69 So. 1011 | Miss. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts will be stated largely from the brief and in the language of counsel for appellant:
“On March 27, 1907, the J. H. Jaffray Construction Company of Vicksburg, Contractors, entered into a written contract with Mrs. Wm. B. Levy, of that city, for the building and completion for her of a two-story brick veneer residence on her certain lot in that city, according to the plans, specifications, and drawings made by the architect, one Michael J. Donovan, acting for Mrs. Levy, for the sum of ten thousand and four hundred (10,400) dollars.
“By the terms of the contract, no payments were to be made until a satisfactory bond had been accepted. The work was commenced on the contract and thereafter, to wit, on May 13, 1907, the J. H. Jaffray Construction Company executed and delivered to Mrs. Levy a bond in the penal sum of five thousand (5,000) dollars, with the appellant company as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance by the Jaffray Construction Company of their contract aforesaid with Mrs. Levy, according to the terms, covenants, and conditions thereof.
“On the same day that the last-mentioned bond was executed, the J. H. Jaffray Construction Company executed and delivered to the appellant company its bond of*860 indemnity in the penal sum of twenty-five hundred (2,500) dollars, with Pat Henry and T. B». Foster (appellees herein) as sureties, reciting therein the execution of the-bond for five thousand (5,000) dollars, on which the appellant was the surety for the J. H. Jaffray Construction Company, at the special instance and request of the obligors, and conditioned that the obligors in said twenty-five hundred (2,500) dollar bond of the J. H. Jaffray Construction Company, and appellees ‘shall and do pay in advance the premiums or charge of fifty-two ($52) dollars made by appellants for executing its bond and continuing the same so long as -the company’s liability on the said bond or obligation shall continue, and the said liability on said bond shall continue so long as the above-recited bond shall be in force and until the company shall be discharged or released from any further liability thereunder, and until sufficient notice, in writing, of the termination of the said bond and the liability thereunder shall be served upon the company, and shall hold and keep harmless the company from and against any and all loss, damages, costs, counsel fees, charges, and expenses of whatever nature or kind which the company shall or may at any time, incur, sustain or be put to, for or by reason, or in consequence of the company having given and executed the said bond; also shall reimburse the company for any and all moneys, with interest, advanced or loaned by the company to the contractor for the purpose of said contract; also for all costs, counsel fees, and expenses which it may incur in investigating any application for advance or loans, or in or about prosecuting or defending any action, suit or other proceedings which may be commenced or prosecuted against said contractor or against the company, upon the said bond or in anywise in relation thereto.’ ”
It is the further contention of appellant that the construction company failed to perform' its contract with Mrs. Levy, and that Mrs. Levy was Compelled to em
It appears from the record that immediately upon the institution by Mrs. Levy of the suit against appellant it notified appellees, as indemnitors, of the pendency of this suit and called upon them to appear and defend it. Appellees are themselves attorneys, and at that time Mr. Henry was a member of the law firm of Henry, Fox & Canizaro. In pursuance of the notice given appellees, they requested the firm of Henry, Fox & Canizaro to defend the suit of Mrs. Levy; and thereupon this firm, in connection with the law firm of Hirsch, Dent & Landau, the attorneys advising with and representing appellant about this matter at" the time the suit was begun, appeared for the defense, filed- the necessary pleas, and jointly tried the case in the circuit court. When the adverse judgment was rendered against the construction company and appellant, its surety, both firms agreed that an appeal should be prosecuted to the supreme court by appellant. An appeal bond was given and the case removed to the appellate court. Mr. Fox for and on’ behalf of appellees, and Mr. Hirsch for appellant, jointly prepared and had printed and filed in the supreme court a brief for the appellant. That cause was submitted on briefs in the supreme court and was ready to be decided when Mr. Hirsch, as counsel for appellant, compromised and settled the whole case by the payment of three thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars and entered into a written agreement with counsel for Mrs. Levy that the judgment of the lower court might
“In the above-styled cause (after styling), it is agreed that this case shall be affirmed without opinion.”
