]¡y (he Court,
Dixon, O. J.The complaint in this action was several times amended. The original does not appear. The first amended complaint was against the defendant as guarantor upon an instrument as follows: “ Ho. 9092. $176. Janesville City Bank, Wisconsin. Certificate of Deposit. Janesville, April 15, 1858. Mr. Wm. L. Mitchell has deposited in this bank one hundred and seventy six dollars, payable to the order of himself, 60 days after date, in currency, upon return of this certificate properly indorsed. Interest— per cent, if left 60 days. Jas. Eeasee, A. Cash.” The plaintiff was the holder of a debt against the Badger State Bank for $234, which the defendant applied to purchase. A sale was agreed upon at $17 6, to be paid in money by the defendant. Unable to raise the money, he requested the plaintiff to accept the certificate in lieu thereof, to which the plaintiff assented, provided the defendant would guaranty its payment. The defendant agreed to this, and writing his name across the back of the certificate, delivered it ‘to the plaintiff. The bank refused payment, and the plaintiff caused the certificate to be protested and notice given defendant. Judgment was demanded for the amount of the certificate and interest from the time it became due. The defendant answered, insisting that he was not a guarantor but an indorser, as alleged in a former complaint, and denied service of notice of protest.
The cause came on for trial before the- judge without a jury, when the judge, conceiving that the pleadings did not conform to the facts proved, ordered them to be amended.
The complaint, as amended under this order, is for the $176 agreed to be paid for the debt against the Badger State Bank. It sets out the transaction substantially as before, *307and avers tie organization of the banks under the statute; that the Janesville City Bank was, at the time of issuing the tificate, and has since remained, hopelessly insolvent, and that the plaintiff did not take nor agree to take the certificate, “ guaranteed or indorsed or not guaranteed orindorsed,” in payment for the debt sold, nor of the $176, the price agreed. The latter allegation is very verbose and' awkward, but this is the substance of it. Judgment is demanded for $176 and interest from maturity of the draft. The answer, protesting that there is an entire departure from the cause of action first stated, denies nearly all the material allegations, and especially that notice of non-payment was properly given.
The case made by the complaint is fully sustained by the -proof, except the giving of notice of protest. The judge below so found, but supposing the plaintiff was still proceeding upon the guaranty, he held that he was precluded by his own allegations from recovering. He refers to those already noticed — that the certificate was not received as payment for the debt or price — and1 understanding from them that the plaintiff did not agree to accept the defendant’s guaranty, he says that it is an end of the action. The last mistake is not very surprising. The intention of the pleader is masked by such an impenetrable thicket of words, that it is hazardous for any one to attempt to get at it. The certificate was produced at the trial.
The case as stated in either complaint is very plain on authority, and it was immaterial which was pursued. The certificate was payable in currency, and therefore not negotiable. See authorities cited by plaintiff’s counsel under this point. Protest and notice of non-payment were therefore unnecessary to charge the defendant. The party writing his name across the back of a negotiable instrument can only be holden as an indorser, and unless the proper steps are ta ken to charge him as such, he will not be liable. Cady vs. Shepard, 12 Wis., 639. But with non-negotiable paper the case is quite different. The liability there is absolute and unconditional. The party is entitled to none of the privileges of a common indorser. It is a guaranty, an agreement *308to pay at all events, wbicb nothing will discharge except act which would discharge a surety. Josselyn vs. Ames, 3 Mass., 274; Moies vs. Bird, 11 id., 436; Oxford Bank vs. Haynes, 8 Pick., 423; Seabury vs. Hungerford, 2 Hill, 80; Hull vs. Newcomb, 3 Hill, 233; Seymour vs. Van Slyck, 8 Wend., 403; Griswold vs. Slocum, 10 Barb., 402; Story on Prom. Notes, § 473 and note. The payee may write out the guaranty over the signature. And in this case it would have been sufficient if the plaintiff had written the guaran-in due form before offering the certificate in evidence.
It being established that the certificate was not received as payment for the debt transferred, it follows that the plaintiff can maintain his action for the price upon surrender of the certificate. The principle is elementary, that the taking of the promissory note or bill of the debtor himself, either for a precedent liability or a debt incurred at the time, is no payment, unless it be expressly so agreed; but that, after the expiration of the credit, an action may be maintained upon the original consideration, upon producing the note or bill to be cancelled. The acceptance suspends the remedy during its currency, and the burden of showing that it was received in payment lies on the debtor. Drake vs. DeCamp, 1 Johns., 34; Hughes vs. Wheeler, 8 Cow., 77; Jeffrey vs. Cornish, 10 N. H., 505; Puckford vs. Maxwell, 6 Term, 52; Clark vs. Noel, 3 Camp., 411; Chitty on Con., 660.
