70 Ind. 513 | Ind. | 1880
— Samuel A. Records, James M. Records and Elijah Bobbitt executed their promissory note bearing date 'January 15th, 1872, and payable one day after date, to John Dishman, for the sum of five hundred and twenty-five dollars. The note was joint, and there was nothing on the face of it to indicate that any of the •makers were sureties.
The note not being paid, judgment was obtained upon it by the payee, Dishman, in the Greene Circuit Court, against all the makers; and, Samuel A. Records being wholly insolvent, James M. Records paid the judgment. In the judgment nothing was settled as to any question of suretyship.
James M. Records, claiming to have been a co-surety with Bobbitt upon the note, for Samuel A. Records, assigned his claim for contribution to the plaintiffs, Shryer and Dugger, who brought this action against Bobbitt for contribution. The cause was tried by the court, resulting in a finding and judgment for the plaintiffs.
The evidence is in the record, and the facts upon which the ease must turn may be stated in the language of the witnesses.
The plaintiff’s, having given in evidence the record in the action upon the note, introduced James M. Records as a witness, who testified as follows :
“ Samuel A. Records was the principal in the note on which the judgment of Dishman was taken, and the defendant, Elijah Bobbitt, and myself were sureties. I paid*515 the judgment and costs in full, on March 20th, 1875. The amount I paid was $734.14. I signed the note at the meeting-house nearOwensburgh. No one else had signed it at that time except Samuel A. Records, and I signed it as his surety, at his request, and it was understood that he would get Mr. Bobbitt” or some one else to sign it too. After I signed it, I gave it to Sam. Bobbitt was not present when this took place. Samuel' A. Records is living now in Illinois, and is insolvent. I transferred my claim for contribution to the plaintiffs, before this suit was begun.”
The defendant, Bobbitt, testified as follows:
“ Samuel A. Records came to me with the note mentioned^ and told me that he and James M. Records wanted to renew a note to John Dishman, and asked me to go on the note with them. The names of Samuel A. Records and James M. Records were then on the note, and I signed the note, believing that both of them were principals. This was at Owensburgh, and James M. Records was not present. I knew nothing about the note except what Sam, told me. After James M. Records paid the judgment, he never said any thing to me about it, nor demanded any contribution. The first I knew of his claiming any thing was when this suit was brought.”
We have no brief for the appellees, and are therefore not advised upon what ground it was claimed or held below, that the defendant, Bobbitt, was liable to contribution. We have, however, a very well prepared brief for the appellant, in which it is insisted that he is not thus liable.
Upon an examination of the question, we have concluded, that, on the facts shown, Bobbitt is not liable to James M. Records for contribution; in other words, that, as between James M. Records and Bobbitt, the former must be regarded as a principal in the note, and the latter
But, if the evidence in regard to the statement were to be regarded as struck out, the case would not be materially changed. The note on its face, as presented to Bobbitt for his signature, imported that the two Records were principals therein. Sexton v. Sexton, 35 Ind. 88. And the presentation of it to him for his signature, without explanation, was equivalent to a representation that those who had signed it were principals.
In Deardorff v. Foresman, 24 Ind. 481, an elaborately considered case, it was held, that if a surety sign a note .and leave it with the principal to procure the signature of ¡Other sureties, and the principal, in disregard of his
There is some analogy-between that case and the present.
Here, James M. Records left the note in the hands of Samuel A., to procure the signature of Bobbitt thereto. He thus wilfully put it into the power of Samuel A. to procure Bobbitt’s signature on the supposition that both the previous signers were principals, for such was the unexplained legal effect of the note as presented to Bobbitt. Bobbitt was thus misled, and signed the note in the belief that both the previous signers were principals. Under these circumstances, we think it clear that James M. is estopped, as between himself and Bobbitt, to claim that he was a surety only on the note, and entitled to contribution from Bobbitt. The law, as enunciated in the ease of Pickard v. Sears, 6 A. & E. 469, 474, followed in hundreds of instances perhaps, is entirely applicable to the case, viz.: that “ where one by his words dr conduct wilfully causes another to believe the existence of a certain state of things, and induces him to act on that belief, so as to alter his own previous position, the former is concluded from averring against the latter a different state of things as existing at the same time.”
The ease is not without authority which seems to be directly in point. In Keith v. Goodwin, 31 Vt. 268, Goodwin, among others, had signed a note, apparently as a principal; and, after it had been thus signed, Keith signed a guaranty upon it, supposing that those who had signed it were principals, as between themselves. Keith paid the note, took an assignment thereof, and sued Goodwin upoti it. Goodwin claimed to have been a surety only upon the
“ But it seems to a majority of the court that the plaintiff' is equitably entitled to treat the defendant as he held himself out upon the contract, i. e. as principal. There was nothing to intimate that the signers were anything but joint principals. And the defendant having so signed the note and entrusted it to the others, with authority to obtain additional signers, or guarantors, it was giving them authority to represent the defendant as a co-principal; and by presenting the note merely, and asking a guaranty of the plaintiff, a virtual representation was made that the defendant stood as joint principal.” See also, as bearing upon this view, the cases of Oldham v. Broom, and Adams v. Flanagan, supra.
The case of Melms v. Werdehoff, 14 Wis. 18, is also in point in principle. There, Melms & Co. had executed a note to one Busack, for his accommodation. Busack, in order to enable himself to negotiate the note and raise money upon- it, applied to the defendant to sign it, which he did, placing his name under that of Melms & Co., and Busack negotiated it. Melms & Co., having paid the note after it became due, sued the defendant for contribution, claiming that the note was made by them and the defendant, for the accommodation of Busack, and that the defendant was liable as a co-surety, to contribution. But it was held that the plaintffs were not entitled to recover: The court said:
*519 “ Busack asked the respondent to sign the note, so as to enable him to negotiate it with Pritzkow, and seeing that the note was given by the firm of Melms & Co., and knowing that they were responsible, he signed it for the purpose indicated. He did not suppose that he was signing a note as a security with them. There is nothing in the case that shows he did .know the note was not given by the ostensible makers in the usual coui’se of business. He had a right to assume that it was, and to act upon that presumption. They now allege that it was an accommodation note, and that the payee agreed to procure the xiaxxie of the l’espondent or Spoei’l as a co-surety. If so, they must look to the payee for redx’ess, aixd not to the respondent. He knew nothing about their understanding with the payee, if indeed they had such aix one as they now insist existed. They had invested the payee with the character of a creditor’, and enabled him to deal with the world in that relation as respected this note. And now if they or the respondent must suffer damage, the loss should rather fall upon them, who have been the least vigilant, than upon him who signed the note, under the circumstances, as surety for them, supposing they were primarily liable for its payment.”
The judgment below is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for a new trial.