4 Pa. 348 | Pa. | 1846
George W. Rue purchased at sheriff’s sale a certain tract of land, in Bucks county, for which a deed, duly acknowledged, was delivered to him by the sheriff. Rue gave notice, under the act of Assembly in such cases made and provided, to the persons in possession; and at the proper time, when the justices of the peace and a jury, summoned by the sheriff of said county in pursuance of a precept issued by the said justices, were assembled, Samuel White appeared and made oath before the justices that he came dnto possession of the premises under title derived to him from Benjamin Rue,-the person as whose property the land was sold, before the date of the judgment against said Benjamin, on which the levy and sale took place. And thereupon the said Samuel White, with Mahlon G. Hibbs and James G. Plibbs as his sureties, entered into'a recognisance, the obligatory part of which is in the following words: “ Now, therefore, the coridition of this recognisance is such, that if the said Samuel White shall appear at the next Court of Com
It is unnecessary to consider the questions arising on the bills of exceptions to the admission in evidence of the records of the action in ejectment and for mesne profits, because the whole case will be disposed of in deciding upon the instructions given by the court to the jury.
The contract by which a surety becomes bound is voluntary on his part without profit or advantage, and without having in view the prospect of gain. It is an act of benevolence to the obligor, and of convenience to the obligee; and of emphatic use to both. The obligations of social duty require therefore that he should be dealt with in fairness, and in a spirit of the utmost good faith. The obligor
See also, Commonwealth v. Simonton, 1 Watts, 310. We are of opinion, that the variation of and departure from the terms of the contract, and recognisance in this case by Rue and White, discharged the surety.
The judgment of the court below is, therefore, reversed.