And, after styling the cause:
“In the above-stvled cause it has been agreed that the appeal herein shall be affirmed, and it is now further agreed between counsel for appellant and appellee that the judgment may be settled in full as between the parties to this agreement for the sum of three thousand, one hundred and twenty-five dollars, with interest from this date, and payment of all costs by appellant. ’ ’
Both agreements are dated March 11, 1910 and the second agreement was not filed in the supreme court. After paying the agreed amount appellant instituted the present suit against appellees, alleging in its declaration the execution and delivery of the indemnity bond, charging a breach thereof, and averring that it was forced to pay the “judgment, interest, costs, damages, and attorneys’ fees in the sum of about five thousand
On the trial appellant introduced the judgment which it compromised and settled, the bond of the construction company in favor of Mrs. Levy, the contract between Mrs. Levy, and the construction company, the indemnity bond given by appellees in this case, the court files in the case of Mrs. Levy against the construction company and appellant in the circuit court as well as in the supreme court, the agreements between private counsel for appellant and counsel for Mrs. Levy, and the oral testimony of Mr. J. Hirsch. After the plaintiff liad rested; the defendant introduced Mr. Carl Fox and also appellees as witnesses in their own behalf. There was proof of certain expenses,' court costs, and attorney’s fees incurred by appellant in defending the Mrs. Levy suit and demand is made for this under the provision of the indemnity bond stipulating that the indemnitors shall hold the indemnitees harmless “from and against any and all loss, damages, costs, counsel’s fee, charges and
“It is not disputed that the case was appealed to the supreme court by the appellant company, appellees’ witness, Mr. Hirsch, testifying that it was with the consent of the appellee Henry; and the appellee Judge Henry testifying that he advised and insisted on the appeal and that no question of not appealing the case was ever discussed. It is not disputed that after the case had been, appealed appellant’s attorneys, Smith, Hirsch & Landau, together with Mr. Fox, the attorney appearing for Henry & Foster in the Levy calise, prepared a brief for the supreme court for the appellant in the Levi case; in other words, that it was a joint brief of Smith, Hirsch & Landau and Henry, Fox & Canizaro.”
Mr. Hirsch in his testimony frankly admits that the appeal was prosecuted by mutual consent of all' parties; that when he consulted Mr. Henry about making the settlement that Henry protested and that he after-wards settled the case without the further knowledge of Mr. Henry and against his advice, and without the knowledge or consent of Mr. Foster. He was asked:
“You didn’t consider Mr. Henry’s or Mr. Foster’s rights at all in determining whether to abandon that appeal? A. I considered the rights of my client. . . . Q. You ’just considered your client’s interest and let these other people go ? A.' Of course, I considered my client’s interest paramount.”
Mr. Hirsch further states he became convinced that there was no merit in the appeal, and believed the case
The general rule of law, sustaining which the authorities are in accord, is that where the indemnitee is sued, the judgment rendered against him is conclusive upon the indemnitor, provided always, that'notice be given to the latter and fair opportunity is given to defend the original action; but when the indemnitor, being thus liable over, is given due notice of the pendency of the suit against his indemnitee and requested to defend the action,. he is then regarded, not as a stranger to the litigation, but the really interested defendant, and should be accorded all reasonable opportunity and the full right to submit any legitimate defense, to controvert by proper pleadings the claim sued on, to reserve exception to any alleged erroneous ruling of the trial court, and to prosecute an appeal from any adverse judgment.
“In order to bind an indemnitor to a judgment rendered against the indemnitee the covenantor must be tendered a full and fair opportunity to meet the controversy, ... he should be allowed all the means of defense open to him had he been made a party.” Freeman on Judgments, section 181.
