Roberts, Throp & Co. v. Laughlin

59 N.W. 967, 4 N.D. 167, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 25
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 967 (Roberts, Throp & Co. v. Laughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts, Throp & Co. v. Laughlin, 59 N.W. 967, 4 N.D. 167, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 25 (N.D. 1894).

Opinion

Wallin, J.

This action is upon a guaranty indorsed by the defendants upon three'promissory notes, before said notes were delivered to the plaintiff by the makers thereof. The guaranty indorsed upon each note is as follows: “For value received, we hereby guaranty the collection of the within note. Laughlin, Palmer & Co.” The notes were executed and delivered to the plaintiff by one G. W. Curtiss and one C. M. Stewart, and were given for the purchase price of a threshing outfit. The notes were secured by a chattel mortgage upon the threshing outfit, and upon two horses. ' So far as appears in this record, no action was ever instituted on either of the notes against the makers, or against either of them; and no attempt was ever made to foreclose said chattel mortgage. All the notes bore date upon the 27th day of August, 1883, and matured as follows-: One, for $109.50, fell due December 1, 1884; one for $250, fell due December 1, 1883; and one, for $210 fell due December 1, 1885. The complaint alleges that said notes are wholly unpaid, except that $113.90 was paid January 10, 1885, on the note first coming due. The complaint also avers that the notes were not paid at maturity, and that plaintiff gave notice of the nonpayment to defendants, and demanded payment of defendants, which was refused, and “that at the time of the execution and delivery of said notes, and of said guaranty, said Curtiss and Stewart were, and ever since that time have been, insolvent; and in' or about the month of January, 1885, said Stewart removed from Dakota Territory, leaving no property therein from which said obligations could be satisfied.” The answer, besides a general denial, admits [169]*169the execution of the notes and guaranty as alleged in the complaint. The answer also alleges two affirmative defenses, which are in substance as follows: That on January 10, 1885, all of said notes were fully paid and discharged in the manner hereinafter stated: Said Stewart and Curtiss paid plaintiff $112 in money, and at the same time said Curtiss and one A. C. Poor executed and delivered to plaintiff their two joint and several promissory notes, as follows: Each note was dated January 10, 1885; one, for $347.73, matured on the 1st day of December, 1885, and the other note, for $233.83, matured December 1, 1886. The second affirmative defense is, in substance, that the plaintiff, in consideration of the payment of. said $112, and the execution and delivery to plaintiff of the said two last mentioned notes, expressly agreed that said Stewart should be wholly released and discharged from liability on three original notes, and that said A. C. Poor, who had succeeded to Stewart’s interest in the threshing outfit, should become responsible, instead of Stewart. At the trial the answer was amended so as to allege that the plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants, extended the time of payment on the original notes, to a date certain.

There was a jury trial. Defendant offered no evidence. The undisputed testimony offered in plaintiff’s behalf established the following state of facts: Plaintiff recovered judgment against Curtiss and Poor, on the collateral notes in an action instituted in August, 1887; execution issued in 1889 on this judgment, and was returned nulla bona. Plaintiff in 1888 foreclosed the chattel mortgage given to secure the collateral notes, and sold the separator, horse-power, and three mares. The net proceeds of the foreclosure were $55. One Angel, acting for the plaintiff, visited Marshal County, Dak. T., early in January, 1885, where Curtiss then resided, and where Stewart had lived before leaving the territory. Angel, by suitable inquiries, ascertained that Stewart left the territory in the fall of 1884, leaving no property behind him, and that Curtiss besides the property covered by the chattel mortgagé had only one team, and had no property [170]*170out of which the two notes then due could be collected by legal process. Angel also learned that, prior to Stewart’s departure, it had been arranged between Curtiss, Stewart, and one A. C. Poor that the latter should take Stewart’s interest in the threshing outfit, and should in consideration thereof, assume Stewart’s liability upon the notes given therefor. Under these circumstances, an arrangement was made as follows: A payment was made of $112 on the note which matured December 1, 1883, out of the funds of Stewart and Curtiss, and for the balance due on the original notes Curtiss and Poor executed and delivered to Angel their three several promissory notes, payable to plaintiff, and dated January 12, 1885. One, for $50, matured February 15, 1885; one, for $377.73, fell due December 1, 1885; and one, for $223.83, matured December 1, 1886. To secure these notes, a chattel mortgage was taken from Curtiss and Poor upon the separator and horse-power and upon four horses. The new notes and chattel mortgage were taken as additional security, and as collateral to the original notes; but there was no direct evidence of an extension of the time of payment upon the original notes, and such indirect evidence as tended to show an extension of time was stricken out by the court, without objection. The case having been rested, counsel for the defendants requested the trial court to instruct the jury to find a verdict for the defendants. The motion was granted as to the $250 note which fell due December 1, 1883, and denied as to the other two notes. An exception was taken by the plaintiff to the following instructions: “You are instructed, as a matter of law, that the note for $250, dated August 27, 1883, and due December 1, 1883, is not in this case; and the court withdraws that note from your consideration, the court, holding as a matter of law, that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover on the guaranty on the note, for the reason that they have not exercised that diligence in attempting to collect of the makers of the note that the law imposes upon them to entitle them to proceed against the guarantors.” The court, no exception being taken thereto, further instructed the jury as [171]*171follows: “You are instructed that there is no evidence in this case that the notes given by Curtiss and Poor were given in satisfaction of the notes in question. The testimony is that they were given as collateral, and not in satisfaction. There is some testimony on that point, but I take the responsibility of deciding that question myself. I also take the responsibility of deciding one other question. You will find that, at the time the second notes were given, there was no agreement that the time of payment of the notes in this case was extended.” The verdict was for the defendants on all the issues.

The only error of law assigned in this court which we deem is necessary to notice is the claim that it was error in the trial court to withdraw the note falling due December i, 1883, from the consideration of the jury, and to instruct them to find for the defendants upon that note. Plaintiffs also except to the verdict as not justified by the evidence, and specify that the evidence shows that the original debtors were insolvent when the original notes matured, and continued so to be until the trial, and also that the evidence shows due diligence on plaintiff’s part to collect the note from the original debtors. In passing upon the assignments of error, it becomes necessary to consider the nature and extent of the obligation assumed by the defendants by their guaranty of the “collection” of the notes in suit. For this purpose we may safely have recourse to certain provisions of the Civil Code. Section 4280, Comp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 967, 4 N.D. 167, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-throp-co-v-laughlin-nd-1894.