6 Port. 32 | Ala. | 1837
This action is debt — instituted in the Circuit court of Madison, on a sheriff’s bond, signed by William McBroom, as principal, and the plaintiffs in error, as his sureties.
The breach assigned, is the non-payment of money, collected on a venditioni exponas.
The defendants pleaded four several pleas — the two first of which are substantially the same; and shew the death of William McBroom, in January, one thousand eight hundred,and twenty-eight — administration on his estate in May, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight, and publication thereof as re
At the trial, no evidence being offered by the plaintiff, to shew any demand of the money collected, the court was requested to instruct the jury, that no action could be maintained, without shewing a demand— which request was refused, and the defendants excepted. To reverse the judgment rendered against them, the plaintiffs in error have brought the case into this court; and assign, that the Circuit court erred, in sustaining the demurrer to the two pleas, and in re-* fusing to give the instructions by them requested.
It is insisted, that all claims against the estate of any deceased person, not presented to the executor or administrator within eighteen months after the cause of action has accrued, or within the same pei’iod after the grant of letters testamentary, or of administration, are extinguished, and forever barred, under the statute of non-claim ;
The statute was certainly intended to present a complete bar, under which the executor or administrator might rest, with security, and proceed to distribute the estate, according to the directions of the will,,or under the statue of distribution, and the ,cre
Admitting this, as the true construction, which must be given to our statute of non-claim, we will proceed to examine whether the consequences flow from this construction, which have been insisted on, by the plaintiffs in error. The general rule, without doubt, is, that the extinction of the liability of the principal debtor, is also, the extinction of the liability of the surety ; but an exception obtains, when this extinction is caused by operation of law. The same rule attaches to all cases of joint contracts. The extinction of the contract, as to one of several joint contractors, is an extinction as to all, but the same exception must prevail.
In the case under consideration no act is alleged to have been done by the creditor, which has affected the subject matter of the contract, or which has changed the situation of the parties. He is charged, alone, with having been passive, and with an act of omission,—by reason of which, it is said, his right is extinguished, as to all of the co-obligors. We look-in vain to the terms of the contract, for a sanction to this argument,—and if supported at all, it must be from the analogies of the law.
It is said, that the surety has the right to indemni
If, in consequence of the delay of the creditor to pursue his remedy against the estate of the principal clebtor, a loss has accrued, it is not perceived how this circumstance, of itself, should destroy the. obligation of the surety, any more than in any other case, where loss is the consequence of the delay of the creditor. No case has, or, as it is believed, can, be shewn, in which it has been held, that mere passiveness will discharge the surety.
There is no legal obligation tobe active, except at the request of the surety, (Eyer vs Everett
It is supposed that the bankrupt and insolvent laws of Great Britain, must present questions analogous to the one which arises in this case, in as much as these laws provide for the extinction of the debt due from ■the bankrupt or insolvent debtor. Accordingly, we find, on reference to. many cases, the very principles maintained, which we have declared. Soutten vs Soutten;
It seems to be admitted, by the argument, that this discharge of the surety, springs out of the statute of non-claim, if at all, and did not exist at common law; and yet, by the common law, in case of a partial insolvency, the omission of the creditor to proceed against the estate of the principal debtor, would have ■worked an entire loss to the sureties, as the whole estate might have been exhausted on other liabilities; and when the surety came to enforce his claim, he might be met with the plea, of fully administered.— The case of Cope vs Smith,
The case of The Nashville Bank vs Campbell et al,
But the principle does not rest on authority alone— it is supported by the ¡plainest principles of equity.— If the estate of McBroom, the principal debtor, was either wholly or partially insolvent, it could neither be just or equitable, that the creditor should lose the whole of his demand, when, under no circumstances, could he have recovered it from the estate of the deceased debtor.
In such a case, to sustain the pleas, would operate as the infliction of a penalty, — and a reward would be given to the sureties, for the omission of the creditor, to prosecute his claim.
Even in cases where a creditor has two funds, to which he might have resorted, to secure his debt, one of which could not have been reached by the debtor, or by his surety, and this one has been lost, by the wilful omission of the creditor to proceed against it; yet these circumstances do not constitute a de-fence at law. Thus, in the case of Folliot vs Ogden,
If it is within the power of the plaintiffs in error to shew, .that the creditor in this case, might and ought to have resorted, in the first instance, to the fund created by the deceased debtor’s estate; and that, by reason of his culpable omission so to do, a loss will be sustained by thpm, if payment is enforced against them, on. the bond, — they might, perhaps, have relief in a court of equity, to the extent of the injury, according to the principles laid down in the case of Wright vs Nutt.
Our conclusion is, that the pleas pleaded, present no legal defence to this action; and if the declaration was sufficient in law, there would have been no error in sustaining the demurrer to them.
But, on looking into the declaration, we are satisfied that it also is vicious. There is no allegation, that the money collected by McBroom was ever demanded from him, or from his administrators, before the institution of this suit. This Court has already decided, (Barton vs Peck,
The sheriff is the agent, appointed by law, to collect the money on executions ; but he is not bound to
The general rule, in relation to all agents who collect money under a lawful authority, is, that until a demand or request made, they are not liable to a suit. Bee Armstrong vs Smith;
These views shew that the exception taken before the jury, for the want of evidence of demand, was unnecessary; and as no averment was made, it was unnecessary to prove the fact: but, as the averment was omitted, in the declaration, the demurrer to the pleas should have been overruled, and the declaration pronounced bad.
The judgment rendered, must be reversed, and the cause remanded; and the pleadings may be amended in the court below.
Aikin’s Digest, 153.
6 Conn. Rep.28 ; 15 Mass. Rep. 6: 16 ib. 179; 3 New H. Rep. 491; 13 Mass. Rep. 201; § Piek. 140.
2 Russ. 381.
1 D. & R. 521: 5 B. & A. 852.
3 Wilson, 262.
6 Taunt. 329.
4 B. & A. 493.
2 M. & S. 195.
4 D. & R. 30.—2 B. & C. 558.
3 Ib. 269,
8 Serg. & Raul. 110.
MS. 7 Yerger.
1 Hen. Black. 123.
1 Hen. Black. 136.
1 Stewart & Porter, 486.
3 Camp. 347.
1 B. & B. 370.
3 B. & A. 696.
3 Mass. 294.
3 Black. In. Rep. 251.
3 Black. In. Rep. 324.
1 Taunt. 572.
5 Cowen. 376.