97 Ind. 539 | Ind. | 1884
The material allegations of the appellees’ complaint are these: That on the 10th day of December,. 1879, Baker recovered judgment in the Cass Circuit Court-for the possession of real estate and $500 damages against Loyal Alford, Carrington Alford and Jackson Dobbins; that at the time the judgment was taken the Alfords were residents of Cass county, and Dobbins was a resident of White county; that the latter was solvent and the owner of property, and the former, the Alfords, were wholly insolvent; that Baker, after obtaining the judgment, and without seeking to enforce it against the Alfords, issued an execution to White-county, and instructed the sheriff of that county to levy on the property of Dobbins; that the sheriff was proceeding to-levy on the property of Dobbins, when he procured the appellees to become replevin bail; that they undertook, as replevin bail, solely at the request of Dobbins, to stay the execution as to him, and wholly relying upon his solvency; that-after the appellees became replevin bail, Dobbins appealed from the judgment and secured a reversal, but did not file any bond nor obtain a supersedeas; that while the appeal was pending Dobbins died, and his estate was finally settled' in due course of administration, and distribution to the heirs-properly made; that after the reversal of the judgment Baker
It is important to note that the complaint does not state the terms of the undertaking as bail. There is nothing indicating that it was not in the usual form, or that it did not possess the force annexed by law to undertakings of that character. Courts know, and parties know, from positive statute and from repeated decisions of this court, what the form and effect of such undertakings are. We must presume that the undertaking was in the usual form and possessed the usual force, since to do otherwise would be to presume that the sheriff and the bail had done an extraordinary thing, and this we could not do without violating a settled rule of law as well as logic, for the presumption always is in favor of that which is ordinarily and usually done in like cases. This presumption is here aided by another, namely, that a public officer is presumed to have done his duty.
The question is not on whose solvency the appellees relied, nor is it material that their motive was to favor one only of three judgment defendants. Motives are not consideration, nor are they elements of contracts or of judgments confessed. Standley v. Northwestern, etc., Ins. Co., 95 Ind. 254. Where the contract is one made by the parties directly, then what all agree upou constitutes its terms, but where the statute gives a certain meaning and force to an undertaking, then that meaning and force it possesses irrespective of the motives which prompted its execution. There may be cases where the question of motive may be important as assisting in the construction of the contract or undertaking, but, granting that there are such cases, it is clear that this can not be one of them, for here there is nothing to invoke the assistance of extraneous circumstances; on the contrary, the undertaking is one with a fixed and definite legal meaning and force.
It would be inequitable to compel a surety to pay a debt adjudged to be owing by two persons only, when he had agreed to pay a debt for which three were bound. To hold a surety who undertakes for three or more persons to liability where the debt as to one of them is annulled by a judgment of a court, would often result in gross injustice. Suppose, for illustration, a man to undertake for ten persons and the judgment to be reversed as to nine, would it not be grossly unjust to make him stand for one when, at the time he contracted, he had a right to expect that there were ten principals to whom he might look for indemnity instead of one?
It is not the consent of the creditor that confers, as against the surety, the right to release one of several principals; that right can only be conferred by the surety’s consent. It is not material to the surety’s rights whether the creditor consented to the release or not, the material question is whether the surety consented. The creditor may or may not be willing to release the principal, but whether willing or unwilling, the release impairs the rights of the surety, and he may insist upon his discharge. A surety is just as much injured in a case where the judgment is reversed against the will of the creditor as he would be if the creditor had consented, for in either case a substantial right of the surety is swept away. The rule of which we are speaking is not made to punish the creditor, but to protect the surety, and protection to him requires that it be held that where one of the principals is released, with or without the consent of the creditor, the suretyship shall cease.
The general and almost universal rule is that a surety is entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the creditor against all of the principals, and this right can not exist where the creditor is adjudged to have no right at all against one of the principals, and this is the effect of the judgment of reversal, secured by Dobbins. The surety is discharged in all cases where he can not secure himself by paying the claim of the creditor and proceeding against all of the principals. Boschert v. Brown, 72 Pa. St. 372.
The principles to which we have referred make it clear, that unless there is something in the terms of the contract, or in the statute under which it is executed, the reversal of the judgment as to one of several defendants releases the replevin bail.
In the terms of the contract there is nothing changing the ■ordinary rules. Nothing in the language binds the replevin bail to pay a judgment which by the decision of .the court becomes no judgment at all. No word can be found in the contract which binds the bail to pay a judgment made lifeless by the courts in due course of Igw.
The statute enters into the undertaking, and if that pro
Disastrous consequences would follow from the doctrine for which appellants contend. The right of appeal would be made fruitless in the face of a plain statute. The strange anomaly would be brought into existence of a surety being compelled to pay an apparent judgment declared by the highest court of the State to be no judgment. The right of subrogation, declared by many cases (see Pence v. Armstrong, supra, Gerber v. Sharp, 72 Ind. 553, and authorities cited), and upheld by the soundest principles of justice, would be overthrown, for if there was no judgment there would be nothing to which the surety could be subrogated. Our statutory provisions and our decisions would be thrown into hopeless confusion, and great injustice would be done. Strong reasons, therefore, combine to support our conclusion.
Two cases are cited by the appellants, but they are founded on a statute widely different from ours. In one of these cases, Jones v. Bomberger, 97 Pa. St. 432, the court said: “ It will be observed that the act of 1845, defining the liability of bail for stay of execution, does not declare the bail shall be conditioned for the payment of the judgment, but for ‘the debt or damages, interest and costs recovered/ * * It is a debt, the amount of which has been ascertained and fixed by the judgment, but it is nevertheless a debt. The obligation on the part, of the bail is a contract to pay the debt which has thus been ascertained.” Our statute, in unambiguous terms, confines the obligation of the bail to the judgment, and the reasoning of the court in the case cited shows that if that had been the
The case is not at all like that of the death of the principal. In such a case the judgment remains, and the bail may have subrogation. Here the judgment has ceased to exist; the reversal was its death.
We agree with appellants’ counsel that an undertaking of replevin bail can not be varied by parol evidence. It is a written contract, and is governed by the general rules applicable to other written contracts. Hopper V. Lucas, 86 Ind. 43 ; Smith v. Tyler, 51 Ind. 512; Jones v. Swift, 94 Ind. 516, vide p. 521.
While we hold that the contract can not be varied by parol evidence, we do not find it necessary to decide whether there was or was not error in allowing the appellees to introduce the evidence which they claim tended to make out the equity of their case, because, conceding that the evidence was incompetent, still the case is one in which it is plain that no harm was done. No matter what the evidence was, the appellees were entitled to a recovery when they proved that the judgment replevied by the appellee had been annulled, for with the destruction of this judgment their liability terminated. This was the inevitable result, and laying aside the testimony objected to, the evidence was so strong as to shutout all doubt.
It is argued that the evidence does not make out a case, for the reason that it shows that in the judgment appealed from there was an order for the restitution of land, and that the judgment of reversal merely operated upon that part of the judgment which adjudged a recovery of $500. The answer to this argument is, that the undertaking of replevin bail extended only to the recovery of money, and not to the order
We have considered all the propositions argued by counsel, and find no material error in the proceedings and judgment of the trial court, and, therefore, affirm the judgment.