Barnes v. . Pearson

41 N.C. 482 | N.C. | 1849

The plaintiff, as the surety of the defendant John Hooks, had paid an amount exceeding $12,000, and Hooks is insolvent. In 1845 Ichabod Pearson died, leaving a will, in which he bequeathed to his daughter Sally, one of the defendants and the wife of the said Hooks, a legacy of $1,500 to be paid in notes, and one-sixth part of the residue of his estate. The defendants Solomon and Lazarus Pearson are the executors. In February, 1847, Hooks by deed assigned to the plaintiff all of his interest in right of his wife under the will of her father "for the purpose of partially indemnifying or making a payment to the plaintiff for his payments as surety." At the death of the testator, Hooks owed him two notes which now amount, principal and interest, to near $1,500, and the testator was bound for him as cosurety with the plaintiff in a note for a large sum. The executors have since paid the one-half thereof, $1,541. The plaintiff paid the other half, and that forms a part of the amount for which the assignment was made. At the time of the assignment the plaintiff had notice of the indebtedness of Hooks to the testator and of his liability as cosurety, and that Hooks was insolvent. Soon after the executors qualified they made an unsuccessful attempt to arrange the matter with Hooks. The bill is filed for an account, and for (483) the payment of the amount which may be found to be due Hooks under the will, to the plaintiff as assignee. The defendants insist upon a right to apply such amount to the discharge of the two notes, and of the sum paid by them on account of the suretyship of the testator. The husband is not entitled absolutely to a legacy given to his wife. It becomes his if he reduces it into possession, or he may dispose of it, if it be such an interest as he can presently reduce into possession. But if he dies without doing so, the wife is entitled to it. Out of respect to this right of the wife, a court of equity will not compel the husband to apply the legacy to the payment of his debts; and if he remains inactive the chance of the wife to get the legacy at his death is preserved. But if he puts an end to the right of the wife by disposing of the legacy, and she is out of the way, there is then no reason why the court may not interfere and see that the fund is applied to the payment of his debts. *338

In Allen v. Allen, ante, 293, it is held that creditors of the husband may subject a distributive share of the wife, after an assignment of it by the husband, although the assignment was made for her benefit, because by the assignment she ceased to have any original right of her own, and was put in the condition of a donee of the husband, and so could not stand out against existing creditors.

In this case the executors, who have the fund in hand, are, as executors, creditors of the husband; and when the plaintiff, who is the assignee with notice, and who paid nothing (for his debts were lost (484) anyhow, as Hooks was insolvent), and who stands in the shoes of his debtor, sets up his claim to the fund, there is no reason, as the wife's right is at an end, why they may not insist that the fund should be first applied to the payment of their debt; for, in truth, it is only the balance that Hooks is entitled to. This is a plain principle of set-off, which is acted upon in courts of law. We lay no stress upon the fact that the legacy was to be paid in notes.

As to the excess after paying off the notes, there is another principle involved. The plaintiff and the testator were cosureties. Between them "equality is equity." If one surety, by any means, gets a fund belonging to the principal, he is not at liberty to take the entire benefit, but must share with his cosurety. The fund in fact belongs to the principal, and should be applied as a payment made by him, and this reduces the amount which will fall upon the sureties. The excess must then be considered as a payment made by Hooks, and the plaintiff, having paid one-half of the original debt, has paid more than his share by an amount equal to one-half of the excess, and is entitled to contribution as against the executors of his cosurety. In other words, the plaintiff has a right to share the benefit of this excess and to recover one-half of it by way of reimbursing himself for having paid one-half of the original debt, instead of one-half,minus the excess, which is a fund of the principal debtor. These principles are well settled and are so consonant with natural justice that no authority need be cited.

There must be a reference to take an account of the estate and ascertain the amount of the excess coming to Hooks after deducting the amount of the two notes. Costs are not allowed to either side; and the costs of the reference will be paid out of the estate, as the plaintiff and defendants, who are residuary legatees, all have an interest in the account.

PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.

Cited: Arrington v. Yarborough, 54 N.C. 81; Brittain v. Quiett, ib., 330; Leary v. Cheshire, 56 N.C. 172; Bryan v. Spruill, 57 N.C. 28;McLean v. McPhaul, 59 N.C. 16; Eason v. Cherry, ib., 263. *339

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