79 Me. 351 | Me. | 1887
This action, brought upon a contract of indemnity, comes to this court upon a full report of the evidence, with the stipulation that the court is authorized to draw such inferences therefrom as a jury might legally do.
It appears that the plaintiff, on January 24, 1871, gave his negotiable promissory note for two hundred and nine dollars, to Harrison Dorr, guardian of Eosetta Dorr, niece of the defend
After judgement was rendered against him, this plaintiff paid, the amount of it, together with costs of suit, to the plaintiff in that action, and now seeks to recover the sum thus paid, amounting to four hundred and seventy-nine dollars, from the defendant in this suit.
To entitle him to a recovery he must show that some other-person has established a better title to the money upon that note-than the defendant herself had, and that he has been compelled, to pay it to such person. This he may do in one of two ways r (1) By ordinary proof of an outstanding better title in such third person, to which he yielded and paid; or (2), by a judgment against him by such third person, to which the defendant was party or privy, and which judgment he has been compelled, to pay. Hall v. Thayer, 12 Met. 136.
The plaintiff does not base his claim upon the ordinary proof of an outstanding superior title in some third person to which he yielded and paid, but upon the recovery of a judgment against him, payment of the same, and for which the defendant was bound to indemnify and save him harmless.
The defendant was not a party to the action upon which that judgment was rendered. Prima facie she was not bound by
From an examination of the evidence it is apparent that the cause of action in the other suit was the identical note which this defendant had induced the plaintiff to pay over to her — the amount of which she acknowledges she received from the plaintiff at the time of agreeing to indemnify him in consequeuce of such payment. With this connecting parol evidence, together with the copy of the declaration and of the note in question, as well .as with what appears from the other evidence in the case, the identity of the cause of action in that suit with the subject matter to which the indemnity relates is sufficiently established.
Was the judgment therein rendered against this plaintiff’, conclusive against the defendant in this action? It was, provided she had due notice of the pendency of the action in which that judgment was rendered and had an opportunity to defend it. The rule seems to be established, that when a person is responsible over to another, either by operation of law or by express contract, and notice has been given him of the pendency of the suit, and he has been requested to take upon himself the defence of it, he is iso longer regarded as a stranger to the judgment that may be recovered, because he has the right to appear and defend the action, equally as if he were a party to the record. When notice is thus given, the judgment, if obtained without fraud or collusion, will be conclusive against him, whether he has appeared or not. Veazie v. R. R. Co. 49 Maine, 124; Hardy v. Nelson, 27 Maine, 580; Boston v. Worthington, 10 Gray, 498; Littleton v Richardson, 34 N. H. 187.
We are of the opinion, from the evidence before us, and with the inferences legitimately to be drawn from it, that the defendant had such notice of the pendency of the suit as renders the judgment recovered therein conclusive against her. She
But the defendant contends that there is no sufficient legal evidence introduced of any judgment such as the plaintiff has alleged in the several counts of his writ — that there is a fatal variance between the allegations and the proof — and consequently the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.
At the time the order for judgment was sent down from the law court an entry was made upon the docket of the county where the action was pending, for hearing in costs by the defendant. No vouchers have ever been filed by the plaintiff in that action, and no hearing had by the defendant therein in relation to costs. Consequently no extended record of the judgment has ever been made, as appears from the testimony of the clerk. True, a record was commenced, but it was never completed. That portion of the record which the clerk had commenced, a copy of which was introduced, shows affirmatively that it is incomplete, never having been made up and attested by the clerk. When the record is once made up, however, it becomes conclusive upon all parties until altered or set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction, and the statements contained in it must be regarded as importing absolute verity, and not subject to explanation or contradiction by any evidence outside of such record. But until the record is in fact fully extended, it is well settled that the docket is the record, and the entries therein are the only proper evidence of the judgment. Willard v. Whitney 49 Maine, 238; Leathers v. Cooley, id. 342.
The fact that there may be no fully extended record does not affect the judgment. That is the principal thing — the record is only evidence of it. Here the certified copies of the docket entries were introduced, and they show that judgment was rendered against this plaintiff for the sum of two hundred and nine dollars, with interest from January 24, 1871 — the full .amount of the note — "as per certificate from clerk of law court received and filed June 10, 1884.” By R. S., c. 77, § 45, it
Were this an action of debt brought upon the judgment itself it would necessarily be against the party defendant therein named and the plaintiff might therefore, meet with serious difficulty in the introduction of a judgment in evidence, in support of his allegations, differing so widely as to the time of its rendition from the time alleged in the first three counts of the plaintiff’s writ, viz.: June 9, 1884.
