4 Blackf. 155 | Ind. | 1836
This was an action of debt by the assignee of a joint and several bond for the payment of á sum of money, in which he declared jointly against all the obligors j Smith and Gibbons. The record contains- no notice of Smith whatever, after the filing of the declaration. Gibbons appeared and put in a special plea in bar', upon which issue was joined; which being found for the plaintiff below, a separate judgment was rendered against Gibbons for the debt demanded and damages.
The error assigned is the rendition of this judgment against one obligor, without any disposition of the suit having been made as to his co-obligor, sued jointly with him.
The law is well settled in England, that in a joint action against several on contract, a valid judgment cannot be rendered against a part of the defendants, on -whom process may have been served, without having first proceeded to outlawry against the residue of them. 1 Strange, 473.—2 id. 1269.—15 East, 1.—1 Maule & Selw. 242. The same doctrine has been recognised and established by our own and other American decisions, substituting in the place of the English process of outlawry, statutory provisions designed to effect the same object. 1 Blackf. 106.—Ib. 139.—7 Crunch, 194.
It is true that in this case, the contract on which the suit in the Court below was founded is joint and several. Rut the defendant in error cannot avoid the force of the authorities above quoted, in consideration of that circumstance.. The only difference between a contract merely joint, and one joint and several, as respects the right of the holder of the one or the other in pursuing his remedy, is, that on the first he is obliged to sue all the living promisers, whereas on the latter he has a right to elect between one and all of them. Having made his election, the contract becomes, so far as the rules of law applicable to his remedy are concerned, purely several or purely joint; and he is no longer at liberty to consider it other
The judgment is reversed, and the proceedings subsequent to the issue set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.