123 Ga. 635 | Ga. | 1905
(After stating the facts.) It is well-settled law in. this State that an accommodation indorser is to be considered as. a mere surety. Civil Code, § 2969. The plaintiff’s petition presents a case of the payment .by one accommodation indorser of the principal debt to the creditor, and a claim for contribution from the other indorsers. It is insisted by the plaintiff in error-that the cause of action set forth in the petition is predicated neither upon the subrogation of her testator to the rights of the-payee of the note, nor upon any implied contract on the part of the defendants to make contribution, but upon their statutory liability so to do, arising under the Civil Code, §2992, which declares-that: “ Where several are sureties for the same principal, for the same sum of money, either by one or by distinct instruments, and one pays more -than an equal share of the sum, he may compel contribution from his cosureties. If one of the cosureties be insolvent, the deficiency in his share must be borne equally by the-solvent sureties.” The payment of the joint indebtedness by one-of several sureties entitles him to sue his cosureties upon the written evidence of indebtedness (in which case the period of limitation would be that applicable to instruments of its class), or to sue upon the implied contract raised by law in favor of one. surety against his cosureties for-contribution (in which instance-the period of limitation would be that of an implied assumpsit). Hull v. Myers, 90 Ga. 674. Admittedly the plaintiff is barred by lapse of time from pursuing either of these remedies. But it. is contended that the right of a surety to compel contribution from his cosureties is a statutory right, and therefore, under the. Civil Code, § 3766, the cause of action is not barred. That section provides that “ All suits for the enforcement of rights accruing to individuals under statutes, acts of incorporation, or by-operation of law, shall be brought within twenty years after the right of action accrues.” The evident purpose of this section is to fix a period of limitation for special cases not provided for by-
But conceding that a new right was created in favor of the surety by the adoption of the code section last mentioned, still the enforcement of that right must be within the period of limitations applicable to causes of actiou which arise by implication of law from the contractual relations existing between parties to an obligation which they have voluntarily assumed. The provisions of section 3766 were not intended to apply to a case such as that now under consideration. To construe it as referring to every right conferred by statute or accruing “by operation of law,” and to stick to its letter as thus interpreted, would be to nullify other sections- of the code fixing the 'period within which an aggrieved party shall bring an action in assumpsit or one for damages arising out of the violation of or failure to perform a legal duty imposed upon another under the' common law or by statute. In Harris v. Smith, 68 Ga. 461, the provisions of-this section were held not to apply to an action in assumpsit brought by a defendant in fi. fa. against a sheriff for the balance of funds in his hands after paying off the fi. fa. under which he had sold property belonging to the defendant in execution; and Mr. Justice Crawford said (page 463): That the act of which this section is a codification “does not apply to the case before us, we think very clear; if, indeed, it were made so to apply, we are at a loss to see where it would stop; for every right to recover arises in some way by operation of law; and if we stick to the letter of this act, there would be
Affirmed.