
    MOREHEAD BANKING COMPANY v. MRS. L. L. MOREHEAD, Executrix of EUGENE MOREHEAD, et al.
    
      Note of Executor to Pay Debts of Testator — Personal Liability of Executor — Knowledge of Creditor.
    
    -1. Where an executor executes a note in his representative capacity for money borrowed and used for the purpose of paying debts of the testator, the estate is not liable, but the executor is personally liable therefor, and this is so notwithstanding the fact that the lender knows for what purpose the money was borrowed and how it was used. .
    2. In such case, the executor takes the risk of being reimbursed the amount of the note out of the assets of the estate on the final accounting.
    Civil action, tried at June Term, 1894, of DuehaM Superior Court, before Winston, L., and a jury.
    The complaint alleged :
    “II. That sometime in the year 1890, the plaintiff lent to the defendant, Mrs. L. L. Morehead, the sum of Five Thousand Dollars, the said sum being borrowed by her,.as plaintiff was then informed and believed and still believes, to pay debts and thus relieve the estate of the said Eugene Morehead, and executed her negotiable promissory note to plaintiff for said Five Thousand Dollars, which said promissory note she, the said Mrs. L. L. Morehead, signed identically as she signed the note set out in the next succeeding allegation, with B. L. Duke and Lucius Green as sureties thereto.
    “III. That said note so given for money so lent to and borrowed by the defendant, Mrs. L. L. Morehead, was from time to time renewed, and in renewal of said original indebtedness, the defendants on the 16th day of March, 1893, executed to plaintiff their promissory note as follows, to-wit:
    
      “§5000.00 Durham, N. C., March 16, 1893.
    “Six months after date we, or either of ns, L. L. More-' head, Executrix of Eugene Morehead, B. L. Duke and Lucius Green, promise to pay to the order of Morehead Banking Company, Five Thousand Dollars with interest at eight per cent, per annum, thereafter until paid, interest to be paid semi-annually in advance, negotiable and payable at Morehead Banking Company, Durham, N. 0., for value received. The parties agree to take no advantage of any agreement for indulgence after maturity.
    Lucy L. Morehead, Ex’rx of Eugene Morehead
    B. L. Duke.
    Luoius GreeN.
    “IY. That said note was, at its maturity, presented at the office of the Morehead Banking Company, in Durham, for payment and payment thereof refused. That said note and no part thereof has been paid, but the whole thereof is now due and owing to said Morehead Banking Company the owner and holder of said note. That plaintiff is advised that the said note made the said Mrs. L. L. More-head personally responsible as well as responsible as Executrix, and that she owes said amount.
    "Wherefore, plaintiff demands judgment:
    “1. That it recover judgment against Mrs. L. L. More-head, Executrix of Eugene Morehead, and Mrs. L. L. Morehead, individually, as principals, and against B. L. Duke and Lucius Green as sureties, for the sum of Five Thousand Dollars, with interest thereon from Sept. 19,1893, until paid, at the yate of eight per cent, per annum, and the costs of this action to be taxed by the Clerk.
    “ 2. That it have such other judgments, orders and relief against either or all the defendants, whether in their personal or representative character, as it may be entitled to.”
    The defendants, Mrs. L. L. Morehead, Executrix of Eugene Morehead, deceased, and Mrs. L. L. Morehead, orally demurred to the complaint because the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them, and for same reason moved to dismiss the action as to them.
    The demurrer was sustained as to Mrs. L. L. Morehead, Executrix, but overruled as to Mrs. L. L. Morehead, individually.
    To this ruling and judgment plaintiff excepted, and insisted that the estate of Eugene Morehead was still liable, as the original debt had been contracted by him and the renewals thereof did not discharge his estate until the debt was paid, and from the refusal to hold said estate liable plaintiff appealed.
    
      Messrs. John W. Graham, and Boone & Boone, for plaintiff (appellant).
    
      Messrs. Fuller, Winston c& Fuller, for defendants.
   A VERY, J.:

An executor cannot, by any contract of his, fasten upon the estate of his testator liability for a debt created by him and arising wholly out of matters occurring after the death of the testator. Devane v. Royal, 7 Jones, 426; Hailey v. Wheeler, 4 Jones, 157; Beatty v. Gingles, 8 Jones, 302; Tyson v. Walston, 83 N. C., 90; McLean v. McLean, 88 N. C., 394. Where an executor executed a promissory note as evidence of such debt and signs it, and renewals of it in his fiduciary capacity, the words “as executor” will be rejected as surplusage, and the contract interpreted as if made in terms by him individually.. Beatty v. Gingles, supra. The rule is not modified by the fact that the note is given, as in this case, by an executrix for money which the creditor knows at the time is to be used in payment of the debts of the testator; but the law assumes that she consents to incur the risk of reimbursement out of the assets on her final settlement. This is unquestionably a liability governed by this general principle. The feme defendant is answerable in her individual capacity.

Affirmed.  