33 N.C. 294 | N.C. | 1850
This is a suit in tort to recover from the defendants a certain sum of money paid by the plaintiff to their use. The defendants, among other pleas, pleaded severally their certificate and discharge under the bankrupt law. On the trial it appeared that the plaintiff became the surety of the defendants to one Logan for $2,100; that on the defendants becoming insolvent he was forced to pay the said debt with costs, and thereupon instituted this suit. The court was of opinion that the plaintiff *216 could not elect to sue in tort in this case; and, in deference to this opinion, the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit and appealed. (295) The only question is whether a surety, who has paid money for his principal, can declare intort, so as to escape from the plea of a certificate in bankruptcy. The plaintiff's counsel was not able to show any authority in support of his position, and it cannot be supported upon any fair reasoning upon the nature of the cause of action. In fact, if a surety is allowed his election to declare in tort or in contract, the landmarks by which actions are distinguished will be entirely obliterated and the marked difference between actions ex contractu and actions ex delicto will be lost sight of.
In Williamson v. Dickens,
Without undertaking to run out the dividing line between those cases in which the plaintiff must declare in contract and those when he has his election to declare in contract or in tort, and to reconcile the cases, it is sufficient for us to say that there is no authority nor reason for allowing the plaintiff in this case to declare in tort.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Bond v. Hilton,
(296)