By the Court,
This action was commenced and prosecuted under the provisions of our Revised Statutes, respecting proceedings against joint debtors. It is a well-established principle of the common law, that in actions upon joint obligations, all the living joint obligors or promissors must be made defendants ; and herein consists the difference, it is said, between contracts which are joint and those which are joint and several, as respects the right of the holder of the one or the other in pursuing his remedy, that, on the first he is obliged to sué all the living promissors, whereas on the latter he has a right to elect between one and all of them. (See Gibbons vs. Surber, 4 Blackf., 155.) It is good ground for a plea in abatement, in an action against one upon a joint liability, that his joint debtor is not made a party defendant; hence, it is not only the right of the plaintiff) but his duty, if he would avoid the risk of such a plea, to issue his process against all such joint promissors. To this rule we are aware of no exceptions; the only difference in the practice of the English and American Courts, as well as the differences in those of the several States, being such as arise in virtue of statutory provisions, affecting the proceedings after the return of pro
In all these cases, whether the judgment be against one or all the joint debtors, as well as where sxxit is instituted against part only of those jointly liable, and no plea in abatement is interposed on that account, such judgment is a bar to an action upon the original claim against the defendants not served in the one case, and against the debtors not px-oceeded against, in the other-. See cases above cited: Sloo vs. Lea, 18 Ohio, 279; King vs. Hoar, 13 Mees. & Wels., 492; Ward vs. Johnson, 13 Mass., 148; Gibbs vs. Bryant, 1 Pick, 118; Smith vs. Black, 9 S. & R., 142; Lewis vs. Williams, 6 Whart., 264; Robertson vs. Smith, 18 J. R., 459. The plaintiffs’ claim thereafter- is upon the judgment, and against those who are parties to it, and hence the defendant Ellis, in this case, was not only “ a party to the record,” but the suit was “ defended in his immediate and
¥e cannot perceive that these provisions of the statute conflict with those provisions of the Constitution, which provide that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. Without stopping to define the phrase “ due process of law,” it is sufficient to say that we can hardly perceive how a remedy, which existed upon our statutes long before the liability of the defendant below accrued,
Under proceedings of outlawry, until the 3d and 4th "Will. IY, ch. 42, this was essential in all cases, but by that act (sec. 7), it was provided that no plea in abatement for the nonjoinder of any person as a co-defendant, should be allowed in any Court of common law, unless it should be stated in such plea that such person is a resident within the jurisdiction of the Court, and unless the place of residence of such person should be stated with convenient certainty in an affidavit verifying such plea. Yet in such case, while it is not now absolutely necessary for the plaintiff to proceed to outlawry against the absent debtor in all cases, nevertheless, if such absent debtor has property in England, out of which the plaintiff is desirous of making his debt, he must still proceed to outlawry against him, as he was required to do before its passage. See 3 Chitty’s Gen’l Prac., 398, 399 ; 1 A rob. Prac., 123 ; 2 lb., 173, 177, 179. By our Revised Statutes (p. 484, see. 29), the proceeding by outlawry in civil actions is abolished, and this milder remedy against absent debtors is substituted in its place, and as the law withholds a remedy against one joint debtor alone, if objection be made, unless this action can be maintained against both in the manner prescribed by the statute, the plaintiff is remediless.
'It is worthy of note also, that under the process of outlawry, the plaintiff could make his debt out of the property
There was no error in the ruling of the Court below, and the judgment must be affirmed.