
    George Green v. Charles E. Burrows et al.
    
      Promissory notes — Guaranty of payment.
    
    A note payable to oiffer was indorsed by the payees with a guaranty oí' payment without protest. Such a guaranty is negotiable by the statutes of this State. Comp. L. § 1564.
    A guaranty of payment indorsed on a note by one to whose order it is-payable is both a guaranty and an indorsement, and the note will thereafter pass by mere delivery. And to a suit against the maker the indorser may be joined as a defendant by the force of the statute. Comp. L. § 5776.
    Error to Muskegon.
    Submitted Oct. 5.
    Decided Oct. 19.
    Assumpsit. Plaintiff brings error.
    Reversed.
    
      L. H. Keating for plaintiff in error.
    A guaranty of payment gives negotiability: Waldron v. Harring 28 Mich. 193, overruling Tinker v. McCauley 3 Mich. 188; Myrick v. Hasey 27 Me. 9; Bank v. Carpenter 41 Ia. 518; Heaton v. Hulbert 4 Ill. 489; Childs v. Davidson 38 Ill. 438; Claflin v. Ostrom 54 N. Y. 581; Cooper v. Dedrick 22 Barb. 516; Watson v. McLaren 19 Wend. 557.
    
      
      F. W. Ooók for defendant in error.
    A note payable to order cannot be sued by any one but the payee until it is indorsed: Redmond v. Stansbury 24 Mich. 445; Robinson v. Wilkinson 38 Mich. 299.
   Cooley, J.

This is a suit against Robert Pierson, Charles E. Burrows and Erank E. Jones upon the following instrument :

“$250.78. Whitehall, Mich., May 20, 1875.

“ Sixty days after date I promise to pay to the order of Burrows & Jones two hundred and fifty and -f^ths dollars at Lumberman’s State Bank, Whitehall, Mich., for value received with interest after due at ten per cent, per a.rmnm.

Robert Pierson.”

Upon the back of this instrument was indorsed the following: “We guaranty payment of the within note at maturity without protest. Burrows & Jones.” The evidence showed that this guaranty was indorsed immediately on the making of the note, by the payees mentioned therein, on a sale thereof to the Lumberman’s Bank. The bank subsequently sold the note to the plaintiff, who brought suit, uniting therein the maker and the guarantors.

Our statute provides that “ the guaranty of the payment or of the collection of any promissory note shall hereafter be negotiable, and shall pass to the holder of the note, whether indorsed thereon, or written or printed upon a separate paper; and the assignment, indorsement, or transfer of any promissory note, the payment or collection of which shall have been guarantied, shall operate as, and be an assignment of, all guaranties of any such note; and the holder of such note may maintain an action upon any and all such guaranties, in his own name, subject to all equities existing between the guarantor and the person to whom such guaranty was made.” Comp. L. § 1564.

The bank after selling to the plaintiff executed to him a written assignment, but this was not important. Waldron v. Harring 28 Mich. 493. The guaranty was an indorsement as well; and the note after the indorsement would pass by mere delivery. A joint suit against all the parties is expressly authorized by the statute. Comp. L. § 5776.

The circuit court held the action not maintainable. This • was error, and the judgment must be reversed with costs and a new trial granted.

The other Justices concurred.  