6 Ind. 128 | Ind. | 1855
Bill in chancery by sureties to enforce an alleged equitable estoppel.
The bill alleges that Dickerson and John L. Shook were sureties, and David P. Shook principal, in a surplus revenue bond for the loan of 203 dollars, executed on the 11th of February, 1847, with interest payable in advance. The bond is stated to have been joint and several, but that the relation of principal and surety subsisting between the obligors was well known to the county officers with whom the loan was negotiated. It was due February 11, 1848. On the third of March, 1848, the ninth of March, 1849, and the fifth of February, 1851, respectively, a year’s interest was paid by David P. Shook, which settled the interest payable in advance, up to February 11,1850.
The complainants aver that in consideration of these payments, the officers having control of the surplus revenue fund extended the time of payment of the principal sum to the said David, without the consent or knowledge of his sureties.
It is further alleged, that in September, 1851, a judgment at law was recovered on the bond against all the parties, by default. And the reason set up for not defending at
Demurrer to the bill sustained, and, on complainants failing to amend, dismissed.
It is objected that there is no release of errors. The objection is not well taken. Addleman v. Mormon, 7 Blackf. 31, is referred to in support of the objection. But that decision is on a statute different from the one governing this case. These proceedings were had while the statute of 1843 was in force. The provision on that subject is, that “ such complainant shall indorse and sign on his bill a release of errors in said judgment, whenever required so to do by the judge granting such injunction, or by the Court.” R. S. 1843, p. 852, s. 130. To make the objection available, it should appear that such an order had been made, and that the complainant had failed to comply. It is only when required to do so, that he is to indorse a release of errors on his bill.
The main question in the case, viz., the doctrine of equitable estoppel, though urged by complainants, is not discussed by the defendants’ counsel. It is not proposed to go into it further than the case made in the bill requires.
Equitable estoppel is generally thus defined: When the payee, upon an agreement supported by a sufficient consideration, extends time of payment to the principal, without the consent of the surety, the latter is discharged, the payee being equitably estopped.
The instrument by which these parties were bound, reads in these words: “We, or either of us, promise to pay to the state of Indiana, for the use of the surplus revenue deposited with the state of Indiana, on or before the 11th day of February, 1848, the sum of 203 dollars and 27 cents, with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent, per annum in advance, commencing on the 11th
Here, it will be perceived, is a direct liability under seal. The sureties do not undertake collaterally. The agreement to pay is joint and several, and made directly to the state, for the use, &e. These features, it will be seen, divest the case of part of the subtleties surrounding the question.
That the payment of interest in advance is a sufficient consideration to support an agreement for further forbearance, is too well settled to admit of discussion. Bailey v. Adams, 10 New Hamp. 162.—Fowler v. Brooks, 13 id. 240.—Mc Comb v. Kittridge, 14 Ohio 348.—Harbert v. Dumont, 3 Ind. 346. Here, it is alleged, that upon a contract for forbearance, in consideration of the payment of interest, the time was extended from year to year without the consent of the sureties.
Without stopping to inquire what subtle distinctions the authorities draw against the complainants, even on this state of facts, and without reference to the surplus revenue acts, we proceed at once to the main question. Was this defence available in equity only, or was it also available at law ?
Admitting it to have been available in equity only, it might be suggested whether the bill should not have been filed while the legal proceedings were pending. However that may be is not so material; for if the matter set up was a defence at law, then the Court below was correct in dismissing the bill.
The leading case on the side that it was not a defence at law, is Davey v. Prendergrass, 5 Barn. and Ald. 187. The decisions in 8 Price 467, 4 Wash. 620, 1 Mees. and Welsb. 564, Tate v. Wymond, 7 Blackf. 240, Carr v. Howard, 8 id. 190, go upon the authority of Davey v. Prender
That was an action of debt on a surety bond conditioned for the payment, in one month, of whatever balance might ^e found due on settlement, not exceeding <£500. The second plea set up that the plaintiffs had, by parol agreement, without the privity of the defendants, given time to the principal to pay, by instalments of <£100 a month, the balance of <£1,099 found due on settlement, and a warrant of attorney was given accordingly. Abbott, C. J., puts the decision on purely technical grounds. Thus: “ The ground of my opinion in this case, is that general rule of the common law which requires that the obligation created by an instrument under seal shall be discharged by force of an instrument of equal validity.” In the separate opinion of Holroyd, justice, it is said—“ The mere giving time by parol, without consideration, is not even binding on the party himself. That [the warrant of attorney] was certainly a good consideration for the forbearance. But a mere engagement not to sue for a limited time, is not a release in law of the original debt.”
This decision was in 1821. In 1836, the case of Ashbee v. Pidduck, often relied upon, to the same effect, was made in the Court of Exchequer. There three persons had signed a bond, and as in the case at bar, it did not appear anywhere on the face of the bond that two of them were sureties for the other. And it was held that a release by the obligee to the representative of.one of the deceased obligors, was no answer to an action against the surviving obligors. 1 Mees. and Welsb. 364.
The American editor appends a note, successfully questioning this decision, on the authority both of American and English cases. Among others he cites The Bank v. Woodward, 5 N. H. 99; Gifford v. Allen, 3 Met. 255; and Bell v. Banks (by Tindal, C. J.,) 3 Scott N. R. 503. And the report shows that the ruling is not one on which the -Court had taken time to advise, but is given in a conversational ,way by Abinger, C. B., in the course of the argument at bar.
1. That it not appearing on the face of the bond that the defendants were sureties, it could not, as against the obligee, be pleaded and shown that they were so. Accordingly, Ashbee v. Pidduck, supra.
