39 A. 196 | R.I. | 1898
The plaintiff sued for a balance due on a promissory note given to it by Patrick H. Horgan, Charles C. Pierce, and Daniel Galvin, August 8, 1892, for the sum of $10,000, secured by mortgage on real estate in Newport. Daniel Galvin died August 8, 1894, and afterwards the real estate was sold under the mortgage for the sum of $6,700.
On motion of the defendant, Catherine Galvin, executrix, the surviving joint debtor, Horgan, was summoned in; the other, Pierce, not being within this jurisdiction. *348
At the trial the plaintiff produced the note, proved the amount due upon it, and rested.
Catherine Galvin then asked the court to rule that she was entitled to a verdict because the plaintiff had not pursued the surviving debtors to judgment and execution, which request was denied.
Under Pub. Stat. R.I. cap. 204, § 28, in force at the date of the note, the representative of one jointly bound with another was made chargeable, by virtue of such obligation, in the same manner as such representative might have been charged if the obligors had been bound severally as well as jointly; "provided, that the plaintiff shall first pursue the surviving debtor to final judgment and execution." The claim is that this proviso fixed the liability of the parties so as to make the liability of a deceased party subsequent to that of the surviving debtors, and that this liability could not be affected by the provisions of the Judiciary Act, cap. 13, § 17, passed May 19, 1893, which limited the proviso to partnership contracts, thus leaving the representatives of other joint debtors to be pursued as under a several contract.
We do not think that the claim of the defendant is tenable. Under both the former and subsequent laws each debtor was chargeable severally. There has been no change in the liability. The only change has been in the remedy. Under the former act the representative could not be sued until after judgment and execution against the surviving debtor, and under the later act he may be sued before such judgment and execution. In both cases the right and liability to contribution and the ultimate liability for the whole, if the surviving debtors are unable to pay, remain the same. The change is simply in the time when the representative may be sued, and this is clearly a change of remedy only. No right is affected, for if a creditor should, under the present law, first sue a representative when the surviving debtors are able to pay, the representative may compel contribution, and the result is the same as though they had been first sued and then compelled contribution from the representative. The proposition that changes may be made in a remedy is *349
too plain for argument. The subject was fully discussed inPenniman, Pet'r,
The request for a ruling, upon the ground stated, having been denied, the defendant proceeded to offer testimony. Without attempting to follow the numerous exceptions which were taken, it is sufficient to say that the defence to the claim for a balance due on the note was by way of recoupment for damages arising from the improper conduct of the plaintiff's agent in the sale, on account of which the property was sold for a sum for below its value, whereas a fair sale would have produced more than enough to pay the note. It appeared that the sale of the property was entrusted by the plaintiff to Edward Newton, then its treasurer, who bid in the property for himself for the sum of $6,700. Much testimony was offered to show the relation between Newton and Horgan in regard to the property after the sale, in support of the charge of a fraudulent sale, which was excluded upon the ground that after the sale Newton was no longer agent for the bank, and that what he did with the property was immaterial. So far as the matter of agency is concerned the ruling was clearly correct; but, still, the subsequent conduct of the parties might show that they were acting in collusion and fraudulently as regards the Galvin interest. When testimony goes to show that the buyer at the sale was only a nominal purchaser, and that Galvin's co-debtor continued to exercise all the appearance of ownership and to use the estate as his own, it is quite a different thing from testimony which would show the same state of affairs between the buyer and a stranger to the estate. The difference lies in the relationship of joint obligors between Horgan and Galvin, which presents an element of fraud when the sale is made for the benefit of one and to the detriment of the other; whereas a sale for the same sum for the benefit of a stranger might show, primafacie at least, only inadequacy of price. Proof of such collusion would most naturally appear in conduct after the sale had been made, but it would tend to show that it existed and operated at the time of the sale. But even if this is so, and if some of the testimony offered by the *350
defendant was pertinent to what she wanted to prove, still we do not see how we can grant a new trial in this case. The defendant Galvin put in evidence the record in the suit in equity brought by her against Newton,