10 N.H. 489 | Superior Court of New Hampshire | 1839
When the intestate paid the interest in 1831, and in 1833, the defendant was liable on the note, as well as himself, and a cause of action arose in favor of the intestate, to recover one half of those sums. The action was commenced.within six years from the time when the first of those sums was paid, and of course no question can be raised as to them. The intestate might have maintained a suit, had he lived. 3 N. H. Rep. 270, Odlin vs. Greenleaf; Crosby vs. Wyatt, ante 318.
The other part of the case raises the question whether,
Sibley vs. McAllaster, Exr., (8 N. H. Rep. 389,) was an action brought to recover money paid. The plaintiff was surety on a note signed by the defendant’s intestate. The creditors neglected to present the note to the executor for more than two years, although its existence was mentioned within that time. The plaintiff afterwards paid the note, and brought his action to recover the amount. The executor contended that all proceedings to recover the note of the estate were barred by the neglect to present it — that the surety was thereby discharged, and could not make his voluntary payment a ground of action. It was held that the omission to call upon the executor for payment, was mere neglect to proceed against the principal, which would not discharge the surety, even if it had continued so long that the remedy against the principal was barred — that the plaintiff, continuing liable, might well pay, and that he thereupon had a remedy to recover of the estate the amount he had paid. The principal question in that case was, whether the surety Avas not discharged, and thus far it has no application here. No doubt Avas entertained, that if the surety continued liable, he had the right to recover, notAvithstanding a direct remedy, by the creditor, against the estate, Avas barred by the provisions of the statute that no action should be sustained against an executor or administrator, unless the demand aves exhibited Avithin two years from the original grant of administration. Upon this latter point that case bears a strong analogy to this ; and Ave are of opinion that the plaintiff in this case is Avell entitled to recover, for the amount paid by his intestate after the period when, according to the facts stated in the case, no action could have been sustained directly against the defendant, by the payee of the note.
When the plaintiff’s intestate, and the defendant, signed the note to Thompson, there Avas an implied promise,
The cause of action which accrued to the plaintiff, as Peas-lee’s administrator, upon this last payment, is not affected by the question, whether Thompson could, or could not, at that time, maintain an. action against the defendant, upon the note. The case, in this respect, is, in principle, like that of Crosby vs. Wyatt, decided in Strafford, upon the present circuit, although different in other particulars. It is immaterial whether Peaslee’s liability was continued by evidence of partial payments, made at a time when he was liable to pay the whole, and accompanied with no disclaimer of further liability, or whether it was continued by a judgment. The administrator brings this action on an entire different promise of the defendant from that which he made to Thompson; one arising by operation of law from the same transaction, but not a promise between the same parties. There is nothing to bar an action on this promise.
Had it appeared that Peaslee was at any time discharged by the operation of the statute of limitations, and that he, or his administrator, after that, refused to avail himself of the defence, and voluntarily paid money which he could not at
On the facts of this case, the liability of Peaslee was at all times continued, and the case, as to him, taken out of the operation of the statute of limitations ; not by any new agreement, or by an assent to any new agreement, not contemplated by the original contract; but by a part performance of what was stipulated in the original contract itself. The defendant, therefore, cannot object that Peaslee paid wrongfully, or that the payment does not come within the implied promise to contribute.
Judgment on the verdict.