4 Ind. 130 | Ind. | 1853
Debt by the defendants in error against the plaintiffs in error, upon a bond of which the following is a copy. The date is the 15th of March, 1850. “Know all men by these presents, that Isaac Schooley and Arner Allen, of, &c., are held and firmly bound unto James Stoops, John. M. Myers, and Andrew M. Earley, of, &c., in the penal sum of 600 dollars, for the payment of which they bind themselves, &c. The condition of the above obligation is as follows: that the above-named Schooley has this day sold unto the said Stoops, Myers, and Earley, a tract or parcel of land lying in Grant county, Indiana, and described as follows: a part, &c., containing eighty acres, for the sum of 1,200 dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, for which the said Schooley made unto the said Stoops, Myers, and Earley, a warranty deed, conveying to them the title in fee-simple of said premises, while at the same time an incumbrance remained by mortgage, of 200 dollars, in favor of Russ and Beauchamp, dated June 1st, 1841, at 10 per cent, interest; now, if the said Schooley satisfies the said mortgage or incumbrance within seventy-five days from the making of this obligation, then,” &c.
Breach, that he did not satisfy said incumbrance.
The defendants made default; a jury of inquiry was sworn to assess the damages; the only evidence offered for their consideration was the bond above set out; and they were instructed by the Court that upon it, the measure of damages was the amount of the mortgage specified in the bond, with 10 per cent, interest from the 1st of
The payment by Schooley of the damages recovered below in this case, will not discharge him from liability to pay to Russ and Beauchamp the amount due on the mortgage upon the land sold to Stoops, Myers, and Earley. He may be sued for that claim at any time, and he, or his legal representative, must be sued for it whenever it shall be collected by suit.
Had the debt to Russ and Beauchamp, which Schooley and Allen bound themselves in the bond sued on to pay, been originally due from Stoops, Myers, and Earley, then, on the failure of said obligors to pay said debt, the direct liability of those three men would have remained to pay it, and on their recovery of the sum in a suit against said obligors, the said obligors would be discharged, and would not remain liable to pay the sum a second time. In such a case there would be no hardship, at least, in the recovery of the full amount in a suit on the bond before the party suing had actually paid the money.
But in the case before us, a party gives bond to pay a debt of his own, which is a lien on land sold by him, by a given day, and fails to do it. Nevertheless, he still remains liable to pay the debt, to be sued for it, and one or the other, or both of these things may happen. The purchasers of the land bound by the lien have not paid it off, and may never do it; and have not, so far as appears, suffered any inconvenience. Why, then, should they recover for damages they have not sustained, and may never sustain? Suppose Schooley and Allen had paid off the incumbrance in question to Russ and Beauchamp on the day after the forfeiture of the bond, and had then been sued by Stoops, Myers and Earley, would these men, in such case, have been entitled to recover the full amount, or could the defendants have shown that no damage had been sustained, and thus reduced the amount recovered to nominal damages? They may still pay off said incumbrance, and why should the obligees in the bond re
We are aware that there are cases, and particularly Lethbridge v. Mylton, 2 Barnw. and Adolph. 772, that seem to be against the view we have taken, but we think the rule they support an unreasonable one. See Sedgwick on Damages, 2 ed., pp. 182, 183.
The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.