as to him; unless the jury should be satisfied from the evidence, that Penick was fully apprised of its having been so filled without the authority of Watters: and the burthen of proof of his having been so apprised lies upon the plaintiffs.

3rd. If the jury shall be of opinion, that the plaintiffs, after the execution and delivery of the note sued upon by Penick, inserted the name of Jennings as a new party thereto, without the assent of Watters and Penick, it rendered the obligation void as to them; unless they, or one of them, afterwards confirmed the same, and in case it was confirmed by one only, it would be obligatory on him only.

4th. If the jury should be of opinion, that at the time, to-wit, the 11th of April, this writing was ordered to be discounted, it was not executed by Pe[27]*27nick, Iiis subsequent signature and delivery as surety for Watters, would not be obligatory on him, unless the note was again discounted, or executed upon some consideration operating beneficially to himself or to his principal, or injuriously to the plaintiffs.

Principal offered as a witness for surety, released and examined. Assignment of errors,. Principal in a promissory note, released by the surety,is a competent witness for surety in an action against him.

In the progress of the trial, Penick introduced Richard L. Watters, one of the persons by whom the writing sued on purports to have been given, as a witness ; the competency of whose testimony was ob jected to by the bank; but upon Penick releasing Waiters from all liability to him, the objection to his competency as a witness, was overruled, and his testimony given to the jury.

The assignment of errors question the correctness of the several instructions which the court gave to the jury, as also the propriety of the decision, admitting the evidence of Watters.

With respect to Watters’ evidence, we think the court decided correctly in admitting it to go to the jury. The objection to his competency would have assumed quite a different aspect, if the action had been a joint one against all of the persons by whom the writing declared on purports to have been executed; for as Waters would then have been a party to the action, it might with great force he contended, that no release by Penick, a co-obligor, could, in a suit to which both are defendants, remove the objections to Watters’ competency as a witness for him. But this suit was brought, not jointly against all of the persons named as obligors in the writing, but against Penick only; so that there lies no objection to the competency of Watters on the score of his being a party to the action. The only objection which can fairly he urged to the competency .of Watters in this case, grows out of the interest which, as a co-obligor, he may be supposed to have in the event of the suit; and that interest, it is admitted, would he sufficient to exclude his testimony if it had not been removed before his evidence was received. But we understand the release, which was executed by Penick, to have absolved Watters from any possible liability to him, and we are incapable of discerning any interest which Watters can have had in [28]*28the event of this contest, except that which grew out of his liability to Penick.

i.lie evidence! Person signJngbis name impor,1 a"d delivering it ioJ. S. anío fiíl«pJÚie blank with an SU^~I~ j the sUpiiiiZ'.> will bind ic.a fol'i(:-

[28]*28Before we proceed to examine the correctness of the instructions which were given to the jury, it is proper that we should state briefly some of the prominent facts, which the evidence introduced at the trial conduced lo prove. R appears, that some time before the date of the writing sued on, Richard L. Watters being indebted to the hank fifty-five hundred dollars, by note with Penick and Jennings his endorsers, and that about the winter of Í

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ky. 25, 5 T.B. Mon. 25, 1827 Ky. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-limestone-v-penick-kyctapp-1827.