1 Ind. 397 | Ind. | 1849
Assumpsit. Common count for money paid; plea, that the cause of action originated in the following manner, namely: On the 2d of September, 1839, the defendant drew a bill of exchange directed to Durbin, and delivered the same to the plaintiff, thereby requesting said Durbin to pay the plaintiff or order, at the Merchants Bank of
The question which this case presents is, whether a discharge in bankruptcy is a bar to an action brought by one co-surety against another for contribution, when the entire debt of the principal for which the parties litigant were bound as sureties, was paid by the plaintiff after such discharge of the defendant.
The fifth section of the act of congress to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy, approved August 19th, 1841, provides that sureties, indorsees, bail, or other persons having uncertain or contingent demands against the bankrupt, “ shall be permitted to come in and prove such debts or claims,” under the act, and shall “ have a right, when their debts or demands become absolute, to have the same allowed them,” and may “have the present value thereof ascertained under the direction of the Court and allowed them accordingly as debts in presentí;” and, by a provision of the fourth section, all claims provable are barred by the discharge of a bankrupt. It was accordingly held by this Court, in the case of Dean v. Speakman, 7 Blackf. 317, that where one of several joint makers of a note had been, after the execution of
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded for a new trial.