delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is upon a bill of exchange for $2,900, dated March 24, 1892, drawn by J. P. Moreland, accepted by T. Y. Val den, and endorsed by J. A. Fuqua, made payable at appellee Citizens Savings Bank six months after date.
J. P. Moreland having made an assignment, the appellant Taylor, his assignee, resisted a recovery on the bill of exchange claiming (1) that it was drawn for accommodation and the proceeds were fraudulently diverted;. (2) *213that the notary public was the cashier of and a stockholder in the appellee bank, therefore he had no legal right to protest or give notice thereof. It is claimed that no notice of protest was given as required by law.
The appellant filed an answer and an amended answer, to which the court sustained a demurrer. Failing to plead further, judgment was rendered against appellant for the amount of the bill of exchange and interest. From that action of the court this appeal is prosecuted.
In considering the question the material allegations of appellant’s pleadings will be taken as true. It is alleged in the original answer that W. H. Moore was cashier of, and a stockholder in, the appellee bank when the bill was made, as well as being the agent of life'insurance companies and sharing largely in the premiums paid such companies; that ■Walden was a borrower of money from appellee; .that he was under the influence and domination of Moore; that Moore procured him to discount paper with the proceeds of which he purchased $105,000 life insurance; that Moore got one-fourth of the premiums paid; that Walden was insolvent; that the bill in suit was discounted to enable Walden to pay premiums on life policies, Moore getting one-fourth thereof; that no money was advanced to Walden on the bill, but Moore appropriated it to pay the premiums.
It is further alleged that Moreland “signed the bill in suit believing the said Walden would use it in renewal of bills he, the said Moreland, was already bound for, or that the money toould he paid to said Walden.”
It appears that Moore occupied a dual position in the transaction. In the purchase of the bill of exchange he represented the appellee; in inducing Walden to procure policies in life insurance companies he represented such companies. '
*214It is not alleged that the appellee obtained any benefit from the discount of the bill of exchange other than that which would ordinarily flow from such a transaction, or that the money which it paid for did not go where Walden desired it, or that the bank retained a cent of the proceeds of it, or had any interest in an improper diversion of the proceeds.
The allegation is that Moreland signed the bill believing that it would be used in renewal of bills for which he was already bound, or “that the money would he paid to said Walden.” From this allegation we must conclude that Walden had the authority from the drawee to sell the bill and get the money for which it would sell. This placed no restriction or limitation upon Walden’s right to dispose of the bill when and where he pleased, or to receive its proceeds. It follows that Walden had the right to sell the bill to the appellee, and receive its proceeds.
It may be said that the facts alleged in the amended answer as to the purpose for which the bill was drawn restrict the right of Walden in the disposition of the bill.
In the amended answer it is alleged “that at the time and for many years previous to the making of the paper in suit, his co-defendant, Walden, was engaged in business, necessitating the borrowing of money for use therein, and did borrow largely from plaintiff and other banks for this purpose, defendant Moreland indorsing his mercantile paper.
“He says that the paper in suit was made for this and no other purpose, and by agreement between said Moreland and said Walden that it was to be discounted and used thus and not otherwise.
The office .of an amended pleading is not to contradict or to make statements inconsistent with those contained *215in the pleadings sought to be amended. The facts alleged are not inconsistent with the idea that Walden had the right to sell the bill and receive the proceeds.
The allegations of the amended answer as to the business in which Walden was engaged, which necessitated the borrowing large sums of money, and the purpose for which the bill in suit was made, are vague and indefinite.
It is true that it is alleged that Moreland indorsed-Walden’s mercantile paper, but in stating the purpose for which the bill was made it is impossible to tell from the language used the character of business in which the proceeds were to be used.
As pleadings should be strongly construed against the pleader we conclude that Walden had the right to sell the bill and accommodate himself in the disposition of the proceeds.
Moore representedthe bank in buying the bill of exchange, but when lie, as the agent of insurance companies, obtained Walden’s consent to, or did for Walden, apply the proceeds of the bill in paying premiums on policies of life insurance, then he was not acting for the appellee and it should not be held to be bound by his acts. He was not employed by the appellee to solicit for life insurance companies or to transact business for such companies. The appellee did not participate in his profits in the life insurance business, nor was it in any way associated with him in such transactions. His agency for the bank ceased when the bill of exchange was purchased. There was no restriction as to the use of the bill, as Walden had the right to sell it and receive the proceeds.
“If the note be made for general accommodation without restriction as to its use, the party accommodated may use it in any way beneficial to himself, provided such use be *216legal, and it will not matter that he fails to apply the proceeds according to a prior agreement, for otherwise there could be no recovery on accommodation paper.” (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 793.) This doctrine is announced in Brooks v. Hey, 23 Hun., 374, wherein the court said “the failure on the part of a payee of an accommodation note to appropriate the proceeds according to a prior agreement, is no defense for the accommodation maker, otherwise there could be no recovery on an accommodation note. When there is no restriction as to the use which the payee shall make of the note, it is sufficient if he receives a full and legal consideration for it when he transfers it.”
In Dunn v. Weston, 71 Me., 270, the same principle is approved.
Black, C. J., in Lord v. The Ocean Bank, 20 Pa. St., 384, says: “But the maker of an accommodation note can not set up the want of consideration as a defense against it in the hands of a third person, though it be there as collateral surety merely. He who chooses to put himself in the front of a negotiable instrument for the benefit of his friend must abide the consequences (Walker v. Bank, 12 Serg. & R., 382), and has no more right to complain if his friend accommodates himself, by pledging it for an old debt than if he had used it in any other way. This was decided (Appleton v. Donaldson, 3 Pa. St., 381), in a case strongly resembling the present one. Accommodation paper is a loan of the maker's credit without restriction as to the manner of its use.”
Whenever a bill of exchange is made for accommodation, and the purpose was to raise money by its sale, the one who buys and pays for it can not be held to look to the application of its proceeds. In such case there can not be *217said to be a diversion of tbe bill though the proceeds may not have been used as the accommodated party agreed with the maker that it should be.
The remaining questions to be considered are as to the authority of the notary to protest the bill, and as to the sufficiency of the notice of protest.
As to the latter there can be no doubt. It is alleged in the petition that Owensboro, Ky., was and is the postoffice address of Moreland; that he did not reside in Owensboro, Ky., when the bill was protested; that the notice of protest was addressed and mailed to him at Owensboro, Ky., and that he received it.
These allegations of the petition are not denied.
It is insisted that the notary being cashier of, and a stockholder in, the bank could not legally protest the bill. To sustain this contention the cases of Herkimer Co. Bank v. Cox, 21 Wend., 119, and Bank v. Porter, 2 Watts (Pa.) 141 are cited. In these cases the court proceeded upon the idea that as the notary was incompetent as a witness by reason of his interest, under the law of New York and Pennsylvania, therefore his certificate should not be competent to prove demand and notice. If the reasoning of the court in these cases was then good it' would not now be in this case because the fact that the notary had an interest in the bank does not render him incompetent as a witness against the parties to the bill in suit. Our statute declares him to be a competent witness.
Judgment affirmed.