This is a suit on a note, and the real controversy on this appeal is, whether or not defendants, Run-dell, Cole and Moore, whose names appear on the back of the instrument, should be held as guarantors thereof. The case was here a year ago, and the point then decided was that the petition stated a cause of action against said defendants. 73 Mo. App. 140. The cause was then remanded to the lower court, where, on a trial of the merits, the court gave a peremptory instruction in plaintiff’s favor, and from a judgment in accordance therewith these defendants have appealed.
The facts are undisputed. The note was originally .executed (October, 1894, due one year) by one Abrams to Garrett, who shortly thereafter transferred it to Huggins. Thereupon Huggins offered to sell the note to plaintiff Adams, who at first declined to purchase the 'same because not satisfactorily secured. It was then agreed however between Huggins, the holder, and Adams, that if the former would procure the additional signatures of defendants Run-dell, Cole and Moore, the plaintiff would purchase the note at a small discount. Huggins at once went to said parties, and they, by his request, .wrote their respective names on the back of the instrument. Huggins thereupon returned to Adams with the note so indorsed and said plaintiff on the faith thereof paid the purchase price. The original maker and Huggins proving insolvent and failing to pay the note, this suit was brought.
*222Bills and notes subsequent signer: consideration. *221The question now is, should defendants Rundell, Cole and Moore, on the facts above stated, be held responsible *222for the payment of the note in suit. They can not be held as original promisors, because their signatures were not indorsed contemporaneous with the execution °f the principal contract, but subsequent thereto and after delivery and passing of the first consideration. If held at all, it must be on the theory that they became guarantors by placing their respective names on the back of the paper. This was fully explained in our former opinion. And as there conceded also, such obligation as guarantors can not be successfully maintained unless there existed at the time some new and independent consideration ; the consideration present at the original making of the contract had become exhausted and no longer capable of sustaining a new undertaking.
—: guaranty: consideration. Defendants contend that as they each indorsed the note in entire ignorance of the understanding between Adams and Huggins (and this the proof shows) it must be held that as to them there was no consideration, and they are therefore not liable. In support of this contention defendants sseem to rely on the language of this court in Messenger v. Vaughan, 45 Mo. App. 15. On more mature reflection we feel bound to recede from the doctrine suggested in that case. We think now that if a consideration passes between the holder of the note and the party about to purchase the same, this will be sufficient to sustain the collateral promise of the guarantor, whether the latter be informed or not of the conditions under which the purchaser is about to take the note. In Parsons on Contracts (vol. 2, p. 7) the correct rule is thus announced: “It is not necessary that any consideration pass directly from the party receiving the guaranty to the party giving it. If the party for whom the guaranty is given receive a benefit, or the party to whom it is given receive an injury, in consequence of the guaranty and as its inducement, this is a sufficient consideration.” So *223then in the ease at hand, it is immaterial whether or not there was any consideration passing between these defending guarantors and the party purchasing the note on the faith thereof; it is sufficient if a consideration passed between said purchaser and Huggins the vendor. The consideration attending said sale will be held sufficient to support both sale and guaranty. When the guaranty was executed under these circumstances it became a portion of plaintiff’s purchase — it formed a part of that for which he paid his money. The indorsement by these defendants and sale by Hoggins to plaintiff composed one transaction, and all supported by the one consideration. As written by Ellison, J., when the case was here befo’re: “Plaintiff refused to purchase the note without further security for its payment. Thereupon Huggins (the holder) procured the signatures of said defendants; and they being satisfactory to plaintiff, he purchased the note on the faith of and by reason of their placing their names on the back thereof. We know of no higher legal consideration than that.”
On the undisputed facts the defendants became guarantors for the payment of the note in suit. Their undertaking was, too, supported by a good and valid consideration at the time, and hence they have no defense. This is the whole case, and it becomes unnecessary to discuss other questions suggested in briefs of counsel.
The judgment must be affirmed.
All concur.