Wilson v. Thompson

186 S.W. 773, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 663
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 1916
DocketNo. 566.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 773 (Wilson v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Thompson, 186 S.W. 773, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 663 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

In 1908, appellee, W. T. Thompson, held a note against T. J. Jackson for $100, and with some interest due, secured by a chattel mortgage on Jackson’s team of horses. At the same time Jackson held a note for a like amount signed by H. A. Carter as principal, and appellants W. R. McClanahan and J. F. Wilson as sureties. Jackson gave Thompson the Carter note in exchange for the note Thompson held against him and indorsed the Carter note in blank, biit leaving some interest on his note to Thompson still unpaid. When the Carter note became due, with Thompson’s consent, a new note was given, signed by Jackson, McClanahan, and Wilson. When that note became due, it was renewed by Jackson, Mc-Clanahan, and Wilson and the parties signing in the order stated. When this last note became due, Thompson again agreed to a renewal. Another note was prepared by Cur-nutte, cashier of the First National Bank of Snyder, Tex., where the note was payable and where Thompson left his papers. This last note was signed by McClanahan and Wilson, Jackson not signing. There is some controversy in the evidence as to Jackson not signing this last note, the one on which this suit was brought. Tho renewal notes were made payable to Thompson.

Wilson testified as a witness, and, after identifying the Carter note and the renewal notes, said:

“That note was made in renewal of a note of II. A. Carter which we were surety men on. Yes; that is the Carter note (the note payable to T. A. Jackson, signed II. A. Carter, W. R. McClanahan, and J. F. Wilson). IVhen this note of Carter’s was made it was turned over by Jackson who owed Thompson, to Thompson, and when it came duo Thompson notified us that wo come in and renew the note or make a new one. Carter was gone then. I don’t know where he was; he had gone some time. Wo came in town and went out to Mr. Thompson’s place south of town and found him in the field working. McClanahan and Dee McClanahan went with me. We talked the matter over with Thompson and ho told us to go to the First National Bank and he would phone Curnutte, who was the cashier of the bank, to make a now note and have Jackson and us sign it. Ho told us we would find Jackson up town somewhere and to get him to sign tiie note. We went back to the bank and Curnutte fixed up a new note, and when we went to sign it he said, ‘Jackson is the first man on this note; you must get him.’. So Mr. McClanahan went out and got Mr. Jáckson and he came in and signed the note. * * * When this note came due we were again notified and came in and made another note signed by Jackson and us two just as in case of the other note. * * * When that came due we were notified and came in the bank and made another note. This one that is sued on, which wo understood was a renewal noto, and which was such renewal — Jackson was not there, but wo signed up just as we always had signed as surety men only and we understood that Jackson was to sign the note; that the note was just like it had been before. I never knew anything about the change in the note until not- long before we were sued, and then when I found out that Jackson had not gotten on the note, I refused to pay it, as it was his note and we were only surety men; no, sir, I never agreed in any way that Jackson should be released and wouldn’t have signed the note sued on if I had known Jackson was not to be on it. I never owed Thompson anything; it wasn’t my debt, and when he released Jackson without my consent, I didn’t propose to pay the note. * * * *774 I and Mr. McClanahan were surety men for Carter to Jackson, and then when that note was renewed and Carter was left off, McClanahan and I were surety men for Jackson. * * * When this note sued on was signed, we were up there in the bank; I think maybe Mr. Thompson was present then. I don’t know that anything was said about Jackson signing it, but we understood the note was to be the same as the old one. No ; Carter did not sign the note renewing the old Carter note.”

T. A. Jackson testified:

“The note now being sued upon is a renewal note of one signed by myself and these two defendants, which note was a renewal of a similar note, and that one had been given to Thompson in place of a note which I had transferred to Thompson, which note was made by Carter and these two men payable to me. I had some dealings with Mr. Thompson and owed him $100 to secure which he held a mortgage on my team. I turned him over this note of Carter’s and I thought he released me from the old debt. Yes; he afterwards dunned me for the Carter note arid also for these two other notes; he would always do it in a nice way, saying to me, ‘What are you fellows going to do about that note?’ and I would tell him I could not do anything, but would see the others; then we would renew the note. The last time the note was renewed I was left off. Mr. Thompson came to my place in Hermleigh where I was at, and told me I need not sign that note, and that there wasn’t any need of my signing those other-notes. * * * Yes; I thought he released me from the old debt, but when .he dunned me I thought otherwise. Yes; I signed the first note after the Carter note, and then a renewal of that one. When the first note was made Mr. McClanahan came down to the Higginbotham-Harris Lumber Yard where I was working and told me to come up and make the note. I did not think I ought to go on the note, but Mr. Curnutte said, ‘You are the first man on the note and must sign it,’ which I did and then afterwards renewed the. note. When I turned the note over to Mr. Thompson I indorsed it. Yes; indorsed it in blank. That is my signature (inspecting note submitted). Yes; he released me from the last note. Yes; I am sure he dunned me for the note. I owed Mr. Thompson a $100 note and some accrued interest, and he held a mortgage against my team to secure it. I had this note against Mr. Carter, McClanahan, and Wilson for $100 and I indorsed it over to Thompson, and my understanding was that that settled the note I owed Thompson. Thompson was to release my team from his mortgage. I do not remember whether he turned my note over to me or not. He has never claimed the team and has never attempted to foreclose the mortgage. No; at the time I turned the Carter note over to Thompson it did not pay the accrued interest on my note to him, but I agreed to pay that as soon as convenient. It was small account. No; Thompson has never dunned me on the original note that I owed him. He has dunned me on the Cartel-, McClanahan, and Wilson note that I indorsed over to him and he has dunned me on the two renewal notes I executed with McClanahan and Wilson. Yes; I met up with Thompson in Hermleigh one day and something was said about the note, and he told me that I need not have signed the two renewal notes which I signed. * * * No; I have never paid Thompson all the interest I owed him on my note to him.”

McClanahan testified substantially as did Wilson as to the renewal notes and said:

“I don’t remember which one it was, but he [Thompson] told me to get Jackson on that note. Yes; 1 remember going down to the lumber yard to find Jackson. Mr. Curnutte sent me. He said that Jackson had to sign this note; that he was the first man on it.”

Thompson testified substantially as did Jackson as to the Carter note and as to the unpaid interest on the Carter note, and substantially as did McClanahan and Wilson on their visit to him in his field anu said:

“They [McClanahan and Wilson] said Carter was away somewhere in another county, I do not remember what one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 773, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-thompson-texapp-1916.