Baumgarten v. Harding
Baumgarten v. Harding
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The action was one in injunction to prevent the sheriff from selling property under an execution. The defendants appeal from an order overruling their demurrer to plaintiff’s petition.
Herman Baumgarten and M. H. Broschinski were partners operating the Golden Belt Garage. They sold a Dodge car to the defendant Harding, taking his note in payment therefor. They later sold and indorsed the note to the Goodland State Bank, which after-wards sued Harding, Baumgarten and Broschinski, against whom it procured judgment. Execution was levied against Harding, who paid the judgment. Harding then sought contribution from Baumgarten. He procured an execution to be issued against Baumgarten in the case in which'the Goodland State Bank was plaintiff. To enjoin the levy of such execution Baumgarten brought this action. His petition sets out that Baumgarten and Broschinski were indorsers on the note and secondarily liable, while Harding was the principal; that judgment was rendered against Harding for the full amount of the note; that a motion for new trial, filed by Harding, was withdrawn; that Harding paid the full amount of the judgment and thereby discharged it; that payment of the judgment was payment and satisfaction of the note sued on, and that Baumgarten was in no wise indebted to defendant Harding. A general demurrer by Harding and the sheriff to the petition was overruled and they bring the case here.
The defendants contend that in the original action filed by the bank there was no showing that Baumgarten and Broschinski-were liable only as indorsers, and that Harding, having paid the judgment, was entitled to contribution; that the original judgment in favor of the bank says nothing definite about the parties being principal and surety, or indorsers, or any other relation, except that of obligors, and that the question as to whether or not one of these parties is a surety is a question not yet judiciously determined. In support of
“When a final judgment is rendered it is ordinarily the end of the litigation as far as the plaintiff is concerned, but, of course, questions may arise between the defendants as to their relations to the obligation and their relative liability.” (p. 233.)
One who is secondarily liable on a note is discharged from liability by a release of the principal debtor by any act which discharges the instrument, whether by payment of the instrument itself of judgment in which the instrument has been merged, unless the holder’s right of recourse against him who is secondarily liable is expressly reserved. (R. S. 52-902.)
The petition in the instant case alleged that the defendant Harding was primarily liable on the note in question; that the plaintiff was secondarily liable; that judgment had been duly rendered against the defendant Harding on the note, and that he had fully paid and satisfied the judgment. 'The petition stated a cause of action and the demurrer was properly overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Herman Baumgarten v. C. M. Harding and Jesse L. Teeters, Sheriff
- Status
- Published