| Cal. | Jul 1, 1867

Lead Opinion

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:

The plaintiff sued Lovejoy—the surviving partner of Love-joy & Co.—and Grandvoinet, upon a joint and several promissory note made by Lovejoy" & Co. and Grandvoinet to the plaintiff. Grandvoinet relied for a defense mainly on the fact that Lovejoy & Co. were the principal debtors, that he was only their surety, and that the plaintiff after having commenced this action and attached sufficient property of Lovejoy to satisfy the demand, released the property Rom the attachment, and the same was attached by other, creditors of Love-joy. The Court gave judgment for the plaintiff.

All the makers of a joint and several promissory note, whatever may be "their true relation between themselves, stand, as to the payee, as principals. The promise of each is an absolute and primary promise, not a conditional or secondary promise. The creditor is not interested in knowing the relation of the makers with each other. In a suit on the note, he ought not to be delayed by an investigation into matters which do not concern him. The Practice Act does not provide the necessary machinery for conducting that sort of a triangular litigation. When one maker alleges that he is a surety, how is another maker to deny the allegation? He may be prepared to disprove it; but how can he be permitted to do so, unless he takes issue upon it ? The law interposes a’ denial of the new matter of the answer, in behalf of the plaintiff, but we have never heard that it is also deemed-,to be denied bv *577the other defendants. If the .suretyship can be alleged, it must, if proven, be found as a fact, and the judgment must be in accordance with it, though the fact found be contrary to the tenor and effect of the note on which the recovery is had. It would better accord with the rules of pleading and evidence, to render judgment on the contract that the makers of the note entered into with the payee, rather than such as they may have made among themselves. These matters cannot be inquired into in a suit on the note. (Aud v. Magruder, 10 Cal. 288" court="Cal." date_filed="1937-11-27" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/people-v-superior-court-1126266?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="1126266">10 Cal. 288; Dane v. Cordua, 24 Cal. 164.) The authorities upon this point were reviewed at some length in the last case cited, and although the cases are not uniform, yet the doctrine is so firmly based upon principle and so fully sanctioned by commercial usage, that we regard a further review as useless and idle.

As he was not entitled to show that he was not a principal, but that as between himself and Lovejoy & Co. he was merely their surety, he had no better right than Lovejoy to complain of the release of the attachment, and he is not entitled to avail himself of that fact in this action in any other manner or for any other purpose than could Lovejoy, who certainly could ^ not set it up as a defense to the action.

Judgment affirmed.






Concurrence Opinion

Mr. Justice Shafter delivered the following opinion, concurring specially,

in which Mr. Justice Sawyer concurred:

I concur in the judgment on the ground that it is found by the Court, and on what I consider sufficient evidence, that the appellant was not a surety, but a principal party to the note. On the question discussed in the opinion of brother Rhodes, I refrain from expressing an opinion.

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