The American National Bank brought suit in the District Court of Dallas County upon the following note:
"No. 6007. $3000.
"DALLAS, TEXAS, March 31, 1891.
"Ninety days, without grace, after date, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of the American National Bank, of Dallas, three thousand dollars, at the office of said bank, with interest at the rate of 12 per cent per annum after maturity until paid, and 10 per cent additional on the amount of said note for attorney's fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. Value received.
[Signed] "TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY, "By C.E. GILBERT, President;
"C.E. GILBERT, "GEO. C. COLE, "Due January 29, 1891. "B. GIBBS." *Page 225
On the back of said note were the following indorsements: "J.W. Barton, John Bookhout."
Judgment was rendered October 22, 1892, in favor of the bank for balance due on the note, against the Times Publishing Company, Gilbert, Cole, and Gibbs, as principals, and against Bookhout and Barton assureties. At the same term the judgment was set aside at the instance of Gibbs, the cause again tried before the court, and judgment rendered protecting said Gibbs, as surety with Bookhout and Barton, from which they have appealed. There are no conclusions of fact or law in the record, and no request by appellants for them. In the absence of such findings, if the judgment is supported by any theory of the evidence, it must be affirmed. In support of the judgment we find the following facts:
1. Gilbert, as manager of the Times Publishing Company, desiring to raise money for the use of the company, applied to Bookhout, Barton, and Gibbs, as friends, to assist him. He went from one to the other until they each agreed to indorse the note if the others would; the understanding among them was that they would all make a general note. The note was signed on its face by Gibbs, with the understanding that the others were to sign it, and was carried by Gilbert to Bookhout and Barton, who signed their names on the back. When asked by Gilbert why he did not sign his name on the face of the note, Bookhout remarked that there was practically no difference. The note was then delivered to the payee, and the money paid to Gilbert. The parties Gibbs, Bookhout, and Barton were all sureties, as among themselves, and neither of them received any benefit whatever from the transaction. Neither Gilbert nor Cole set up any suretyship, and neither of them has appealed; hence no finding is necessary as to them.
The first assignment of error attacks the ruling of the court in setting aside the judgment rendered October 22, 1892, upon the motion of appellee Gibbs, because the motion was filed after two days from the rendition of the judgment, and showed no excuse for not filing it in time, and was without merit. The motion, under oath, set up the agreement of all the parties to sign the note for the accommodation of the maker, and that they were to be equally bound as sureties on indebtedness for accommodation; that he believed the note had been signed on the face by all the parties; that said Bookhout and Barton had in fact signed as sureties, and that he believed that the judgment had been rendered against them all alike until about the time his motion was filed, when he discovered that judgment had been taken against him as principal, and against Bookhout and Barton only as sureties, authorizing execution in their favor over against him; that there was no proper pleading on the part of said Bookhout and Barton to authorize such judgment, etc.
It is well settled, that before adjournment of the term at which a judgment is rendered, the court has a large discretion over its own records, and may reform a judgment or set it aside and grant a new *Page 226 trial, even without any motion, if the ends of justice require it. Linn v. Le Compte, 47 Tex. 440; Bryorly v. Clark, 48 Tex. 353 [48 Tex. 353].
It appears from the judge's note to appellants' bill of exceptions, that upon the hearing of the motion the court announced that a new trial would be granted, or the judgment would be reformed so as to make Gibbs liable as surety, or indorser with Bookhout and Barton, when they stated in open court that they preferred that a new trial should be granted, which was done. We find no error in this ruling.
2. The second assignment is, that the court erred in again trying the case at the same term of court. In the absence of any legal motion for continuance of the cause, and no injury being shown to appellants by such trial at that term, their testimony being all in court and they being present and represented by counsel, we can not sustain this assignment.
3. The third assignment is, that the court refused the application of appellants for a jury, they having made a demand therefor in open court and tendered the jury fee. It appears from the bill of exceptions, that at the time of the demand the jury service for the term had been concluded and the jury discharged, so that if the demand had been complied with, it would have necessitated a continuance of the cause. It is provided by statute (article 3061), that "any party to a civil suit in the District or County Court desiring the same tried by a jury, shall make application therefor in open court on the first day of the term of the court at which the suit is to be tried." It is the duty of the trial court to give a liberal construction to the statute, so as to permit parties to exercise the right of trial by jury where it can be done without delay or prejudice to the opposite party, and our courts have gone as far in this direction as seems reasonable and just. Appellants failed to call for a jury on the first day of the term, or at any time before the jury was discharged for the term. They could not then force a continuance of the cause in order to get a jury. Petri Bros. v. Bank, 84 Tex. 153; Id., 83 Tex. 424 [83 Tex. 424]; Cabell v. Shoe Co., 81 Tex. 104.
4. The only remaining assignment which we deem it necessary to consider is the seventh, which attacks the judgment upon the ground that the court erred in holding that the liability of Gibbs, as surety, was the same as that of Bookhout and Barton, who claim to be liable only as indorsers, and that their liability is secondary to all the signers on the face of the instrument. When a party signs his name in blank across the back of a note, before delivery and before any indorsement of the paper by the payee, the intention of such party is not manifest from the paper itself, and the contract intended to be placed above the signature may be proved by parol evidence. Mr. Daniel says: "The ground upon which parol proof of intention and agreement in such cases is admitted, is, that the position of the name upon the paper is one of ambiguity itself, that it is not a complete contract, as is the case of an indorsement by the payee, which imports *Page 227 a distinct and certain liability; but rather evidence of authority to write over it the contract that was entered into; and that parol proof merely discloses and brings to light the terms of the unwritten contract that was made between the parties." 1 Dan. Neg. Inst., sec. 711.
In the case of Cook v. Southwick, 9 Tex. 617, Judge Wheeler, in commenting upon this question quotes from Judge Story, as follows: "If the blank indorsement was made at the same time as the note itself, the indorser ought to be held liable as an original promisor, or maker of the note, and that the payee is at liberty to write over the blank signature, `For value received, I undertake to pay the money within mentioned to B., the payee.'" Story's Com. on Prom. Notes, sec. 473. Continuing, Judge Wheeler says: "The authorities are numerous to the effect that where a person, not the payee of a note, signs his name upon the back, at the time of its inception, without any words to express the nature of his undertaking, he is liable as an original promisor or surety." 9 Tex. 618; Latham v. Flour Mills,68 Tex. 130; Carr v. Rowland 14 Tex. 275 [14 Tex. 275]; Good v. Martin, 95 U.S. 90, and authorities there cited.
In this case there are no conclusions of fact, and the record does not show that any were requested. There is sufficient testimony in the statement of facts to support the judgment upon the theory that it was understood by all the parties that Gibbs, Bookhout, and Barton all signed the instrument as sureties.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.