41 Ky. 348 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1842
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
These were three separate actions of assumpsit brought against Atkinson by the other above named parties respectively, each action being upon a single count for money paid and advanced for the defendant. And the question presented by the record is, whether and to what extent such actions can be maintained upon the following facts: a joint and several note for $1500, payable to the President, Directors & Co. of the Bank of Kentucky, and executed by R. S. Davis as principal and Stewart, Thayer, Chamberlain and Atkinson as sureties, having been discounted by said Bank, for the benefit of Davis, and being unpaid at maturity and protested, therefore, Stewart, Thayer and Chamberlain paid and took up the same by paying into Bank something over $50 each, and by executing and procuring to be discounted at the said Bank, their joint and several note for $1350, in which Stewart was named as principal and the other two as sureties, and the'proceeds of which were, upon the check of Stewart, passed to the credit and discharge of the protested note. This second note was made and offered and discounted for the benefit of the three parties to it respectively, and had been reduced by payments at the time of the action, to about $900. Shortly after the protested note had been thus paid and taken up, Davis offered and executed to the three parties who had paid his debt, a mortgage on his interest in the right of his wife, in certain slaves of the estate of her father, which, however, were still in the hands of the administrator, and subject to the event of a suit in chancery pending against him, which might render a sale of them necessary. The mortgage contained an express obligation on the part of Davis, to pay to the mortgagees the amount of the $1500 note,
It may be assumed upon the evidence, that Davis was insolvent, except so far as the contingent interest covered by the mortgage might make him otherwise.
On these facts a verdict was found for each of the plaintiffs, for the amount of one fourth of the protested note of Davis, &c. with the interest thereon; and the verdict and the judgment upon it are, in our opinion, supported by the following propositions, which, as we think, contain the law of the case.
1st. The extinguishment of the original debt in the manner above stated, was such a payment in money or its equivalent, as according to the case of Robertson vs Maxcey, (6 Dana, 101,) and the cases therein cited authorized an action against the principal debtor for so much money paid for his use; and so far as the mere form of action is concerned, the same principle applies to the action against a co-surety. And indeed as by the discount of the note of the three sureties, the money was, in fact, appropriated in Bank to the drawer, the application of it, upon his check, to the original debt, was in truth, a payment of so much money, dispensing only with the useless ceremony of taking the money out of Bank and instantaneously returning it.
2nd. Although in the new note, on which the money was raised, Stewart was named as principal and the other two obligors as his sureties, and although in consequence of this form the amount was applied to the original note upon his check; yet as the new note was resorted to by the three as a means of raising the money
3rd. Conceding that the action against the cosurety arises only in consequence of the insolvency of the principal, and to the extent that hé is unable to pay, as decided in the case of Morrison vs Poynts, (7 Dana, 307,) and in Pearson, &c. vs Duckham, (3 Littell, 385,) and that when the paying sureties have taken a mortgage from the principal debtor, this circumstance should, on the presumption of solvency to the extent of the mortgaged property, be deemed prima fade, sufficient either to translate the cause of action to the equitable forum, orto suspend it until the mortgage is exhausted: Morrison vs Poynts, supra. Still we arc of opinion that the mortgage in this case should not have any such effect, because when taken in connection with the proof relating to the same subject, it affords no presumption of such solvency of the principal as should repel, diminish, or postpone the legal liability of the co-surety to contribute to the sureties' vmo have paid the debt. The property mortgaged furnishes no present means of coercion, either legal pr
4th. The cause of action against the co-surety, Atkinson, being complete and unaffected by the mere fact of a mortgage, we do not admit that it was affected either by giving time to the principal debtor before the mortgage should be forfeited, or by taking his acknowledgment of the debt and covenant for payment, as a part of the mortgage; both of these acts or circumstances, and especially the former, were, as appears from what has already been said, entirely nugatory, as to any present substantial interest or advantage. Tho - covenant may indeed have merged the simple contract, and the time allowed may have postponed the right of action of the present plaintiff, against Davis the principal debtor. But how did this affect their rights against their co-surety, or his rights or duties in regard, either to the principal debtor or to them. The true cause's of action by the
5 th. This being so, the subsequent promise of Atkinson to pay part in money and to give his note, &e. if acceeded to, was at most but an accord without satisfaction, and did not merge the cause of action previously ■existing. It was, in fact, but an offer to do what was just, and would doubtless have been accepted; but not having been performed it was entitled to no effect in the case.
Wherefore, the judgment in each case is affirmed.