Appellees in this case were duly notified or vouched to defend the suit of Mrs. Levy, and the judgment of the circuit court would be binding upon them had no appeal been prosecuted. By common consent appellant super
It is contended by counsel for appellant that the judgment rendered fixes liability against appellant and also defines liability to that extent and concludes appellees. It occurs to us that the judgment of the circuit court was superseded by the appeal, and that the agreement that the case should be affirmed without an opinion and compromised for approximately one thousand, one hundred dollars less than the full demand, simply, at best, under the circumstances of this case, placed appellant in the attitude of paying to Mrs. Levy by agreement the sum of three thousand, one hundred and twenty-five dollars. The result, however, is more far-reaching than this. The judgment being in reality a mere compromise no longer operated as a definitive judgment. The court of last re
“ That is, the indemnitor is entitled, under such circumstances, to all the rights of defense to such a suit, including the right of review, which belonged to the indemnitee as the real party thereto. Under the law of New Jersey, the right to a writ of error is absolute. It was as much the right of the plaintiff in error as indemnitor, under*868 the circumstances disclosed by this record, to have taken the case to a reviewing court, as it was to defend the suit against the Security Company in the lower court, provided he exercised that right in good faith and with reasonable promptness, and it was as much the duty of the Security Company, as indemnitee, to refrain from obstructing or interfering with that right, as it was to offer every opportunity for the proper defense of the suit in the court below. The reciprocal rights and duties arise from the law of this particular contract.”
A case very similar, indeed, to the case at bar, and relied on by counsel for appellees, is that of the American Surety Co. v. Ballman, 115 Fed. 292, 53 C. C. A. 152. The opinion is by the circuit court of appeals for the eighth circuit and we desire to adopt as expressing our views that part of the language of the opinion as fallows:
“An adverse judgment was rendered by the trial court, which was deemed erroneous, and thereupon, in accordance with the understanding between the parties, a writ of error was sued out in good faith, and a transcript of the record filed in the appellate court, and briefs of defendants’ counsel, so that the cause was ready to be argued and submitted on its merits, when the plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants, dismissed the writ of error, and paid to the Burlington Elevator Company the full amount of the judgment against it. Even though the plaintiff had not formally dismissed the writ of error, its payment of the judgment appealed from necessarily worked that result, and terminated the defendants’ right to prosecute a writ of error to final judgment in the court of appeals. Ill view of the agreement of the parties, this action on the part of the plaintiff clearly estops it from now asserting any claim against the defendants based on the judgment of the Burlington Elevator Company against it. Under the facts found by the circuit court, the payment of that judgment*869 by the plaintiff was a waiver of any claim against the defendants based on it.
‘ ‘ A further contention of the plaintiff in error is that, if the facts ráise an estoppel, it extends no further than to merely destroy the conclusiveness as against the defendants of the judgment obtained by the Burlington Elevator Company against the plaintiff. Since the plaintiff by its notice compelled the defendants to either defend the former action, or to be bound by the judgment, and they did defend it in good faith and at great expense, until their right to do so was cut off by the wrongful act of the plaintiff, the plaintiff cannot compel them to incur the same expense to make the same defense which it called upon them to make in the former action. That would have the effect of permitting it to litigate again the question of its liability on the primary bond in this suit. It cannot play fast and loose with sureties in that way. By compelling them to defend the former action, and then depriving them of the benefit of a full defense, it deprived itself of the right to pursue these sureties, and discharged them from liability. Stark v. Fuller, 42 Pa. 320.”
It cannot well be said that the right of appellees to complain of the weakness of Mrs. Levy’s demand still exists. If they can be called upon to litigate in this case, the points at issue in the Mrs. Levy suit, then we would be confronted in this record with a retrial of the entire Mrs. Levy case; but the case of Mrs. Levy has gone into the judicial history of the state without an opinion and is a closed chapter. The door of inquiry into the merits of that litigation has been voluntarily closed by appellant. It would be contrary to every sense of justice to hold that appellees are bound by a judgment rendered without opportunity accorded them to defend themselves, especially when the very appeal prosecuted in the Mrs. Levy ease was taken and prosecuted at the expense of appellees. To use a common expression, the latter were
There is no testimony to show liability in this case except for the mere fact of the rendition of the judgment in favor of Mrs. Levy, and testimony as to certain expenses of litigation in that case, and a solicitor’s fee paid
Reversed amd remanded.