87 Ala. 334 | Ala. | 1888
The contract of, suretyship must be strictly construed, in favor of the surety. His obligation is voluntary, without any consideration moving to him, without benefit to him, entered into for the accommodation of his principal, and generally, also, for that of the obligee; and courts see to it that his liabilities thus incurred are not enlarged beyond the strict letter of his undertaking. To the extent, and in the manner, and under the circumstances pointed out in his obligation, he is bound, and no further. His contract can not be changed in any respect. Whether an alteration is or is not to his benefit, is not open to inquiry. “He has a right to stand upon the very terms of his contract,” and if a variation is made which extends its liability “to another person, or to any other subject, or for any other period of time than such as may be included in its words,” and he does not assent to it, such variation is fatal to his obligation, whether he is injured thereby or not.—Miller v. Stewart, 9 Wheaton, 681; Taylor v. Johnson, 17 Ga. 521; Gardner v. Walsh, 5 El. & Bl. 89; Bowers v. Briggs, 20 Ind. 139; Henry v. Coats, 17 Ind. 161; Wallace v. Jewell, 21 Ohio St. 163; Dickerman v. Miner, 43 Iowa, 508; City of Montgomery v. Hughes, 65 Ala. 204.
Variations of the contract of suretyship which operate the discharge of the surety must, however, be such as are material,' and change the legal import of the instrument, assuming the genuineness of the paper thus modified. Interlineations and changes may be made in the paper which evidences the liability, or in the words which express it, without destroying the validity of the contract, provided such modifications clo not go beyond the mere form of the undertaking,
There is another important limitation on the general doctrine which we have been considering, applicable to contracts generally, and exerting its influence on contracts of surety-ship as well as all others. It is now well settled in this country, though the contrary rule formerly prevailed, and does yet to a large extent in England, that erasures, interlineations, spoliations and changes, made in and of contracts by strangers to them, however material abstractly considered, are, in legal contemplation, wholly immaterial, and ineffective to give to the instrument any other or different meaning or operation than that which attached to it before such intermeddling.—Brown v. Jones, 3 Porter, 422; Davis v. Carlisle, 6 Ala. 709; 1 Green. Ev., §§ 565-568; Byles on Bills, 323, and notes; 2 Parsons on Contr. 716 et seq.
In this case, it is averred by the defendants Anderson and Beeves, that after the bond had been signed by them and their principal, it was delivered to, and accepted and approved by the sheriff. It was the latter’s duty to pass on the sufficiency of the bond as to amount and solvency. When he accepted and approved it, with these names on it, the contract was complete, and his duties, so far as the execution of the instrument was concerned, were then at an end. His further duty with respect to the bond was to file it in the office of the clerk of the court. — Code, 1876, §§ 2942, 2946. The sheriff was merely the agent of the law to take the bond of the defendant, payable to the plaintiff, and return it into court. After taking it, he had only the naked custody for a particular purpose, and not to extend beyond a given time. In all other respects, and for all other purposes, he was an utter stranger. Of course, the defendant Aycock was also a stranger to the contract. The addition of Aycock’s name as an obligor, after the undertaking had thus been perfected, was the act of these two strangers to it,
Contracts made on Sunday are absolutely void. — Code, § 1749. A contract delivered on Sunday, is a contract made on that day, within the meaning of this statute.—Flanagan v. Meyer, 41 Ala. 132; Burns v. Moore, 76 Ala. 342. The contract of the defendants, while running to the plaintiffs, and enuring to their benefit, was required by law to be made, and could only be made with the sheriff. If delivered to him on Sunday, it was absolutely void, and imported no liability whatever’. The plaintiffs had, and could have had, no connection with the making of the contract, and no control over the sheriff’s action in relation to it. To hold that it was not void as between the plaintiffs and defendants, would be to add another term to the statute, and make it inapplicable to public officers, and enuring to third persons. The case of Saltmarsh v. Tuthill, 13 Ala. 390, is not in point. That adjudication related to a negotiable instrument, and depended for the result reached on the general principle which frees commercial paper from infirmities of which subsequent holders have no notice. Besides, the present statute “is more sweeping and vitiating in its effect than the act of 1803,” under which that case was decided; and “all contracts,” of whatever nature, are rendered void by it, if made on Sunday, unless they fall in one of the classes of cases specially excepted.—Burns v. Moore, supra. It was not necessary, therefore, for the third plea of Anderson and Reeves to aver the complicity of the plaintiffs in the execution of the contract, and the demurrer to that plea should have been overruled.
Fairly construed, the plea interposed by Aycock is an averment that he was fraudulently induced to sign the bond,
This plea of Aycock also disclosed that his signature constituted an alteration of the contract made by him through a mistake of fact, .being mislead by the sheriff so to do; and on this ground, also, we hold that it was well pleaded, and the demurrer to it was properly overruled.
Beversed and remanded.