176 A. 282 | N.H. | 1935
The extent of a surety's liability depends upon the terms of his contract. Brown Durrell Co. v. Belisle,
In the present case it plainly appears from the language of the condition of the bond that the sureties guaranteed nothing except the performance of the principal's obligation, and the decisive inquiry, therefore, is whether the agreed facts disclose any legal or equitable defence which was available to Arthur Lavigne, Jr., the principal named in the bond. If such a defence existed, it is equally available to Arthur Lavigne, Sr., the surety, whose liability is at issue here. Intervening impossibility of performance on the part of the principal is the defence upon which the surety relies in this case.
Ever since the case of Paradine v. Jane, Aleyn 26, was decided in 1647, it has been well understood that there is a clear distinction *226
between obligations created by contract and those created by law as regards impossibility of performance as a defence. 5 Page, Contracts, s. 2674; Note to Runyon v. Culver (
The most common application of this principle is found in cases of common carriers where it is held that a breach of their law-imposed obligation to make safe delivery is excused by impossibility of performance. 5 Page, Contracts, s. 2674. In Horter v. Mullen,
The obligation of a father to support his child is clearly a law-imposed duty, and since the bond in suit is an undertaking to secure the performance of this obligation, the above principle might well be held to apply.
Doubt as to the applicability of this principle may arise, however, from the fact that in the present case the parental obligation of Arthur Lavigne, Jr., was commuted by order of court into one requiring the payment of a sum of money each week and that the bond is, in terms, conditioned only upon the making of such payments. If, for this reason, the bond is to be regarded only as a voluntary undertaking to secure the payment of money, the inability of the principal to pay would be regarded only as "subjective impossibility," (3 Williston, Contracts, s. 1932) which does not excuse the performance of a contract. *227
It is not necessary for us to decide at this time, however, whether impossibility of performance due to the illness of the principal constitutes a defence as a matter of law in the present case, since the defendant is clearly entitled to relief upon another ground. Under the agreed facts, it cannot be doubted that the principal was entitled in equity to have the order for support vacated from the date of his disability. This would have relieved the defendant from his obligation as surety upon the bond. Under our informal system of procedure, it is equally clear that the surety had a right to intervene in the proceeding brought by the principal in his lifetime to secure revision of the order and prosecute the same to judgment. It is not suggested that the defendant's failure to do so before the principal died was prejudicial to the plaintiff, and there is no apparent reason why he should not now assert that right. An order should, therefore, be made nunc pro tunc, vacating the order for support as of the date when the principal's disability began, and in the present proceeding judgment should be entered for the defendant.
Judgment for the defendant.
All concurred.