This case does not fall within that class of cases like Sheldon v. Horton (43 N. Y., 93). In that case a debtor who had given his creditor a note with an indorser payable at a fixed time applied to the holder to let it remain another year. The indorser told the holder that he was willing. This was held to be a waiver of protest and notice, and the indorser was held as if the note had been protested. In the present case the only consent is by a renewal note, the first note (the one sued on) was given October 6, 1882, at three months. On the 4th of January, 1883, the plaintiff took a precisely similar note to the first, except the date “ to renew it.” The defendant Augusta Yan Wagner was the indorser on the first note and also upon the second. If the indorser consented that the first note be not presented for payment and^waived notice of non-payment? she *454did so by a new contract, which was that the second note should be presented and notice of non-payment given her. That was not done, so that if her consent to waive protest is to be drawn from the new note the maker must do what he agreed thereby to protect'the indorser upon the new note. The indorser was never bound upon the note in suit. "When the maker, before it was due, delivered the new note with the same indorser having a longer time of payment inserted, the indorser is only bound upon this new note and cannot be sued upon the first even if the second had been protested, if the first was not.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Peatt, J., concurred. Present — Baenaej>, P. J., JDykman and Peatt, JJ.Judgment affirmed, with costs.