40 Ind. 211 | Ind. | 1872
This was an action brought by the appellee against the appellant for money paid by him for the use of the appellant. Issues were made; after the overruling of a demurrer to the complaint,^there was a trial by a jury, and a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant
The facts stated in the complaint are, that John W. Waugh recovered a judgment in the common pleas of said county, on the 13th day of November, 1867, against Robert Boyd and Adam Laidla, for two hundred and eighteen dollars and sixty-three cents. The judgment was rendered by default. The court found that Laidla was surety only on the note, and it was ordered by the court that the judgment be levied of the property of Boyd, and that the sheriff should not proceed against the property of Laidla until the property of Boyd should be exhausted. It was further ordered by the court, that the judgment should not be repleviable unless the replevin bail should specially undertake to pay the same, if said judgment could not be collected of Boyd; that shortly after the rendition of said judgment, and before any execution was issued on the same, the said Boyd removed from the State, and has ever since been a non-resident of the State; and that at the time of the rendering of' said judgment, and ever since, the said Boyd w;as and has been insolvent; that on the 15th day of January, 1868, an execution was issued on said judgment, upon the order of Waugh, and placed in the hands of the sheriff; that the sheriff could find no property of the said Boyd on which to levy, and called on said Laidla and demanded payment of him, and threatened to levy the execution on his property; that Laidla was then and still is in good circumstances, owning' property worth seven thousand dollars; that being alarmed lest his property should be levied upon, he called on plaintiff to. accompany him to Lafayette and become replevin bail on said judgment for him, the said Laidla, on the said execution; that plaintiff not wishing to spare the time from his business, offered to advance the money to said Laidla to pay the execution; but hedeclhied the same, on the pretence that he wished, for personal reasons, to keep the plaintiff Waugh from getting his money as long as he possibly could; that this plaintiff finding that Laidla refused to
The question is, whether the complaint shows that Loveless was induced to execute the recognizance of replevin bail by the fraud of Laidla. We think it quite clear, from the allegations of the complaint, that Loveless believed that he was becoming security for Laidla, and that Laidla would be responsible to him if he should have the debt to pay. The finding in the judgment, that Laidla was the security of Boyd, the order that the execution to be issued on the judgment should be first levied on the .property of Boyd, and that the judgment should not be replevied unless the replevin bail would stipulate to pay the judgment in case the the same could not be made of the principal debtor, are all irregular, to say the least of them. No written complaint was filed by the surety, as contemplated by sec. 674, 2 G. & H. 308. But, on the contrary, both the principal and surety made default. No objection was made by the surety at the
The learned counsel for appellant refers us to Seeright v. Fletcher, 6 Blackf. 380. In that case the action was upon a delivery bond. The defendant pleaded that the constable who took the bond falsely and fraudulently represented to the defendant that the property was to be delivered to the constable on the 5th day of April, 1842, at 10 o’clock, a. m., and not on the 8th day of April, as stated in the condition; and that the bond was executed in confidence of said false and fraudulent representations, without the same being read to him, and that he was thereby deceived and prevented from delivering said property on the day named in the condition, to wit, the 8th day of April, etc. A demurrer to this plea was sustained by the court below, and in reference to that ruling, the following is the language used by the learned judge who wrote the opinion: “The first,error assigned is, that the court sustained the demurrer to the defendant’s special plea. The demurrer we think was correctly sustained. It does not appear that the defendant was deceived by the representations made to him, or if he was, it is manifest that it was the consequence of his own folly. If the defendant were an illiterate man, and the bond had been misread to him, he not being able to detect the imposition, the case would have been different. But it appears that he signed the bond without reading it himself, or hearing it read, and with all the means of knowing the truth in his power, reposed a blind confidence in representations not calculated to deceive a man of ordinary prudence and circumspection. In such a case the law affords no relief. 2 Stark. Ev. 374.” It seems that the false representation relied upon in that case was
In Rogers v. Place, 29 Ind. 577, this court had the point in question under consideration, and having the case of Seeright v. Fletcher before it as an authority, said: “In the absence of any device to put the party off his guard, an omission to read the instrument by one having the capacity to do so, will place him beyond the protection of the law; and the maxim, ‘ vigilantibus, non dormientibus, jura subveniuht,’ will apply to him with all its force.”
In Keller v. The Equitable Fire Insurance Company, 28 Ind. 170, this court said: “Thus, if it be the law that a contracting party may not rely upon the representations of the party with whom he contracts, ás to the contents of a written instrument, but must examine the instrument for himself, it is at the same time implied that the party who represents the contents of the instrument shall not, by his own act, have rendered such examination of more than ordinary difficulty. In other words, the amount of diligence required is to be determined by the relation of the parties and the circumstances of each case.” It is clear to us that Loveless executed the instrument in question under a misapprehension of its nature, and that such misapprehension was caused by the representations of Laidla. By these representations he supposed, and had a right to suppose, that the instrument which he was to sign was an ordinary recognizance of replevin bail. It is not fair that Laidla should now say that Loveless should have read the instrument before he signed it, in order to see whether he was becoming security for him or for some one else. He had requested Loveless to become his security, to replevy the judgment for him. He did not want to borrow the money of Loveless,' and pay off the execution, for the reason that he wanted to keep Waugh out of the money as long as
The judgment is affirmed, with ten per cent, damages and costs.