Mulnix v. Spratlin

10 Colo. App. 390
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
DocketNo. 1248
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Colo. App. 390 (Mulnix v. Spratlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulnix v. Spratlin, 10 Colo. App. 390 (Colo. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Thomson, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 21st day of August, 1893, the Bessemer Ditch Company executed and delivered to Hope and Mulnix three promissory notes, one for $696.34, payable ninety days from 'date, one for $175, payable ninety days from date, and one for $559, payable sixty days from date. There were paid on the first note, October 20, 1893, $160.40, and November 18, 1893, $25.00. On the second note there were two payments of $50.00 each, one made on August 23, 1893, and the other on August 25, 1893. Nothing was paid on the third note. On November 27, 1893, Hope and Mulnix, for a valuable consideration, indorsed these several notes to Spratlin and Anderson. On the 28th day of November, 1893, Spratlin and Anderson commenced their action against Hope and Mulnix in the county court of Pueblo county, alleging the execution and delivery of the notes by the ditch company to the defendants, the payments made, the indorsement to the plaintiffs, and the insolvency of the ditch company, and demanded judgment against the defendants for the amount due on the notes. For some reason which does not appear, no answer was made to the complaint until December 7, 1894. On that day, however, the defendants answered admitting the execution and indorsement of the notes and the insolvency of the ditch company, and alleging that after the insti[392]*392tution of the suit, and on May 25, 1894, by a contract entered into between the representatives of the first mortgage bondholders of the ditch company and the general creditors of the company, among whom were the plaintiffs, whereby the creditors accepted the covenants and agreements of the bondholders hr lieu of their claims against the ditch company, the defendants were discharged from liability on their indorsements. This contract will be considered more in detail in another connection. The judgment in the county court was for the defendants, and the plaintiffs appealed to the district court, where judgment was rendered in their favor for the amount then due on the notes. The defendants have brought the case into this court by writ of error.

The notes were made and payable in this state, and indorsed in this state. The remedy of the indorsees is therefore governed by the laws of this state. By the act concerning bills, bonds and promissory notes (General Statutes, sec. 107), an indorsee may maintain an action against his indorser if he has used due diligence by the institution and prosecution of a suit upon the note against the maker, or, without such suit, if its institution would have been unavailing. It is agreed on both sides that at the time of the indorsements the ditch company was, and continued to be, irremediably insolvent. The right therefore, of the plaintiffs to judgment was indisputable, unless by virtue of the contract into which they entered with the representatives of the bondholders, the right was lost. At the time the plaintiffs commenced their action, the liability of the defendants was complete; and the main question in the case is whether what the plaintiffs subsequently did operated to extinguish the liability. Whether it so operated or not depends upon the effect to be given to the contract; and to reach a satisfactory solution of the question, the contract, its purposes, and the circumstances under which it was made, must receive something more than a merely general examination.

On the 14th day of November, 1889, the ditch company executed a deed of all its property, assets and franchises, [393]*393to the New York Security and Trust Company, as trustee, to secure an issue of its first mortgage bonds, amounting to $200,000, bearing interest at seven per cent. This deed was duly recorded. On the 25th day of May, 1894, these bonds were outstanding, the ditch company had made default in the payment of the interest, and the trustee for the bondholders was about to foreclose the trust deed for the payment of the full amount, principal and interest. At this time there were outstanding unsecured debts of the company, amounting in the aggregate to $15,586.72, and there was due to the company, on assessments before that time levied by it against its stockholders, the sum of $14,480.13. On that day, in pursuance of a plan of reorganization, embodied in an agreement between its stockholders and the holders of its bonds, which provided for the foreclosure of the trust deed, the sale of the company’s property, and its purchase by the trustee of the bondholders, the contract alleged in the answer was made. It was entered into between the trustee of the bondholders and a committee appointed to represent them, and the Bessemer Ditch Company, of the one part, and the general creditors of the company of the other, and provided that the delinquent assessments should be collected by the ditch company and paid to a trustee to be selected by the general creditors, and by him divided among them pro rata ; and the creditors covenanted and agreed that all suits and legal proceedings pending against the ditch company on account of the debts due them from the company, should be dismissed, and that no further action or proceeding should be commenced against the company on account of such debts. They also covenanted and agreed that they would accept the amounts collected on the delinquent assessments in lieu of all legal obligations of the ditch company. The creditors selected a trustee, who had, prior to the judgment, collected and paid over a portion of the delinquent assessments, and the share to which the indebtedness in suit was entitled was credited to the defendants, and allowed by the court in reduction of the judgment. The contract was signed by the plaintiffs, and also by the defendants.

[394]*394The position of the defendants' is that by the contract the plaintiffs discharged the maker of the notes, and that by discharging the maker they also discharged the indorsers. It is entirely settled, as a general rule, that if an indorsee enters into a contract with the maker of the note, whereby the debt, as against the latter, is extinguished, the liability of the indorser is at an end. The reason of the rule is that the indorser, after having paid the note, is entitled to proceed against the maker for reimbursement; and if by the unauthorized act of the indorsee his right to so proceed is cut off, it would be inequitable to hold him on his indorsement. To deprive the indorser of his remedy against the maker, and still compel him to make good Iris contract of indorsement, would be grave and manifest injustice. And it is not necessary that the remedy which the indorser would have should be absolutely destroyed. If it is merely impaired, if it is made less effective, if he is deprived of some right which he would have in connection with his remedy, the result is the same. See Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, § 1306, et seq. But where the indorser has himself released the maker from liability, the rule has no force. The reason having ceased to exist, the rule fails also. The law protects the indorser against any unauthorized act of the indorsee by which his right, upon payment, to hold the maker, is extinguished or compromised; but it does not protect him against the consequences of an act of his own by which the same result is accomplished. The defendants were parties to the contract, they affixed their signatures to it, and by its terms they agreed to bring no suit against the ditch company upon the notes; they agreed that the share of the delinquent assessments to which the notes were entitled, should be received in discharge of the company’s liability upon the notes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Colo. App. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulnix-v-spratlin-coloctapp-1897.