255 N.W. 733 | Mich. | 1934
Defendant in its brief on application for rehearing again contends that this case cannot be distinguished fromLawrence v. American Surety Co.,
The cases involve different statutes, but there is a more vital distinction than this. The Lawrence Case was a limitation on the amount of the surety's *119 liability; the provision here in question is acondition on the liability, a limitation as to the character or accrual of liability. The pro rata clause merely sets a maximum amount payable by the surety, an indeterminate amount, to be sure, but one easily capable of ascertainment when the amount of the loss is known. If the public officials require sufficient bonds, the public will be completely protected, barring insolvency of a surety; and to offset such possible insolvency, there is still the possibility of recovery from the principal. The pro tanto subrogation clause, on the other hand, does not fix a maximum amount of liability but undertakes as a condition to payment by the surety (or, as the appellant prefers to state it, in return or consideration for such payment) to require the county to give up certain of its rights against the principal. The extent of dividends paid by the principal need not be known at the time of the payment of the bond, nor, indeed, whether such dividends will ever be paid to any extent. Thus the pro tanto clause is not a limitation on the amount of the surety's liability but a qualification of the duty of the surety to pay and of the nature of the protection received by the public. The statute intends the depository bond to furnish security in addition to the liability of the principal. The pro tanto subrogation clause, if enforced, would contravene the statute by giving up to the surety a part of this liability of the principal and thus changing the nature of the security required by the statute. *120