Bumgardner v. Groover

95 S.E.2d 101, 245 N.C. 17, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 525
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 21, 1956
Docket235
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 95 S.E.2d 101 (Bumgardner v. Groover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bumgardner v. Groover, 95 S.E.2d 101, 245 N.C. 17, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 525 (N.C. 1956).

Opinion

PARKER, J.

With the exception of formal assignments of error, the defendants have only two assignments of error: one, to that part of the order sustaining the demurrer to the first further answer and defense and cause of action for affirmative relief, and two, to that portion of the order allowing the motion to strike from the answer the entire second further answer and defense.

This is not an action based on the $15,000.00 note executed and delivered to plaintiff by the defendants Barney Lee Groover and wife, Mary Lee Groover, as a purchase money note for a farm, and secured by a deed of trust on the property. This is an action to recover from the defendants $984.62 which the plaintiff paid the Union National Bank of Charlotte by reason of his liability as an endorser on defendants’ sealed note for $1,484.62, which the defendants admit they executed and delivered to the bank with the plaintiff as an endorser thereon, and which note the plaintiff now holds.

*21 In essence the allegations of defendants’ first answer and defense, and cause of action for aifirmative relief are these: The Union National Bank of Charlotte loaned the defendants $1,484.62 on their note under seal for that amount, endorsed by plaintiff, which sum was paid to plaintiff as a payment on the $1,000.00 installment past due on the purchase money note of $15,000.00 of Barney Lee Groover and wife, Mary Lee Groover, and of the accrued interest on this note, that Barney Lee Groover paid the bank $500.00 on this note, that the defendants defaulted in the payment of the remainder due on their note held by the bank, that the plaintiff by virtue of his liability as endorser on their note held by the bank paid the remainder due on the note, to-wit, $984.62, and is now the holder of the note, that their note executed and delivered to the bank is null and void, becaused based on no consideration as to them, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover nothing on the note transferred to him by the bank, and Barney Lee Groover is entitled to recover from plaintiff the $500.00 he paid the bank on the note. In this part of their answer the defendants allege the note they executed and delivered to the bank “represents part of the identical money represented by the said note and deed of trust for $15,000.00.”

Whether the allegations of defendants’ first answer and defense, and cause of action for affirmative relief are sufficient can be tested by a demurrer. G.S. 1-141; Jenkins v. Fields, 240 N.C. 776, 83 S.E. 2d 908.

Accepting these allegations as true, this is the situation presented. The defendants make no contention that the purchase money note for $15,000.00 is not based upon an adequate legal consideration. They admit that the $1,000.00 installment payment due on this note 1 January 1953 was past due, when they executed and delivered their sealed note to the bank, and it is manifest from the allegations that this note was used by them to obtain money to pay this past due installment, which installment payment Barney Lee Groover and his wife justly and lawfully owed, and for which payment they are entitled to credit on their $15,000.00 note. It seems that the rest of the money secured from the bank was used to pay accrued interest on the $15,000.00 note, and they are entitled to credit for that payment. It also seems plain that the payment was made by the defendants to prevent a foreclosure of the deed of trust, and to permit Barney Lee Groover and wife to retain possession of the farm, because it nowhere appears in the Record that the deed of trust on the farm has been foreclosed, or that Barney Lee Groover and wife are not in possession of the farm. Certainly by accepting payment of this past due installment plaintiff waived and surrendered his right to foreclose the deed of trust by reason of the non-payment of the $1,000.00 installment due 1 January 1953 on the $15,000.00 note, and to proceed to judgment on the note, and the amount *22 be received is a proper credit for the makers of the $15,000.00 note on the note.

G.S. 25-30 (Negotiable Instruments) reads in part: “An antecedent or pre-existing debt constitutes value, and is deemed such whether the instrument is payable on demand or at a future time.” “And it is well settled that a pre-existing, valid and enforceable indebtedness or liability of a contracting party constitutes a sufficient consideration to support his undertaking on a bill or note. Consequently, it is generally held that a bill or note given for practically any kind of pre-existing debt or liability of the maker or drawer is supported by a consideration. . . .” 10 C.J.S., Bills and Notes, p. 604.

Undoubtedly, the release or waiver of a legal right, or a forbearance to exercise a legal right, is a sufficient consideration to support a note made on account of it. Searcy v. Hammett, 202 N.C. 42, 161 S.E. 733; Exum v. Lynch, 188 N.C. 392, 125 S.E. 15; Lowe v. Weatherley, 20 N.C. 355; 10 C.J.S., Bills and Notes, p. 618.

So far as Barney Lee Groover and wife, Mary Lee Groover, are concerned their sealed note to the bank, according to the allegations of their first further answer and defense and cause for affirmative relief, was based upon a valid consideration, and Barney Lee Groover is not entitled to recover from plaintiff the $500.00 he paid to the bank. As to them the demurrer was properly sustained.

Mrs. Marietta Grant, daughter of the other two defendants, says that she was not a party to the purchase of the farm, did not sign the $15,000.00 purchase money note, and that there was no consideration so far as she was concerned in respect to the note she executed with her parents and delivered to the bank. In 10 C.J.S., Bills and Notes, pp. 619 and 620, it is written: “It is well settled that the discharge, release, or forbearance of a right or claim against a third person, at the instance or request of the obligor, is sufficient consideration to support the latter’s undertaking on a bill or note. A bill or note given in payment or extinguishment of a debt or liability of a person other than the maker is supported by consideration, although the debtor is wholly without means, or although the maker mistakenly believed that he was in turn indebted to the debtor. It is apparent, therefore, that if a bill or note of a relative or spouse of a debtor has been taken in discharge or payment of the indebtedness, or has induced a forbearance thereon, the instrument is supported by consideration, although, as already noted, neither the debt itself, see supra sec. 150 d, nor the interest or affection attendant on the relationship involved, see supra sec. 148, would of itself have been sufficient to sustain the undertaking.”

In Bank v. Harrington, 205 N.C. 244, 170 S.E. 916, it was held that the cancellation and surrender of deceased husband’s notes to widow constituted a sufficient consideration for widow’s notes. The Court *23 said: “In the instant case the plaintiff had surrendered the notes of the deceased husband, and thereby discharged his estate from liability for said notes. 8 C.J., 219. This was a sufficient consideration for the notes sued on in these actions.”

In Searcy v. Hammett, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.E.2d 101, 245 N.C. 17, 1956 N.C. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bumgardner-v-groover-nc-1956.