(after stating the facts). As to the issue presented under the second count of the answer, it is not insisted by defendants’ counsel that said release operated as a satisfaction of the judgment. The single and decisive question presented by the demurrer to the third count of the answer is whether the composition release operated as a satisfaction of the judgment pro tanto or pro rata. There having been 16 defendants against whom judgment went, and a compromise thereof by 14 of the defendants, if this operated as a pro rata payment, it left only one-eighth part thereof unsatisfied; and, as this fractional part is admitted to be less than the sum necessary to give this court jurisdiction, it would result that the plaintiff’s action be dismissed. The party injured by,
“Any person jointly or severally liable witli others for the payment of any debt or demand may be released from such liability by the creditor and such release shall not discharge the other debtors or obligors beyond the proper proportion of the debt or demand for which the person released was liable.”
If this latter statute is applicable to this case, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that only one-eighth of said judgment remains unsatisfied; for it, in effect, declares that such release shall discharge the other debtors to the extent, but not “beyond, the proper proportion of the debt or demand for which the person released was liable.” The term “proportion” is synonymous with “pro rata.” Black, Law Dict. tit. "Pro rata,” p. 944. Plaintiff's counsel interposes, as a first objection to this latter statute, that the subject-matter of said paragraph 1102 is not sufficiently expressed in the title of the act, which is, “An act regulating contracts and promises.” And the court is asked to hold that the term “contracts and promises” is not comprehensive enough to include judgment debts. In the accepted text books, contracts are divided into three classes: (1) Contracts of record, such as judgments, recognizances, and statutes staple; (2) specialties which are under seal, such as deeds and bonds; (3) simple contracts, or contracts by parol. Judge Brewer, in Meixell v. Kirkpatrick,
The second contention of plaintiff’s counsel in this connection is that the supreme court of Kansas has construed this statute to mean that the sum paid by one tort feasor under a judgment in trespass operates in favor of (lie others only as a satisfaction pro tanto. The case of Meixell v. Kirkpatrick.
“It is further understood that the amount hereinbefore acknowledged as rewired by me is not received by me in satisfaction of said judgment except to the extend of the proportionate share of said juelgment for which last-named parties are liable.”
It would he a straineel perversiem of the; language employed in so carefully framed an instrument, hy competent; practitioners in law, to he>ld that: “the proportionate share of said juelgment” was inadvert, cutty empleiyed, or that they should not he held to have employed it in the sense of its legal acceptation, and with direct reference to said paragraph 1102 named in the agreement, which declares that the release shall ope-ra fe to discharge; “the proper proportion of the eKM,” which was fourteen-sixteenths of the judgmemt. It; does seem to me that both reason and justice demand that; the plaintiff should be bedel to the operation of said paragraph 1102, and the explicit language of the instrument of releíase. By incorporating in effect the provisions of said paragraph 1302 into the composition release,
