Appellee sued appellant on a promissory note, alleging that the note was made to him on February 21, 1903, by James T. Polley and F. W. Fambro for the sum of $204.50, payable thirty days after date with interest from date at the rate of ten percent per annum; that while the note was signed by each maker as a principal, as a matter of fact, Polley was the principal and Fambro his surety thereon; that since the note matured and before the institution of the suit Polley died leaving his estate insolvent.
The defendant Fambro answered by a general denial, and pleaded specially: (1) That he signed the note as an accommodation surety at the request of Polley and upon the representation made him by plaintiff when such request was made that the note would never be enforced against him, and that he relied upon and was induced by such representation to place his signature to the instrument; and (2), that after the note matured the plaintiff, without his consent, in consideration of an agreement made with him by Polley to pay the interest accruing thereon, extended its time of payment of the note for thirty days, and that by reason of such agreement and extension defendant was discharged from further liability. Exceptions to both special pleas were sustained, the case was tried by jury and judgment rendered against the defendant for the amount, principal and interest due.
That the first special plea offered no defense to the action is too obvious for discussion. It involves the absurdity that an oral promise of the payee to the payer, made when a note is executed, not to enforce its payment, destroys the obligation evidenced by a written instrument.
But there is music for the appellant in the other special plea. *Page 304 For it is held in this State that the extension of an interest-bearing debt, upon an agreement of the parties based on a consideration, for a definite period, is, in effect, a contract that the creditor will forbear suit during the time of extension, and that the debtor forego his right to pay before the expiration of that time; that such agreement is a contract based upon a valuable consideration and binding upon the parties, because the debtor secures the benefit of forbearance, and the creditor an interest-bearing investment for a prolonged and definite period; and, hence, that a surety on the original contract of indebtedness, who has not assented to the agreement extending its time of payment, is released from his obligation, because of the impairment of his right to pay the debt at any time after it became due under the original contract and proceed against the principal for indemnity. (Benson v. Phipps,87 Tex. 578; Carter-Battle Grocer Co. v. Clarke,91 S.W. 882; Kearby v. Hopkins, 14 Texas Civ. App. 166[14 Tex. Civ. App. 166].)
We conclude, therefore, that the court erred in sustaining the exception to said plea. Wherefore the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.