after having read the (Statement of the case prefixed to. this report, proceeded to deliver the opinion of the court.
In' reviewing the grounds relied on by the complainant as the foundation of his claim to relief, the second and third, being coinci-. dent with the order ■ and progress of the transactions between the parties as stated in the bill, and evincing especially the circumstances and the attitude under which this approach to a court of equity hás been made, will be first considered, and this examination will be premised by,stating the following principles of equity jurisprudence, which may be affirmed to be without exception ;— that whosoever would seek admission into a court of equity must come with' clean hands J that such a court will never interfere in opposition to conscience or good faith; and again, and in intimate connection with the principles just stated, that it will never be called into activity to rémédy the consequences of laches or neglect, or the want of reasonable diligence. Whenever, therefore, a competent remedy or defence shall have existed at law, the party who may have neglected to use it will never be permitted here to supply the omission, to the encouragement of useless and expensive litigation, and perhaps to the subversion of justice. The effect of these principles upon the statements of the complainant is. obvious upon the slightest inspection. The complainant alleges, that the obligation to which he had voluntarily become a party was intentionally made in fraud of the law, and for this reason he prays to be relieved from its fulfilment. This prayer,.too, is preferred to a court of conscience, to á court which touches nothing that is impure. The condign and appropriate answer to such a prayer from, such a tribunal is this;,— that, however unworthy may have been the conduct of your opponent, you are confessedly in pari delicto ; you cannot he admitted here to plead your own demerits ; precisely, therefore, in the position in which you have placed yourself, in that position we must leave you. • And so with respect to the omission by the complain *205 ant to set up at law either the failure or the illegality of the consid» eration for which the note was given ; no reason is perceived why ■such a defence should not have been made or attempted. The action at law was founded upon a simple promissory note, a parol contract in legal intendment, and not upon a specialty ; the consideration was fully open to investigation, and it was surely a sufficient indulgence to the payees of that note to have been permitted once to set up a defence by which payment may have been resisted, whilst the whole consideration received by them for their undertaking would have been withheld, and absolutely possessed, and enjoyed by them. But these payees of the note did not stop even here. After the first judgment recovered against them, and after the levy of an execution sued out on'that judgment, they voluntarily go forward, the compilainant- amongst them, execute to the respondent their forthcoming bond, equivalent, in effect to a confession of a second judgment,-and after these repeated-and.'concjusive recognitions .of their liability, they invoke the aid of a court which repels whatever is unfair, or even illiberal, to declare that these proceedings, thus solemnly had and evidenced of record, shall be utterly null; that the respondent shall be stripped of his property without the ■promised equivalent, and that 'property be secured, if not to the complainant, to one with whom he was associated in effecting its rer linquishment by the owner.
Recurring now to the first ground for relief set up in the bill, being that on which greatest stress is laid, — viz., the suretyship of the complainant, and the wrong ¿lleged to have been done him by a change of his position'and responsibility, by the indulgence extended to his codefendant Pinkard, — let us test this ground, first, by the proofs upon the record, and next, by trying the accuracy of the' deductions attempted to be drawn from them. The promissory note, on which the action at law was founded, is made an exhibit, and it appears that to the name of Pinkard, the first signer of that note, there is added the word “ principal,” and to the name of each of the other makers is added the word “ surety.’.’ ■ .It is insisted by the respondent, that these designations upon the note had no effect upon the' obligations of these parties to bM, however it might be supposed to operate upon their relations with each other.; that with respect to the respondent all the makers of the note were from the beginning principals, but that at any rate, after their liability was fixed by judgment upon the note,' and still moré after their uniting in the forthcoming bond, in the nature of a second judgment, their equal responsibility as principals was irrevocably settled. In connection with this view of the case it may not be irrelevant here to remark, that by the statute of the State of Mississippi, promissory notes, though it be not so expressed upon the face of them, are declared in.their legal effect tp be joint and several.' See Howard & Hutchinson’s Statutes of Miss. 578. The proposition contended
*206
for by the respondent, were it necessary^here to pass upon it, would not be found without support from decided cases.. Thus, for in-, stance, it. was ruled by Chancellor Kent in Bay and others
v.
Tallmadge, 5 Johnson’s Chancery Reports, 305, that where bail become fixed with the payment of the debt of the defendant, their character of bail ceases ; that after judgment and execution against bail and sureties, there is an end of the relation of principal and surety, and the bail cannot claim any advantage against the creditor on the ground of want of diligence in prosecuting the principal debtor. In Prout
v.
Lennox,
Reynolds
v.
Ward,
Bank of Utica
v.
Ives,
Norris v. Crummie, 2 Randolph, 328. It is ruled, that indulgence granted by a creditor to the principal debtor will not discharge the sureties of such debtor, unless the creditor shall have bound himself in law or in equity not to pursue his remedy against .foe principal' for a definite length of'time.
Hunter’s Administrators v. Jett, 4 Randolph, 104. A surety will not be discharged by indulgence granted by foe creditor to foe principal debtor, unless such indulgence ties up the hands, of the creditor from pursuing the debtor at law ; nor will the surety be discharged evén then, if the indulgence shall have been given with his knowledge and assent.
McKinney’s Executors
v.
Waller,
Alcock
v.
Hill,
The last case which will be cited on this point is that of M’Lemore v. Powell et al.,
Order.
This cause came oh to be heard on the transcript of the record from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Mississippi, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and decreed by this court, that the decree of the .said Circuit Court in this cause be and the same is hereby* affirmed with costs.
