delivered the opinion of the Court.
The facts of this case, arranged and compressed, are these.' Previous to Oct. 31, 1814, Colburn, Stevens and Flitner, had become the sureties of Smith, for sundry debts which ho owed, to the amount of about $500; and on that day Smith conveyed to them the prem
It has been urged that Smith’s deed to Colburn, Stevens and Flitner, may and should be considered as a mortgage; but this is not the fact. There was no defeasance; but only a written promise, not under seal, to reconvey; of course the cases to this point do not apply. The absolute estate vested, in equal proportions, in the three grantees; and though Flitner did not pay any part of the demands for which they all became responsible, that circumstance had no effect on his vested title, or any tendency to impair it. The only remedy that Colburn and Stevens have, is .an action against Flitner to compel him to reimburse them the sum they have advanced for him. If he is unable to pay them, it is his and their misfortune. There is no legal ground for the argument in favor of construing the estate in Flitner, as a trust estate. The language of the deed negatives this construction; and the authorities cited by the counsel for the petitioner, as well as many others, clearly shew this. The consequence is that when Jewett extended his execution on the one undivided sixth part of the premises, as there stated of Flitner, he was
Alter having given this simple statement of the important facts of the case, and applied to them a few plain principles of law, it is unnecessary that we should advert to any other points which were discussed in the argument. We are all of opinion, that the defence fails ; and there must he Judgment on the verdict.
