116 F. 1003 | D. Mass. | 1902
The voluntary petition in this case was filed December io, 1901. Mrs. Nickerson, the wife of the bankrupt, was the daughter of Mrs. Langmaid. Mrs. Langmaid had lent money to the bankrupt, for which he and his wife had given Mrs. Langmaid joint and several notes, some of which notes the bankrupt’s daughters now seek to prove against his estate. Mrs. Nickerson was also indebted to her mother for money lent directly by the latter to the former, which last indebtedness was represented by Mrs. Nickerson’s separate notes. Mrs. Langmaid died October 22, 1896. Her will contained the following clauses:
“9. I bequeath all the rest and residue of my personal estate to my three daughters, to be divided equally among them, to have and to hold absolutely share and share alike; and if any of them die before my decease, leaving children, then the share or shares which would have been taken by such daughters, had they lived, shall be divided equally among all the children left by them, and living at the time of my death.”
“14. If, at my death, any of the beneficiaries designated in this will should be indebted to me upon any liability of whatever nature, whether absolute*1004 or contingent, then the amount of all such indebtedness shall be deducted: from the share of said beneficiaries before their taking any benefit under this will; and if the husband or husbands of either or any of my said beneficiaries should be indebted to me at my death, then the amount of such indebtedness must be paid to my executor before such beneficiaries shall become entitled to partake of any benefit under this will.”
Mrs. Tangmaid had two other married daughters living at her death, both indebted to her. The husband of one daughter was also indebted to Mrs. Langmaid upon joint and several notes given her by himself and his wife. After payment of the debts of the estate, Mrs. Tang-maid’s executor calculated the valúe of all the assets, including the notes of the daughters and of the daughters’ husbands. The notes of the. bankrupt and his wife were figured and treated as shown in the following account:
Notes of Georgiana P. Nickerson, Made up with Interest at 4% to the 1st of July, 1897.
July 12, 1895, $1,225 00 int. paid to Jan. 12, ’96, 1/5/19............$ 72 00
Jan. 27, 1896, 675 00 1/5 / 4............' 38 55
Feb. 28, 1896, ■ 500 00 1/4 / 3 ............ 26 84
$2,400 00 $137 39
137 39
Total.. $2,537 39
Notes of John F. Nickerson, Made up with Interest at 6% to the 1st of
July, 1897.
Aug. 2, 1895, $ 1,000 00 int. paid to Feb. 2, ’96, 1/4/29......... $ 84 83
Dec. 6, 1895, 5,000 00 do June 6, ’96, 1/0/25......... 320 84
Dec. 31, 1895, 10,000 00 do June 30. ’96, 1/0/1......... 601 67
Jan. 2, 1896, 1,000 00 do July 2, ’96, 0/11/29........ 59 83
Mch. 2, 1896, 1,000 00 do 1/3/29......... 79 83
$18,000 00 $1,147 09
1,147 00
$19,147 00
Georgiana P. Nickerson, notes and interest...................... $ 2,537 39
John F. Nickerson, do ...................... 19,147 00
Total ................................................... $21,684 39
i
The total value of the’ estate, including all notes outstanding, was divided into thirds, each third representing a daughter’s share. In the executor’s final account, the transaction was set forth as follows: “Payment to Mrs. Nickerson of her share of the estate, of $-.”
