10 Wend. 498 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1833
By the Court,
The principal question in this case is, when did the plaintiff’s cause of action against the defendant accrue %
The payments by the plaintiff, on account of the note negotiated to Harrison, were made on or before the third day of
As to the cause of action set forth in the first count of the declaration : On the 26th May, 1821, Hedden, having previously paid $20, made a further payment of $100 on a ca. sa. which had been issued against him on a judgment obtained upon the note specified in that count, and gave his note for $28,10, payable 60 days after date to the plaintiff in the execution. This note was given to the plaintiff’s attorney in full satisfaction of the judgment, and he paid a portion of the money received of Hedden to the plaintiff in the judgment, and gave to him the note for $28,10, in full of his claim.
If the giving of this note, under the circumstances of the case, can be considered so much money paid by Hedden for Rodman, then the whole cause of action was complete in Hedden on the 26th of May, 1821, when the note was given, which was two months before Rodman left the state. The statute having in that event commenced running before Rod-man’s departure, as to the whole cause of action, and more than six years having elapsed before the commencement of this suit, the whole cause of action is barred by the statute. It is true, as a general rule, that a surety, as such, cannot call on his principal at law until he has actually paid the money. Although a judgment be recovered against him, and he be imprisoned upon a ca. sa., still that is no satisfaction to the creditor for his debt, or discharge of the principal debtor, and does not therefore entitle the surety to call upon the principal for money paid to his use. But where there is an express promise on the part of the principal to indemnify and save the surety harmless, and the surety is sued and charged in execution, the promise to indemnify is broken, and an action may be maintained without the debt having been paid by the surety ; but he will recover, not the amount of the debt, but only a compensation for the injury which he shows himself to have sustained.. These principles were adjudged in Powell v. Smith, 8 Johns. R. 249, and are sustained by the authorities there referred to: 5 Coke, 86 ; 1 Taunt. 486 ; Cowp. 525; 1 T. R. 599 ; 2 id, 100; 2 Esp. N, P. 528; 3 East, 169. But
Both the special counts allege that the defendant promised to provide money for the payment of the notes, endorsed (for his accommodation) by the plaintiff, when the same should become due and payable, and to indemnify and save harmless the plaintiff from any loss or damage, for or by reason of his endorsing the notes; and upon the issue of non-assumpsit, the jury found that the defendant did so undertake and promise, although the bill of exceptions contains no evidence of any such special undertaking. If such was the contract, it was undoubtedly broken by the omission of the defendant to take up the notes at maturity, and suffering the plaintiff to be sued upon them ; and the plaintiff might immediately have sustained an action for the breach of the contract, although he would have recovered only nominal damages. Upon this point there can be no doubt; the authorities are clear and explicit. 3 Wils. 13. 8 Johns. R. 249. 3 Barn, & Ald. 288, 626. 5 Barn. & Cres. 259. Howell v. Young, 11 Com. L. R. 219, S. C. But although it is true, as a general rule, as is shown by some of the above cases, that the breach of the contract, or the omission to do what the party had undertaken to perform, is the foundation and gist of the action, and not the damages which may subsequently result from such omission, still that doctrine is not, I apprehend, applicable in its full force and strictness to a case like this, of principal and surety. Wherever a surety pays money for his principal, by virtue of a legal obligation to pay, it is money paid to his use, and gives the surety an immediate and present cause of action against his principal. The case of Butler v. Wright, 20 Johns. R. 367, and 2 Wendell, 369, affords a strong illustration of this principle. Wright, in that case, was the first, and Butler the second endorser of a promissory note discounted at the Middle District Bank, for the accommodation and sole benefit of the maker, one Joseph A. Bostwick. The note not having been paid at maturity,
Judgment reversed.