Coggeshall v. Ruggles

62 Ill. 401 | Ill. | 1872

Mr. Chief Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In April, 1855, William H. Coggeshall, one of the appellants, as pi-incipal, with Ruggles, the appellee, as surety, executed a promissory note for three hundred dollars to the administrators of the estate of one Marshall, deceased. In 1861 suit was brought upon the note in the county court of Mason County, and a judgment rendered in favor of the administrators. The defendants appealed to the circuit court, where the appeal was subsequently dismissed and a procedendo awarded. In 1866 an execution was issued on the judgment and levied on the land of Ruggles. There was a sale under the execution and the property was bid off in the name of one Beasely, to whom the judgment had been assigned as guardian of a daughter of Marshall. After the expiration of twelve months he assigned the certificate of purchase to Francis S. Coggeshall, a son of William H. Coggeshall, and he, on the day this suit was commenced, assigned it to Dummer for the benefit of one Martin, who had obtained a judgment against William H. Coggeshall. Dummer, however, merely took the certificate under an agreement that, if it should prove valid, he would satisfy the judgment in favor of Martin, but declined to take it at any price, absolutely, conjecturing, as he says in his answer, that there might be some controversy. Martin is not, therefore, in a position to claim any equities under this-assignment. This bill was filed by Ruggles to set aside the sale on the ground that, prior to the sale of the land, an arrangement had been made between Beasely and William H. Coggeshall by which the judgment was in fact paid, though not satisfied in terms, and that it was kept in apparent life in order that Ruggles’ property might be sold under it. The court below set aside the sale.

Beasely testifies that he was owing W. H. Coggeshall about four hundred dollars for corn purchased, and they applied this amount to the payment of the judgment. After the sale Beasely assigned the certificate of purchase to the son of W. H. Coggeshall, receiving no new consideration therefor. We are satisfied from all the evidence that the father was the real party in this transaction, and that the sale under the execution was for the benefit of Coggeshall with a view to reach the property of Buggies. Beasely indeed swears that the arrangement-in regard to the corn debt was made before the sale.

The decree, then, would have been in all respects correct if the relation of Coggeshall and Buggies had continued to be that of principal and surety as it was in the beginning. But it appears that several years before the sale, Buggies, doubting the solvency of Coggeshall, took from him a pair of horses and a buggy, and agreed in consideration thereof to pay the sum of three hundred dollars on the judgment, and so advised one of the administrators. Buggies thus, as between himself and Coggeshall, became the principal debtor, and his subsequent attempt to cancel this obligation by crediting Coggeshall with three hundred dollars without his consent on an account due from Coggeshall to the firm of Buggies & Gatton as partners in trade, did not change this relation. The individual debt due from Buggies to Coggeshall for the horses and buggy could not be thus discharged without the latter’s consent.

Nevertheless, although Buggies had become the principal debtor in the judgment, Coggeshall could not pay the judgment in fact, and still keep it apparently in force for the purpose of selling the land of Buggies, and acquiring and retaining the title. Admitting, as we are inclined to do, that the arrangement made by him with Beasley was not such a .technical satisfaction of the judgment as to render the execution a nullity, still, when Coggeshall received the certificate of purchase by assignment to his son, he acquired no title to Buggies’ land which he could rightfully hold as his own. He could retain it only as security for the money he had paid, and which should have been paid by Buggies. Until he had offered Buggies, the opportunity of redeeming within a reasonable time, his title amounted merely to a specific lien. Having acquired, by his arrangement with Beasely, the right to control the judgment, he must be regarded in a court of equity as having paid it, except so far as it would be just to allow the sheriff’s certificate of sale to be treated as a security. The principle is the same as when a surety buys the debt against his principal for less than its face. He can enforce payment to himself of whatever he has actually paid, but only of that amount. Story’s Eq. Jur. Sec. 316; Reed v. Norris, 2 Mylne & Craig, 361. The conduct of Coggeshall, if his object was to acquire the title to Buggies’ land without his knowledge by means of this judgment, was inconsistent with their obligations to each other as joint debtors, and he can not be permitted to use the certificate for that purpose.

While, therefore, we agree with the court below in the opinion that the complainant can set aside the sheriff’s sale and certificate, we think, as already in substance stated, the court should have imposed terms. The complainant must do equity. He should have paid the debt which Coggeshall has paid—at least he should have paid three hundred dollars of it, with the interest from the time that sum should have been paid on the judgment, if Coggeshall himself has paid so large an amount. On his bringing this money into court for the benefit of Coggeshall, the sale and certificate will be set aside.

It is not necessary to discuss the other questions raised in the argument. The true ground for setting aside the sale is the one stated; and the terms of granting this relief, above indicated, are required by the equity of the case.

Decree reversed.