—Under which were the following items:
To Georgiana P. Nickerson, her notes and interest to July 1st,
1897 ...........................•.............................. $ 2,537 39-
Notes of her husband, John F. Nickerson, and interest to July 1st,
1897 ......................................................... 19,147 00-
Total ....................................................$21,684 39-
Then followed a list of other securities, which were turned over to Mrs. Nickerson, and were entered in the same manner, with their values set against them. The total value of these securities, including^ the notes above referred to, was figured to be the value of Mrs. Nicker-
The first question before the court concerns the intent of Mrs. Lang-maid as manifested in article 14 of her will. That Mrs. Nickerson’s liability was dealt with, in the- first clause of that article, is plain. Whether that liability was absolute or contingent, it was, in some •sense, to be deducted from Mrs. Nickerson’s share. This has been ■done. By reason of the notes, Mrs. Nickerson’s share of Mrs. Lang-maid’s estate has been lessened, and her liability to the estate has ■ceased. The second clause of article 14 manifests no intention to ‘benefit Mrs. Langmaid’s sons-in-law. To release to them their debts was the last thing Mrs. Langmaid wished to do. As they might be ■indebted to her by obligations which did not bind their wives, and as she had not provided in the first clause for deducting such obligations from her daughters’ shares, the second clause may have been intended to meet this contingency by providing that no daughter should get her share until her husband’s liability was in some way disposed of. Mrs, Langmaid did not intend that one of her daughters should be injured by the insolvency of another daughter’s husband, but her will indicates no desire that, as between wife and husband, the liabilities of the latter should be diminished. She wished the debts of her sons-in-law to be paid, not for their benefit, but for the benefit of her estate, and of her daughters. In Bacon v. Gassett, 13 Allen, 334, the principal liability was the wife’s, the liability of the husband was only 'secondary. In South v. Williams, 12 Sim. 566, the intention to benefit the son-in-law was clear. Let us suppose that some friend of Mrs. Nickerson, at her instance, had bought from Mrs. Langmaid’s estate the notes in question, paying their face value. So far as Mrs. Langmaid’s estate was concerned, the notes would then have been paid, and nothing would have prevented Mrs. Nickerson from receiving her share of her ■mother’s property. As soon as this share was received, including the money just paid for the notes, Mrs. Nickerson, in accordance with a previous arrangement, might have reimbursed the friend advancing the ¡money, and might have left him the nominal holder of the notes, in
That the joint and several maker of a note, who is, in fact, a surety, and who takes up the note from the payee by paying the same in full, cannot, in his own name, maintain an action on the note itself against the other maker, is clear. That, under the circumstances stated, he can maintain an action in the name of the payee, was decided in Bank v. Claggett, 29 N. H. 292, and no- case to the contrary has been cited1 or found. Apart from the marital relation, there is nothing to prevent proof in this case. In Woodward v. Spurr, 141 Mass. 283, 6 N. E. 521, and in Bank v. Tyndale, 176 Mass. 547, 57 N. E. 1022, 51 L. R. A. 447, it was decided that a claim arising purely out of a written-contract between husband and wife cannot be enforced in equity, and in Re Talbot (D. C.) 110 Fed. 924, it was decided that such a claim cannot be proved in bankruptcy. If, therefore, Mrs. Nickerson’s claim for reimbursement from her husband’s estate arose purely from-the contract implied by law on the part of a principal to reimburse his surety, proof of this claim must be refused. Major v. Holmes, 124 Mass. 108. Büt the counsel for the creditors, with great ingenuity, has suggested that a surety has a claim against his principal which does not arise out of a contract, but out of the subrogation of the surety to the claim of the principal debtor,—in this case out of the subrogation of Mrs. Nickerson and her devisees to the claim of Mrs. Tangmaid. Thus, in Swire v. Redman, 1 Q. B. Div. 536, 541 j It was said by Mr. Justice Blackburn, with whom Tord Chief JusticeCockburn concurred:
“But where the two who become liable for a debt are not joint principar debtors, but from the beginning one of them is a principal and the other a surety, the ease is different. The relation of principal and surety gives to-the surety certain rights. Amongst others, the surety has a right at any time to apply to the creditor, and pay him off, and then (on giving proper indemnity for costs) to sue the principal in the creditor’s name. We are not aware of any instance in which a surety ever in practice exercised this-right; certainly, the cases in which a surety uses it must be very rare. Still, the surety has his right.”
The right of subrogation does not arise from contract. One surety is entitled to subrogation as against his co-surety even when they are not bound by the same instrument, and are ignorant of each other’s existence. Dering v. Earl of Winchelsea, 1 White & T. Lead. Cas.
“As the right of the surety does not depend upon the contract, but upon, the equities arising out of the circumstances of the case, the creditor is affected by knowledge of the true relation of the debtors, acquired at any time before he does the act which alters the position of the surety; and one who makes a promissory note for the accommodation of another is a surety, within the rule.”
This last statement must be taken to determine that the remark made by the same learned judge in Major v. Holmes, 124 Mass. ’io8, 109, viz., that in a case like this no contract of indemnity could be made or implied as between husband and wife, was not intended to deny the wife’s right of subrogation. Inasmuch, therefore, as Mrs. Nickerson, by her transaction with her mother’s executors, acquired a right of subrogation available against her husband, which subrogation did not arise from any contract with her husband, but from an equitable right against her mother, it appears to me that her legatees have a claim in bankruptcy which they can prove against her husband’s estate. The rule of law in Massachusetts, that a husband may not contract with his wife, is not construed to prevent the enforcement against his estate of all rights in their nature contractual, provided these rights did not originate in a contract made directly between the couple. Butler v. Ives, 139 Mass. 202, 29 N. E. 654.
The judgment of the referee is reversed, and the claim allowed.