delivered the opinion of the Court:
This action is upon a promissory note, and the principal defense relied on is that the note was fully paid to the payee before it was assigned to plaintiff. We think the evidence sustains the finding, on the plea of payment.
The note was for $200, bears date July 24, 1870, was made payable to the cashier of the First National Bank of Gales-burg, was signed by A. G. Humphrey and W. S. Hinckley, defendants in this suit, and was payable four months after date. It is proven, Humphrey was principal and Hinckley surety on the note. About the time the note became due, Humphrey applied to plaintiff to borrow $200, until the first of April following, with which to take up the notejn bank. Plaintiff agreed to let him have it. After some negotiations, Humphrey and plaintiff met in the bank, when plaintiff gave the bank his check for $200, and Humphrey paid the balance of the interest, and the cashier surrendered the note to them.
Previous to this interview, it does not appear that anything had been said between plaintiff and Humphrey as to what security, if any, he was to give, but at this time Humphrey proposed to give his note, payable on the first of April following, but plaintiff, on examination, said the old note was “good enough.” It was then suggested the bank should indorse the note, which it did, without recourse.
While the evidence is slightly conflicting, we think it greatly preponderates in favor of the proposition that the legal effect of what the parties did was the payment of the note to the bank. There is no pretense the bank ever sold the note to plaintiff. The idea of indorsing the note was suggested after it had been passed over the counter to the parties, as having been paid. It was returned to the bank, after some consultation between them, to be indorsed to plaintiff. o
The note may have been good, as against Humphrey, in the hands of plaintiff, but as to Hinckley it is different. He was not present, and consented to no arrangement about the matter. As to how the note was paid, Humphrey states, in his testimony, the note was not indorsed in his presence, but the cashier of the bank thinks it was. Conceding the note was indorsed exactly as the cashier says it was, the arrangement could not bind Hincklev, who was a mere security, and was not present, consenting to it. The $200 paid to the bank to take up the note, was, in fact, a loan by plaintiff to Humphrey, to be repaid on the first of the ensuing April. The conduct of the parties is inconsistent with any other theory of the ease. The note was taken up on the 10th of December, 1870, but it was never presented to Hinckley for payment until 1874, and in the meantime Humphrey had become insolvent. The contest in the ease is between the security for Humphrey and his creditor, and the facts proven raise no equities in favor of the latter as against the former.
There can be no objections sustained to the instructions given for defendants. Indeed, the instructions, considered together, state the law favorably for plaintiff.
Humphrey made no defense in the court below, nor is there any appearance on his behalf in this court. The pleas were all filed by Hinckley. Notwithstanding the issues.on Hinckley’s pleas were found in his favor, it is claimed the court, under the recent statute, should have rendered judgment against Humphrey. It is a sufficient answer to the position assumed, that plaintiff did not ask for any judgment against him. Had he asked for judgment against Humphrey, and it had been refused, the decision of the court could have been assigned for error.
The justice of the case seems to us to be clearly with defendant Hinckley, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.