So too of the acceptance by the creditor of the note of a third person for a precedent debt. Prima facie it is no discharge, and it is for the debtor to show that it was so intended, unless the creditor makes the note his own by laches, or by parting with it. Tobey vs. Barber, 5 Johns., 68; Whitbeck vs Van Ness, 11 Johns., 409; Booth vs. Smith, 3 Wend., 66; Bank vs. Fletcher, 5 Wend., 85; Smith vs. Rogers, 17 Johns., 340; Waydell vs. Luer, 3 Denio, 410; Hays vs. Stone, 7 Hill, 128; Frisbie vs. Larned, 21 Wend., 450; Vail vs. Foster, 4 Coms., 312.
But where the note of a third person is received upon the sale of goods, or for an indebtedness contracted at the time, the rule is reversed. The note will then be deemed to have been taken by the vendor of the goods in satisfaction, unless *309tbe contrary be expressly proved; or unless tbe note be void, and there be fraud and misrepresentation on tbe part of vendee respecting it. Wilson vs. Force, 6 Johns., 110; Johnson vs. Weed, 9 Johns., 310; Whitbeck vs. Van Ness, supra; Breed vs. Cook, 15 Johns., 241; Read vs. Hutchinson, 3 Camp., 351. In such cases it is regarded as an exchange of commodities — -that it was part of the original contract that the note should be taken in payment for tbe goods. If the purchaser indorse the note, there being no agreement that he shall otherwise be answerable for the goods, he will be liable in the character of an indorser only, and cannot be sued for goods sold and delivered. Booth vs. Smith, and Frisbie vs. Larned, supra; Whitney vs. Goin, 20 N. H., 354; Soffe vs. Gallagher, 3. E. D. Smith, 507. The subject is particularly well considered in the last case. The indorsement is, of course, conclusive evidence that the vendor did not intend to take the note at his own risk, or to part with the goods without holding the purchaser liable for the price ; but having accepted it, he assumes the obligation incident to such a contract ; he must see that the indorser has notice of the dishonor, or the indorser will be released.
But when the purchaser undertakes to answer for the note in some other form, as if he guaranty or agree to guaranty its payment or collection, it seems that the seller may recover in an action for goods sold. Monroe vs. Hoff, 5 Denio, 360. In that case it was held that he might do so, though the guaranty was void by the statute of frauds for not expressing the consideration. The attempt to guaranty was considered very strong if not conclusive evidence that the note was not received in payment.
All these were cases where the note was negotiable. Whether a different rule would apply to the transfer of a non-negotiable note, on the purchase of goods, as to burden of proof, we need not inquire. In Phinley vs. Westley, 2 Bing., N. C., 249 (29 E. C. L., 322), the plaintiff having received from the defendant, in payment for goods, a promissory note indorsed by the defendant, but not made payable to order, it was held that he was entitled to recover the price of the goods, notwithstanding he had omitted to give full notice. *310Jn -¡¡he cage kar) p think, aside from the other proof, that the signature of the defendant upon the back of the certificate furnishes indisputable evidence that it was not received in payment, and hence that a suit for the price may be maintained. The certificate not being negotiable, the plaintiff could be guilty of no laches in not presenting it or notifying the defendant of its dishonor. The case is very like that of Monroe vs. Hoff, above cited. As observed by the court in Soffe vs. Gallagher, it seems clear that the taking of an absolute and unqualified guaranty that the note or other evidence of debt shall be paid, will not operate as payment but only as a security extending the term of credit. Such absolute liability is inconsistent with the idea of payment; for the guarantor, if liable, is so in respect of the original consideration, whether sued upon his guaranty or for the goods. Where there is a sale of goods and in consideration thereof an absolute undertaking for the payment of the price, the consideration may be resorted to as well as the express agreement. And in such cases it is immaterial whether the express contract be the note of the buyer or his absolute guaranty that the price shall be paid upon the note of a third
The plaintiff was, therefore, entitled to judgment upon the complaint as last amended. It was no departure, the cause of action being the very same, whether it was pursued in one form or the other.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions that judgment be entered for the plaintiff according to the demand of the complaint.