93 N.J. Eq. 70 | New York Court of Chancery | 1921
The complainant has supplemented its bill, as suggested in the conclusions filed May 9th, 1920 (North v. North, 91 N. J. Eq. 390), and now sets up that -on February 24th, 1921, the Plant company recovered a judgment against it for $300 damages, for failure to fill one of the orders mentioned in the “Schedule,” and that payment is demanded; and it prays that sufficient money be appropriated -out of the fund of $20,000 in, the Elizabeth Trust Company to extinguish the liability. (Since the filing of the supplemental bill the fund has been paid over to the defendant— he being financially responsible — and the prayer is regarded as calling upon him to relieve the complainant of the judgment.) The answer admits, sub silentio, the allegation, but denies the right- of the complainant to- relief. The cause came on for hearing on bill and answer. I have already held that the complainant is entitled to recover upon establishing its liability. This has now been done by the judgment. The judgment is prima fade evidence against the' defendant, and if he had notice- of the suit, and an opportunity to- defend (which is n-ot pleaded, but counsel states he had), it is conclusive against him. 32 Cyc. 270. The present position of the parties is' analogous to that of principal and surety. The defendant has now become the principal and the complainant the surety. A surety may call upon his principal to save him harmless; he need not wait until he has suffered harm by paying the debt. Irick v. Black, 17 N. J. Eq. 189; Holcombe v. Fetter, 70 N. J. Eq. 300; Chancellor v. Towell, 80 N. J. Eq. 228.
The defendant’s counsel draws a distinction between the right to equitable relief where the liability is a fixed sum, as in Loosmore v. Radford, 9 M. & W. 657 (cited in Sparkman v. Gove, 44 N. J. Law 252, and in North v. North, 93 N. J. Law 438; affirmed, Id. 476), and where, as in the present ease, the liability is unliquidated. The difference, if any, lies in the character of the proof and not in the applicability of the principle. The distinction vanishes with the coming -of the judgment. The lia
The defendant also sets up' in his answer and contends that he suffered damage to the amount of $60,000 because of the complainant’s failure to save him harmless from liability, and that, although he was limited by the ad damnum of his complaint, in his suit at law, to a maximum recovery of $20,000, which he recovered (93 N. J. Law 438), his damage of $60,000 was in fact mitigated, in some degree, at least, by the testimony of the complainant that it had novated much of the defendant’s liability ■ and had caused other of it to be canceled. This testimony, he alleges, was untrue, and he avers that he is still liable to his former customers in sums, in the aggregate, greatly in excess of the amount of his judgment, and that, therefore, it would be inequitable to compel him to apply the amount of his judgment, or any part of it, in discharge of the complainant’s liability. I confess I am unable to follow the argument. Whenever and however the defendant discharges the complainant’s liability he discharges his own. Their liability is identical. And, so, whether the defendant be compelled to apply his $20,000 verdict towards the satisfaction of one or the other of his customer-creditors’ claims, it releases both only to that extent, leaving each still liable for the balance. The defendant’s dilemma is that he has not enough money-verdict to go around. This unfortunate situation was brought about by the rule of the law court. The jury was not privileged to award the defendant as much as he now asserts is necessary to relieve him of the liability against which the complainant had promised to protect him, because in his pleadings he had limited the amount of his damage, which was unliquidated, to $20,000. Excelsior Electric Co. v. Sweet, 59 N. J. Law 441. Withdrawal of a juror, by permission of the court, and an amendment to an otherwise formal part of the pleading, and a new trial, or submitting to a nonsuit and a suit de novo, were
This situation may arise hereafter — it is not now before me. A customer-creditor may sue the complainant only, foregoing his right of action against the defendant. If, perchance, the customer should be one whose claim the complainant set up in the action at law as having been settled or taken over by it, the defendant could, probably, raise an estoppel and defeat the complainant’s bill for protection pro tanto.
The complainant is entitled to a cl e'er ee for the amount of tbe Plaut judgment.