69 So. 931 | Ala. | 1915
The bill is to foreclose a lien on a certain stock of drugs and fixtures sold by appellee to appellant, and prays other incidental relief. By demurrer it is insisted that there is no equity in the bill, and that there is a misjoinder of parties respondent. - The Ely-Robertson-Barlow Drug Company, a corporation,
By the sixth paragraph of said contract of sale, a lien for the purchase price is expressly reserved in the following language: “It is further understood and agreed that the party of the first part has a lien upon all the goods which it has sold to the party of the second part, upon all moneys derived from the sale of said goods,'and upon all accounts made by the sale of said goods, which said lien shall be prior to and superior to all other •claims of any party against said .goods, proceeds, or accounts, and that said goods, proceeds and accounts shall remain impressed with the lien of the party of the first
It is provided by paragraph 3 of the supplemental contract that the Averyt Drug Company should deposit all proceeds derived from the sale of the property purchased from the complainant by said contract, in a. special account, in the First National Bank of Birmingham, Ala., to be applied by said bank to the payment of the notes described in the said contract as the same should fall due, with .the further provision that the amount so deposited should be 20 per cent, of the price at which each item should be sold, provided that no article should be sold at a less price than cost, with 10 per cent, added. The bill avers that the Averyt Drug Company wholly failed to carry out the terms of said provision and has made no deposits whatever with the First National Bank as therein provided, and, further, that said paragraph contained the stipulation that the respondent should keep an accurate and correct charge sheet of each sale made of said goods, and should furnish the complainant a carbon copy of same, and that it has failed to furnish promptly carbon copies of such charge sheets. It is further provided in paragraph 4 of the supplemental contract that the Averyt Drug Company was to keep the goods, wares, and merchandise sold to it by complainant separate and distinct and segregated from any other goods, wares, and merchandise belonging to the respondent, or to any of its subsidiary stores, and so earmarked and labeled as to be distinguishable from its other property. The bill then avers that the complainant did not know, of its own knowledge, whether the respondent had carried out this part of said contract, but that it had been informed that the Averyt Drug Company had commingled the goods, wares, and
In Tedder v. Steele, 70 Ala. 347, it was held that a surety on a note given for the purchase money of land, though not a necessary party to a bill to enforce the vendor’s lien, is a proper party, being interested in the account to be taken, and, when made a defendant, cannot avoid a personal decree for any balance of the debt remaining due after the land has been sold, as authorized by the statute, by entering a disclaimer. The court said: “The disclaimer of Tedder, by which he sought to repudiate all interest in the suit, did not entitle him to a discharge. Conceding that he was a mere surety to the note executed by himself and Beatty for the purchase money of the land, and that he was not interested as a purchaser, he was nevertheless a proper, though not a necessary, party defendant to the suit. He was a joint maker of the note, equally bound with the principal for its payment, and was interested in the account required to be taken by the court in order to ascertain the amount of the mortgage debt, and to determine the balance due after allowance of a credit on the debt of the amount for which the land may be sold, as is required to be done by the statute.” — Bristol v. Morgan, 3 Edw. Ch. Rep. 142; Rushmore v. Miller, 4 Edw. Ch. Rep. 84.
In Dampskibsaktieselskabet Habil et al. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, 142 Ala. 363, 39 South. 54, Chief Justice McClellan said: “Independent of statute, the general rule is that the creditor cannot be compelled to exhibit his remedy against the principal before resorting to the surety. — Skinner v. Barney, 19 Ala. 698; Bank, etc., v. Godden & Lowry, 15 Ala. 616; Abercrombie v. Knox, 3 Ala. 729 [37 Am. Dec. 721]. A request, however, to sue the principal operates to discharge the surety when by the negligence of the creditor the means of recovering the debt has been lost or damage has accrued to the surety. It does not appear from the bill that any request to sue the principal had been made, but if such be the fact, and the complainant has been damaged by the negligence of the creditor, this damage was available as a plea in bar of the action against him. — Howle v. Edwards, 97 Ala. 649 [11 South. 748].”
As said by Lord Eldon in Wright v. Simpson, 6 Vesey Jr., 714, 734, as between the creditor and the surety, the creditor assumes no obligation of active diligence against the principal; and it is the business of the surety, not of the creditor, to see that the principal performs.
Because the surety may have no interest in the contract of its principal, and because the creditor of the principal debtor may prejudice the surety by delay, equity will sometimes interfere in behalf of the surety, either against his principal or against his creditor. In such a case the surety may proceed, in a court of equity against the principal, to compel him to- pay the debt, or against the creditor, to compel him to proceed at law to collect his debt from the principal. — 1 Story, Eq. § 327; Wright v. Simpson, supra; Hayes v. Ward, 4 John’s Chancery, 123; Bishop v. Day, 13 Vt. 81, 37 Am. Dec. 582; Harris v. Newell, 42 Wis. 691.
In the case before us, the very words of the guaranty disclose an interest of each of the sureties: “One dollar in hand paid each of the undersigned, and * * * the further benefits which will accrue to the undersigned by reason of their participation and interest in the said purchase,” etc.
These principles settle the equity of the bill, as involving subject-matter properly within the jurisdiction of a court of chancery, and show that the chancellor properly overruled the demurrer to the bill.
The decree o,f the chancellor is affirmed.
Affirmed.