22 N.Y.S. 849 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
On the 27th day of December, 1876, one Leonard B. Bartholamew, a deputy sheriff, as principal, and William- Norman and Judson ÍL Clark, as sureties, executed and delivered to William H. Withey, then sheriff of Allegany county, their bond, in writing, conditioned that Bartholamew would pay to Withey, the said sheriff, one half of the legal fees received by Bartholamew, at any time, as
The right of contribution, as between cosureties of a common principal, is unquestioned, and a cause of action may be maintained therefor by one who pays more than his proportionate part of the debt for which all are liable. Baylies, Sur. 317. Whether this right grows out of an equity which is deemed to spring up from the relation assumed by two or more cosureties to each other, or by a contract in which each is deemed to have impliedly promised the other that he would perform his part of the contract, and pay his proportion of the loss, is not necessary to now consider. In neither case do they become copartners, or agents for each other. They are not privies either by representation, estate, or law. So that neither has the authority nor the power to represent the other, or bind him by any act, or in any manner change or alter his relation or liability upon the instrument. Winchell v. Hicks, 18 N. Y. 558-560. If the right to contribution is founded upon the principles of equity, it is that the cosurety should pay his proportionate part of that which his principal has neglected and failed to pay, and not that which his cosurety may have improperly paid; and the same is true if his liability is founded upon contract. In order to establish the cause of action, it was necessary to prove that Bartholamew, as deputy sheriff, had collected fees, and the amount thereof, and that he had neglected to pay over the one half thereof to Withey, the sheriff, as he had undertakén to do, and that Clark, the plaintiff, as the cosurety of the defendants’ testator, had paid the same. Can these facts be shown by the judgment against Bartholamew and Clark? It was evidence showing what had actually been done; that a suit was brought, and a recovery had; the amount thereof; and that it had been paid by Clark. But is it evidence against these
“AVhere judgment is recovered against part of the sureties in a bond, which is satisfied by them, it has been held, in a suit by them against their cosureties for contribution, that such judgment is competent evidence to show the amount of payment made by the plaintiffs, and the circumstances under which it was made, but not for the purpose of proving the liability."’
This question was also considered in the case of Fletcher v. Jackson, 23 Vt. 581-592, and the same conclusion reached. This case is in many respects similar to the one on review. A judgment had
“Where the suit may in the first instance be brought directly against the guarantor, the judgment against the principal, without notice to the guarantor, is not evidence, and so, if; the guarantor have notice of the suit against the principal, he is not obliged to concern himself in its defense, but may await a suit against him, and then insist upon the right to contest the whole ground. * * * We think, therefore, that although the record was' evidence, like any other fact, to show the amount of the payment made by the plaintiff, and the circumstances under which it was made, we can scarcely regard it as evidence beyond that.”
And to the same effect is Thompson v. Young, 2 Ohio, 334; Love v. Gibson, 2 Fla. 598; Means v. Hicks, 65 Ala. 241.
The judgment should be affirmed. All concur.