But the basis of the plaintiff’s claim is assumpsit and not debt —it is founded on a promise of indemnity and not on a contract of record. His claim is to recover in assumpsit for the money which he has been compelled to pay by force of that judgment. In addition to the special counts in his writ he has declared upon the general count for money paid, — and we think he is entitled to maintain this action under that count. The judgment therefore becomes admissible and competent evidence between these parties. Hardy v. Nelson, 27 Maine, 530; Holbrook v. Holbrook, 15 Maine, 11.
Nor do we think that the objection of the defendant is tenable, that there being a written contract of indemnity the plaintiff must declare specially upon such contract, and will not be allowed to introduce proof in support of his claim under the general count for money paid. The objection is one of form and does not touch the real merits of the case. Still if it rests on sound legal principles it is the duty of the court to give effect to it. It is undoubtedly the general rule of law, that where the parties have made an express contract the law will not imply one. But ibis rule is not inflexible, and like most general rules is subject
It is also a reasonable' and well recognized principle of law settled by numerous decided cases, that where there is an express contract of indemnity, and by its terms it contains nothing more than the law would imply, it is optional with the plaintiff to declare in general indebitatus assumpsit for money paid, or upon the special contract.
This question arose in Gibbs v. Bryant, 1 Pick. 118, where a written promise of indemnity had been given to the plaintiff by the defendant, and upon objection by the defendant that there was a special agreement which ought to have been declared on, the court say: "This objection cannot avail the defendant, because the written contract produced contained nothing more than what the law would imply. The right of action rests upon the payment of money for the use of the defendant. The law raises a promise, and the plaintiff may make use of his written contract or not, as he pleases. If there is anything in the written promise to contradict the implication of law, the defendant may show it.”
Precisely the same doctrine was laid down in Sanborn v. Emerson, 12 N. H. 58, where the declaration contained a general count for money paid, laid out and expended for the use of the defendant. There the plaintiff had receipted for the property of the defendant, attached in sundry suits commenced against him, and had the actual custody of it, and at the request of the defendant the plaintiff delivered the property to him, the defendant expressly agreeing that the plaintiff should be indemnified and saved harmless on account of the obligation resting upon him in consequence of his having receipted the property attached. Judgments were afterwards recovered in the several
The relation of the present parties in reference to the note upon which the indemnity was given, was such as would in law raise an implied duty or obligation of indemnity as strong as where a receiptor upon request, had delivered up property to the owner against whom suits had been commenced. The defendant in the one case had no right to the property — in the other, no right to the money or note, and the contract of indemnity in both cases contained no more than the law would imply.
The plaintiff alleges that he has paid so much money for the use of the defendant. To sustain this allegation it is necessary for him to show that the money Avas paid at the defendant’s request, either express or implied. "The request to pay, and the payment according to it, constitute the debt, and whether the request be direct, as where the party is expressly desired by the defendant to pay, or indirect where he is placed by him under a liability to pay, and does pay, makes no difference. ... In every case, therefore, in which there has been a payment of money by the plaintiff to a third party; at the request of the defendant, express or implied, on a promise, express or implied, to repay the amount, this form of action is maintainable.”
The only remaining question relates to the measure of damages under the particular facts and circumstances of this case. What is the defendant’s liability under this branch of the case ? She was notified of the pendency of the action against this plaintiff in which the title to the note in question and the validity of payment to her were put in issue. She appeared and participated in the defence, and has paid the counsel fees. It was her duty thus to appear and if possible save this plaintiff harmless on account of his paying, upon her representations, the note to her when in fact she had neither the legal title to it, nor the lawful right to the money upon it. Judgment being rendered against this plaintiff, the defendant was called upon and requested by him to settle the same, and this she refused .to do. After such refusal the plaintiff was not obliged to wait until his property was seized on execution issued upon that judgment before being authorized in law to pay the same.
The amount he paid to relieve himself from the judgment against him, as appears by the evidence, was no more than the judgment rendered and costs legally taxable against him in that suit and incident to that judgment. This the plaintiff has paid in good faith. He is entitled to recover it as the measure of his damages. Coolidge v. Brigham, 5 Met. 72; B. & A. R. R. Co. v. Richardson, 135 Mass. 477; Ryerson v. Chapman,
Judgment for plaintiff for $479.00 and interest thereon from the date of writ.