2. That a mere engagement not to sue for a limited time, even supported by a good consideration, is not a release in law of the original debt, and therefore can not operate to release the surety.
3. That an instrument under seal can not be released or discharged by a parol agreement.
On the first point, the decisions are numerous and conclusive against the ruling of the English Courts. Harris v. Brooks, 21 Pick. 195.— Carpenter v. King, 9 Met. 511.— The Bank v. Hoge, 6 Ham. 17.—Bank v. Kent, 4 N. H. 221.—Artcher v. Douglass, 5 Denio 307.—Bell v. Banks, 3 Scott, N. R., 503. And to the same effect, though with obvious misgivings on the part of the Court, Harbert v. Dumont, 3 Ind. 346. Carpenter v. King was debt on a judgment rendered on a joint obligation, without anything on its face to show that one was merely surety for the other. After judgment against both, a parol assurance was given to the surety that it was paid. It was held that, even in the absence of fraud, the defendant, going behind the judgment, might show the collateral relations subsisting between the payors, within the knowledge of the plaintiff, and thus form a basis for the defence growing out of the subsequent acts of the plaintiff. The other authorities are directly in point to the same effect. In Bell v. Banks, the reasoning of Tindal, C. J., is that the giving forbearance to the principal, without the knowledge of the surety, is a legal fraud upon the latter; and the defence growing out of this fact, coupled with the subsidiary relations of the parties, is not in contravention of the terms of the contract. In Harbert v. Dumont, supra, Harbert sued Cheek, Dumont and Glenn, on a joint and several note. Dumont and Glenn pleaded that in consideration of
2. The second proposition is equally untenable, viz., “that a mere engagement not to sue for a limited time, even supported by a good consideration, is not a release in law of the original debt, and therefore can not operate to release the surety.” The error is in assuming that to release the surety, the contract must be such as to release the debt as to all the parties. This is not necessary, and is not claimed. It is not pretended that the forbearance given discharges the principal. But such indulgence, without consent, &c., is set up as an act of the plaintiff, collateral to the main contract, which entitles the surety to be exonerated.
That the forbearance is only for a limited time can not affect the case. The suspension of the right to sue for a month, or even a day, is as effectual to release the surety as a year or two years. Fellows v. Prentiss, 3 Denio 512. The existence of such a contract for delay as, if violated, would give the principal debtor a right of action, will be sufficient to discharge the surety. Such contract need not deprive the creditor of the power of suing. It need not be such as the debtor could plead in bar of the suit. If it fetter and embarrass the discretion of the creditor, it changes the situation of the surety. Owen v. Homan, as quoted in 3 Ind. 349.— Turrill v. Boynton, 23 Vt. 142.— Smith v. Day, id. 656.
3. The third position assumed in Davey v. Prendergrass, and seemingly sanctioned in 7 Blackf. 260, and 8 Blackf. 190, presents, at first impression, more difficulty. That an instrument under seal can not be released or discharged by
It is upon this justly recognized distinction that the Courts which have ventured to question the English decisions have proceeded. In Carpenter v. King, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts apply it to a judgment. In The Bank v. Leavitt, the Supreme Court of Ohio apply it to a specialty. The facts in that case were these: A bond had been executed by two persons, the relations of " whom, as principal and surety, were known to the plaintiff, though the fact of such relation did not appear on the face of the instrument. The bank accepted a confessed judgment from the principal, with an agreement for the stay of execution. By the terms of this agreement, forbearance was extended eighteen months. The plea setting up these facts came before the Court on demurrer. The Court say—“ A surety can not be further bound than by the terms of his undertaking. These terms can not be changed without his consent. If any change is made, to the prejudice of his rights, without such consent, he may hold his obligation at an end. Any act which suspends his right to an instant pursuit of such remedy as belongs to sureties, absolves him from his liability. The defence which such an act gives to the surety is one proper to be set up in a Court of law. The doctrine is originally of chancery.”
And 2 Rand. 333, and numerous other authorities, are cited.
The Bank v. Hoge was an action on a joint and several bond against three obligors. Plea, that they had executed the specialty as sureties, with notice of that fact to the plaintiff, and that the bank had subsequently bound itself to extend the time to the principal. Replication, that the defendants were estopped by their seal, &c. But the Court say—“ There is no attempt here to deny the obligation of this paper or to evade its admissions. The defence sets up a distinct and independent fact beyond the terms of the writing, -not controverting any of its stipulations.” 6 Ham. 17.
In Artcher v. Douglass, the obligors of a bond given to indemnify the sheriff, were permitted to show that they were sureties, and so enable them to set up in defence that the principal had been released. 5 Denio 307.
. We therefore conclude, on the weight of the American authorities, that the doctrine of equitable estoppel is a defence available at law as well as in equity.
Whether the facts here set up for relief in chancery would have constituted a good and complete defence at law, we do not decide. It is not before us. Nor do we give any intimation what effect we think our statutes in relation to sureties generally might have on such questions in a Court of law. Nor particularly do we decide what may be the effect of the provisions of the statute in relation to the surplus revenue, on the case at bar.
All we do decide is, that the matter set up, if a defence at all, was available at law. That the defendants were presumed to know. That they were otherwise advised and believed, does not avail. Platt v. Scott, 6 Blackf. 389. They have had their day in Court. That a party has mistaken his rights, and so failed to make his defence at law, does not entitle him to relief in chancery. Raines v. Scott, 13 Ohio 7.—Raburn v. Shortridge, 2 Blackf. 480.—Park v. Morton, 5 id. 1, and the authorities there cited.
The decree is affirmed with costs.