86 Me. 181 | Me. | 1893
Debt by an obligee against a surety upon two bonds, given by a collector of taxes for the years, 1884 and 1885, respectively. The last bond was not signed by the principal. Each surety bound himself severally, and not jointly, in the sum of $5000. The obligee received from two sureties a sum of money, "in full discharge from liability upon each bond.” Two questions are presented :
I. Did the failure of the principal to sign the last bond render it void? We think not. The bond was conditioned that the principal should faithfully perform official duty. This he was bound by law to do, just as effectually as if he had covenanted to do it by signing the bond. The engagement of the surety, therefore, rested upon the legal obligation of the principal already incurred. It is not like the cases, often referred to, where no obligation attaches to the principal, outside of the bond itself. In those cases, the principal not being bound, it would be unjust to hold the surety. Nor is it like the case of bail, where the sureties have peculiar rights flowing from the stipulation agreed to by the principal. The bond must be held good at common law. Howard v. Brown, 21 Maine, 385 ; Scarborough v. Parker, 53 Maine, 252 ; Goodyear Co. v. Bacon, 148 Mass. 542.
II. Did the discharge of two sureties release the defendant, another surety? No. The defendant was one of six sureties, who bound themselves severally and not jointly, each in the sum of $5000. Their relations to each other are precisely the same as if each one had executed a separate bond. They are neither necessarily joint debtors, nor joint sureties. Had the
In the case at bar, the attempted discharge of some of the sureties is not pretended to have been by a sealed instrument. Had it been, it would have worked a discharge of all the sureties, for they stand in the relation to each other of joint debtors, being co-sureties for the payment of the same debt. Nor does it pretend to have discharged the whole debt, as provided for by statute. It simply presumes to discharge some sureties from a liability or debt that was to remain outstanding, and, therefore, not being upon sufficient consideration that would have paid the debt, or so much of it as they had engaged to pay by their covenant, nor evidenced by a sealed instrument, it was ineffectual to discharge any one.
The result is, damages upon the last bond should be assessed in a sum equal to the existing default of the principal, with interest from the time it accrued, leaving the defendant to such claims for contribution as shall prove just.
Defendant defaulted. Damages to be assessed below.