The defendant moves to set aside the verdict for the plaintiffs, and for a new trial, mainly upon the ground that upon the proofs disclosed a recovery is not sanctioned by the law. The action is by the plaintiffs as indorsers against the defendant as acceptor of a certain inland ■bill of exchange, dated April 1,1886, for $3,000, at 90 days, drawn by
It is urged for the defendant that the parties litigant, being all accommodation parties to the bill, were co-sureties for the drawer; that therefore the plaintiffs can maintain no action on the bill as such, and may only recover in separate actions, and upon the equitable principle of contribution, such an amount as each has paid in excess of the one-third part of the bill.
With respect to business paper, the parties thereto are liable to each other in succession, as their names appear. The acceptor of a bill is the principal debtor.' As between successive indorsors, the writing imports a several and successive, not a joint, obligation. In this respect there is no distinction between accommodation and other paper. They are both governed by the same rules. 3 Kent, Comm. *86. It is competent for the accommodation parties to a bill, as between themselves, to contract for a liability different from that evidenced by the paper itself, and parol evidence thereof is receivable. Phillips v. Preston, 5 How. 278. But, wanting such independent agreement, the several successive parties to accommodation paper arc bound to those succeeding them, who have been compelled to meet the obligation. In such case parties are not hound to contribution. The principle upon which the rule is founded, is this: The indorser has incurred a contingent liability upon the faith of the antecedent names to the paper, and by payment becomes
In addition to the foregoing, I have fallen upon decisions in two other states sustaining the contention of the defendant, which it may bo well to notice. Flint v. Day, 9 Vt. 345, and Pitkin v. Flanagan, 23 Vt. 160, 166, both sustain the theory of the defense, but they are doubted in Keith v. Goodwin, 31 Vt. 268, 276, and would seem to be of no present, or at least of doubtful, authority in that stale. In Daniel v. McRae, 2 Hawks, 590, by a divided court, accommodation parties to commercial paper are held to be co-sureties in whatever order or character they are placed upon the paper. The doctrine declared came for review before the supreme court of North Carolina in Richards v. Simms, 1 Dev. & B. 48, 51. The court states that the rule in that state had been so generally acquiesced in that, upon the principle of stare decisis, it felt bound to follow it as established law; but the judges unanimously declared that, wore the question res integra, the principle could not be sanctioned; and they “should say, as has been said by the rest of the mercantile world, that the parties to accommodation paper were to be governed by the same rules as parties are governed whose names are on other or business paper.” It may therefore fairly be said that the few decisions in this country upholding the contention of the defendant ha.ve been repudiated and shorn of their authority within their respective jurisdictions, and that the courts of the states, so far as they have spoken, approve and follow the decisions ox the supreme federal tribunal.
The case of Reynolds v. Wheeler, 10 C. B. (N. S.) 561, undoubtedly sustains the defense here. It sanctions the right of an accommodation acceptor to contribution from an accommodation indorser. The decision is based upon general principles of suretyship, overlooking the presumption oribe mercantile law that subsequent accommodation parties signed in reliance upon the responsibility of the prior accommodation parties. The case was decided in 1861, and appears not to have been reviewed in any court. It would seem to be opposed to the principle upon which Fentum v. Pocock, 5 Taunt. 192, was decided, wherein Lord Chief Justice Maxseield remarked : “And I never before know that there was any difference between an acceptance given for accommodation, and an acceptance for value.” I am referred to and can find no other case in England directly to the question. The absence of other authority in that country is somewhat remarkable. The case stands alone; citing no authority to sustain, in opposition 'to the general current of authority, and in antagonism to the ruling in McDonald v. Magruder, which may not be disregarded in this court.
It may not be denied that there is an engaging, persuasive equity in the principle that all sureties should, share equally the burden assumed; and that in general is the law. “Equality is equity.” But in the case of commercial paper a superior equity intervenes, in that liability has been assumed upon the faith of prior engagement, and that without respect to knowledge of the accommodation character of precedent stipulation. And, after all, the distinction between the two classes of authorities is more apparent than real; or is perhaps one resting in the burden of proof. The one assumes the contract to be as appears upon the face of the paper, construed by the mercantile law, permitting and enforcing all agreements for a different liabilitj' inter se. The other declines to assume that the one party has become bound upon faith of the other’s precedent engagement, and treats all accommodation parties, however they may appear upon the paper, as co-sureties and equally bound for the debt, and so liable to contribute; but likewise recognizing and enforcing any different engagement between the parties. Whichever rule may seem the more equitable and to be preferred, the former is too firmly established to be disturbed. Individual notion of right must now yield- to the wiser judgment of the law.
It is also insisted for the defendant that the court erred in failing to submit to the consideration of the jury the question whether the proceeds of the original draft were applied by Buchanan in whole or in part towards the payment of other paper upon which the plaintiffs or one of them were indorsers. On January 1, 1886, the bank held four pieces of Buchanan’s paper, severally indorsed for accommodation by one or the other of the plaintiffs, but no one piece indorsed by both. Three-
Buchanan requested the acceptance of Campbell to enable him to raise money “to run his business.” The defendant accepted the bill, and returned it to the drawer, with a view to its use for that general purpose. There was no restriction upon its use for the needs of the drawer in his business. If the proceeds were applied by Buchanan towards the discharge of his debt, that was one of the uses contemplated. That was no fraud upon the defendant. If with the proceeds Buchanan discharged in part a debt for which Winsted, one of the plaintiffs, was holden as an accommodation indorser, that is not an availing defense. It was none the less the debt of Buchanan, which he was obliged to discharge, and could rightfully discharge with the proceeds of the Campbell acceptance. Tt is of the first importance in any business that one should pay maturing obligations, and that object must be deemed to have been within the contemplation of the defendant in accepting this bill. It was a legitimate use of the credit loaned by him. But, if otherwise, it was the act of Buchanan, and not of the plaintiff Winsted. He is not shown to have had any connection with or knowledge of the transaction. If known to him, it is not perceived that the fact would avail to discharge the liability of the defendant upon his acceptance. It is true that thereby Winsted was relieved of his contingent liability upon that note, or, rather, that his contingent liability for that debt was transferred to the bill in suit. The debt, however, was the debt of Buchanan, which he was primarily obligated to discharge. The defendant’s credit was loaned that moans might be obtained by Buchanan to meet his obligations. It was wholly immaterial in this connection whether the proceeds of the credit loaned were used for future speculation, or to enable Buchanan to meet past obligations, and to continue his business. And, again, the plaintiffs sue as joint owners of the bill. The defense assorted, if otherwise availing, cannot advantage the defendant here. It could only be well pleaded