29 Ind. 347 | Ind. | 1868
Suit against husband and wife to foreclose a mortgage made on the 3d of September, 1866, upon real estate, the property of the wife. The mortgage was given to secure accommodation endorsers upon a note of the husband, payable in bank, and executed in August, 1866, for four thousand dollars. By the same instrument, which was executed by both husband and wife, a quantity of personal property of the husband, amply sufficient to pay the debt, was also mortgaged to the endorsers, to secure them for the same liability. It was provided in the mortgage that if the endorsers should obtain an extension of the indebtedness by renewal of the note, or otherwise, the mortgage should stand as their security the same as upon the original note. They did obtain an extension by renewal, and upon the maturity of the new note the husband was insolvent, and the endorsers were compelled to pay the debt. The wife, now appellant, answered in three' paragraphs, very much alike, the best one of which averred that the plaintiffs negligently
For the purposes of the present case, it may be assumed that when a wife mortgages her property for the debt of her husband, she may claim all the rights and privilege's of a surety. The question then remains, does the merely passive negligence of a creditor, whereby another sufficient security held by him upon the property of the principal debtor becomes unavailable or worthless, discharge the surety; or, in this case, the real estate of the wife ?• In the absence ’ of authority, the question would be one of some difficulty, for, as a problem of ethics, each side of it is capable of support by considerations of much weight. Should the creditor be active, not only to protect himself, but also to save the surety from ultimate loss, in the absence of bad faith, and when there is nothing in the contract or circum
But the question is strictly one of existing law, and in its determination we must be guided by what has been adjudged. It is well settled that an affirmative act of the creditor, whereby any indemnity of which the surety might avail himself is put out of his reach, discharges the surety pro tanta. Such affirmative act wotild otherwise operate as a positive- fraud upon the surety, and the consequences must fall upon the party who is guilty of the act. This is plain justice.
But we know of no American case where loss of another security, in consequence of mere passiveness, in the absence of a request to act, has been held to discharge the surety. The contrary was ruled in Schroeppell v. Shaw, 3 Comst. 446. In that case, the creditor, in consequence of most glaring negligence, failed to make the debt out of a collateral, not suing upon it for over two years, and finally neglecting to docket his judgment, whereby the lien was lost, and other liens attached to the whole value of the property within reach. There was no request to sue by the surety. The case was decided upon two grounds: 1. That after judgment at law against him, the surety could not have relief in equity, the facts being as available for defense at law as in a bill in equity. 2. That in any event, the facts were not sufficient to discharge the surety, because he was in default. He should have paid the debt, and then prosecuted the collateral himself, taking into his own hands the means of his indemnification. The learned judge who delivered the opinion in that case, after noticing the cases in detail which had been cited as being favorable to the surety, concludes
In Hampton v. Levy, 1 McCord Ch. R. (S. Car.) 107, and in Lang v. Brevard, 3 Strobh. Eq. R. 59, the very question before us was directly involved, and it was held, in both cases, that the surety was not discharged. In the last case, it was said that he should have been diligent to secure his own protection by requesting the creditor to register the mortgage, and that if such reasonable request had not been complied with, then he would have been discharged. In King v. Baldwin, 17 Johns. 384, where the claim for discharge rested upon the unreasonable failure to sue the principal debtor, though requested, until he became insolvent, the same doctrine was applied after the fullest consideration. Whether it was justly applicable to such a case as' that, has been denied in many of the states, where it is held that the mere. request by the surety to sue the principal is not sufficient to so impose that duty upon the creditor that its neglect will discharge the former. But this can but. strengthen it as against the surety.
The cases upon the question in hand are very fully collected in the valuable notes to Rees v. Berrington, 2 Lead. Ca. Eq., pt. 2, p. 707, and therefore we do not cite them in detail.
Two other questions are made, which may be disposed of together. They are, 1. That the mortgage, having been given a month after the original note was indorsed, was without consideration as to the wife. 2. That the stipulation in the mortgage that it should stand as security for a note given in renewal of the original note, was not binding upon the wife, and that the taking up of the original, by a note in renewal, was an absolute satisfaction of the former as to her. .
The first of these questions cannot avail the appellant, if
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.