Hale v. Forbis

3 Mont. 395
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 3 Mont. 395 (Hale v. Forbis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Forbis, 3 Mont. 395 (Mo. 1879).

Opinions

BláKE, J.

The respondent brings this action against the makers of the following promissory note :

“ Helena, Mon., September 1, 1873.
“ $745^%. Nine months after date, for value received, we promise to pay to the order of Robert 8. Hale the sum of seven hundred forty-five and dollars, negotiable and payable at his business house at the city of Helena, M. T., without default or discount, with two per cent interest per month from maturity until paid, both before and after judgment.
“E. E. BYWATERS,
“ J. F. FORBIS.”

The complaint alleges that the interest had been paid to November 1, 1874; and that the respondent then agreed that the rate of interest should be reduced to one and one-half per cent per month from November 1, 1874, until the payment of the note. During the pendency of this action, Bywaters was adjudged a bankrupt and his assignee paid, August 15, 1876, on account of the note, $246.55. The following memorandum was indorsed upon the note, November 1, 1874: “In consideration of further time being granted, I agree to pay one and' one-half per cent interest per month on the within note until paid.

“E. E. BYWATERS.
November 1, 1874.”

[399]*399The answer of Forbis alleges that he signed the note as security for Bywaters; that the respondent and Bywaters agreed that the time for the payment of the note should be extended until the spring of 1S75 ; that the rate of interest should be reduced to one and one-half per cent per month from November 1, 1874, until the note should be paid ; that Bywaters then signed said memorandum ; that the note was canceled under this agreement; and that Forbis had no knowledge of this agreement for the extension of the time of payment, and never .consented to or ratified the same.

Jorbis died before the trial, and his administratrix, the appellant, was made a party defendant. Upon the trial she offered testimony tending to prove the allegations of the answer of Forbis, but the court excluded it. The jury were instructed that the agreement, which was indorsed upon the note, was void for want- of consideration, and its failure to fix a certain period of time for the payment of the note and interest; and that the appellant, or the estate of Forbis, had not been released from liability on the note. Judgment was entered on the verdict for Hale.

How were the rights of Forbis affected by the memorandum of Bywaters upon the note. This note was payable June 1, 1874, and the facts which are set forth in the answer of Forbis Occurred five months afterward. The written agreement does not extend the time of payment for a definite space of time, and does not restrict some rights of the parties to the note. As soon as it was signed, Bywaters and Forbis could tender the amount remaining unpaid on the note and demand its surrender or cancellation, and Hale, the payee, was not prohibited from commencing an action to enforce its payment. “ To discharge the surety, the contract for new credit must be such as will prevent the holder of the note from bringing an action against the principal.” Blackstone Bank v. Hill, 10 Pick. 129; Oxford Bank v. Lewis, 8 id. 458. “ The .indulgence, to have the effect of discharging the surety, must be for a definite time.” 1 Pars, on Notes and Bills, 240, and cases there cited; 2 Dank on Neg. Inst., § 1319.

W e think it is clear that the memorandum of By waters did [400]*400not defeat the right of the respondent to maintain this action. But the appellant sought to introduce oral evidence tending to show that the time for the payment of the note was extended for a certain period. Although the agreement was written upon the back of the note, it is not an indorsement within the legal meaning of the term, and, therefore, is not subject to the same rules. The instrument, it is obvious, contains a part of the contract between the respondent and Bywaters, and the remainder may be supplied orally, so that the entire stipulation can be adjusted. “ This is not constructing a new bargain, but authenticating and throwing light upon the old.” 2 Pars, on Notes and Bills, 514. It was competent for the appellant to show that the words, “further time,” expressed one portion of the agreement, and that the respondent promised to extend the time of payment until the spring of 1875. In Abel v. Alexander, 45 Ind. 523, the court holds that'the agreement of the holders of a promissory note to postpone the time for the payment of the principal sum “until the summer, ” and afterward, “until the fall,” could be made certain by oral evidence, and that the time was extended until June 1 and September 1.

The other question for our investigation relates to the consideration of the agreement of Bywaters and the respondent. By the terms of the note, Bywaters and Forbis promised to pay interest at the rate of two per cent per month until paid, “ both before and after judgment.” On November 1,1874, according to the agreement of Bywaters and the respondent. Bywaters promised to pay interest at the rate of one and one-half per cent per month “until paid.” Most of the cases and authorities, to which our' attention has been invited, interpret contracts which were entered into by the parties before the note became due, and we are inclined to deny their applicability to the case at bar, in which the agreement was made five months after the note was payable. But waiving this consideration, and placing the appellant in the most favorable situation, we intend to assume, in our treatment of this subject, that Bywaters and the respondent entered into this contract on or about June 1, 1874. The following rule is undoubtedly sound. If there was a sufficient consideration for the prom[401]*401ise of Bywaters, Forbis was released from liability on the note; and, if there was no consideration therefor, the rights of the parties have not been suspended.

Upon this matter the decisions are conflicting, and we desire to apply the best principle that can be found in the books. The classes of consideration, which appear in the reports, comprise promises to pay the same rate of interest which is mentioned in the note; or interest in .excess of that specified in the note ; or interest in advance for a certain time; or a certain sum in addition to the interest; and also promises to perform work or deliver goods besides the payment of the interest. In the limited number of authorities at our command we have not observed a case in which the maker and payee made an agreement for the payment of interest at a rate below that named in the note.

In Oxford Bank v. Lewis, 8 Pick. 458, a promissory note was signed by two persons, as the principals, and two sureties, and, after the note was overdue, the principals paid in advance the same rate of interest for sixty days. The court held that the receiving of this interest did not disable the owner and holder from bringing an action on the note at any time, and that the sureties were not discharged. The courts of Massachusetts have adhered to this doctrine.

In Reynolds v. Ward, 5 Wend. 501, it is held that a promise by the maker of a promissory note to pay the interest during the time the creditor did not enforce its collection forms no consideration for the agreement to enlarge the period for its payment when the debtor was compelled to pay the interest. In the opinion, Mr.

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3 Mont. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-forbis-mont-1879.