4 Mont. 489 | Mont. | 1882
This is an action upon a promissory note payable to plaintiff, and signed by defendants. Freyler, the answering defendant, alleges that he signed the note without consideration and as surety merely, which fact was known to the plaintiff. He further alleges that, at the time the note became due and payable, the principal debtor was solvent and able to pay the same, and that said surety demanded of the plaintiff, the payee of the
There was a motion for a judgment in favor of plaintiff, notwithstanding the answer, which was granted, and the defendant Freyler appeals.
Two questions are presented for determination, viz.: 1. Can a joint maker of a promissory note show by parol that he is surety merely, and that the payee had knowledge of such fact? 2. If, after the note becomes due, the surety request the creditor to sue the principal, who is then solvent, and the creditor fails to do so, and the principal afterwards becomes insolvent, is the surety thereby discharged ?
1. The fact of suretyship may be proved by parol. There never was any dispute that such evidence was admissible in a court of equity, and since, under the code, equitable defenses are permitted in actions at law, all difficulties in the way of setting up such a defense, or in making proof of the same, are obviated. Such proof does not change the contract or the liability of the party making it. Hubbard v. Gurney, 64 N. Y. 457.
Says Shaw, C. J., in Harris v. Brooks, 21 Pick. 195: “So, when one of two promisors annexes the word ‘principal’ to his signature, and the other ‘surety,’ these descriptions do not affect the terms or the legal effect of the contract. They indicate the relation in which parties stand to each other, and give notice of such relation to the holder; but the fact of such relation, and notice of it to the holder, may, we think, be proved by extrinsic evidence. It is not to affect the terms of the contract, but
In Howenstine v. Pacific R. R. Co. 55 Mo. 33, the supreme court of Missouri, by Wagner, J., says: “It has frequently been decided, and the rule is settled, that it is perfectly competent for a surety to show in what capacity or character he signed the note.”
The same doctrine is now held in England since the statute authorizing equitable defenses in actions at law.
We do not think that any of the decisions of the supreme court of California, relied on by appellants as stating a contrary doctrine, go to the extent of holding that it is not a good defense, in an action upon a promissory note, for one of the joint makers to allege and prove by parol that he signed the note as surety in fact with the knowledge of the payee, and that the payee, having such knowledge, by his act or omission, as, for instance, by his contract with the principal, without the consent of his surety, extended the time of payment' for a definite period for a valuable consideration. See Aud v. Magruder, 10 Cal. 282; Shriver v. Lovejoy, 32 Cal. 575; Darwin v. Pardon, 34 Cal. 278; Sichel v. Carillo, 42 Cal. 493; Harlow v. Ely, 55 Cal. 344.
The decision in the case of Aud v. Magruder, to which the subsequent cases generally refer, was rendered to controvert and overrule a former decision of the same court in the case of Bryan v. Berry, 6 Cal. 394, in which case it had been assumed that the obligation of a surety was that of a mere guarantor or indorser, and it was held, as it is held everywhere, that the obligation of a surety to the payee or holder is the same as that of the principal, which obligation is to pay the note when it becomes due. No one ever supposed that this obligation could be escaped, unless the payee or holder with full knowledge, by some act or omission, released the surety. Mere proof that one of the parties signed as surety is not material, and is no defense, because such proof does not in any manner affect his contract or obligation. But if the payee or holder, knowing that one of the makers of the note was surety merely, enters into a valid contract with the principal, whereby the contract of the surety is varied or changed without his consent, then the surety is discharged. And in order to show that the surety has been
2. As to the second question, “ the great majority of the cases on the subject hold, in the absence of any statutory provisions, that if, after the debt is due, the surety request the creditor to sue the principal, who is then solvent, and the creditor fails to do so, and the principal afterwards becomes insolvent, the surety is not thereby discharged. The ground upon which these decisions rest is that the principal and surety are both equally bound to the creditor, who may have taken a surety in order that he might not have to sue the principal.” Brandt on Sur. and Guar. sec. 208, referring to Jenkins v. Clarkson, 7 Ohio, 72; Carr v. Howard, 2 Blackf. (Ind.) 190; Halstead v. Brown, 17 Ind. 202; Ex’rs of Davis v. Rider, 2 McLean, 451; Davis v. Huggins, 3 N. H. 231; Pickett v. Land, 2 Bailey (S. C.), 608; Nichols v. McDowell, 14 B. Mon. 5; Frye v. Baker, 4 Pick. 382; Stout v. Ashton, 5 T. B. Mon. 251; Gage v. Bank, 79 Ill. 62; Dillon v. Holmes, 5 Neb. 484; Inkster v. Bank, 30 Mich. 143; Langdon v. Markle, 48 Mo. 357; Hartman v. Burlingame, 9 Cal. 557; Dane v. Corduan, 24 Cal. 157; Hickok v. Bank, 35 Vt. 476; Hogoboom v. Herrick, 4 Vt. 131; Coster v. Dunlap, Rich. Eq. Cases, 77; Croughton v. Duval, 3 Call (Va.), 69; Boulte v. Martin, 16 La. 133; Wyler v. Beck, 13 Ill. 376; Huey v. Reinly, 5 Minn. 310; Bizzell v. Smith, 2 Dev. Eq. (N. C.) 27; Thompson v. Brown, 39 N. J. 2; Hogshead v. Williams, 55 Ind. 145; Harris v. Newell, 42 Wis. 627; Pintard v. Davis, 1 Spence (N. J.), 205; id. 1 Zabriskie (N. J.), 205.
When a surety signs a promissory note, his promise is absolute and unconditional to pay the same when it becomes due. And there is no escape Ofrom this promise
In the case of Dane v. Corduan, 24 Cal. 164, the court reviews the authorities and holds as follows: “ As to the first question, admitting that a request and failure to prosecute has been shown, is the security exonerated from liability? Such a state of facts did not discharge the surety in England. His remedy was to pay the debt himself, and then sue the principal, or perhaps he might, by bill in chancery, compel the creditor to proceed against the principal. Chancellor Kent says: ‘ There is no case in the English law in which the personal application of the surety was held to be compulsory on the creditor at the hazard of discharging the surety.’ 2 Johns. Ch. 562.
a There was a departure from the English rule on this subject in Paine v. Packard, 13 Johns. 175, and in that case the surety was held to be discharged. But this case was combatted and overruled by Chancellor Kent in King v. Baldwin, 2 Johns. Ch. 554. The case was appealed and in the court of errors reversed by the casting vote of the lieutenant-governor, who, like many senators voting on the question, was a layman. This fact detracts very much from the weight of the decision as authority, and the arguments of Chancellor Kent in the court of chancery, and of Senator Van Vechten in the court of errors, against the principle announced in the case, appear to us conclusive. The courts of New York have since followed the case of King v. Baldwin, while they have disapproved of the principle established by it. Mr. Jus
In Harris v. Newell, 42 Wis. 690, Ryan, C. J., said: “The contract of a surety is not merely a contract to perform upon the failure of the principal, but binds the surety equally with the principal. The surety assumes for himself the liability of the principal. And, as Lord Eldon remarks in Wright v. Simpson, 6 Vesey, Jr. 714, as between the creditor and the surety the creditor as sumes no obligation of active diligence against his principal; and it is the business of the surety, not of the creditor, to see that the principal performs.” “This is the legal contract; but because the surety has no interest in the contract of his principal, and because the creditor of the principal debtor may prejudice the surety by delay, equity will sometimes interfere in behalf of the surety, either against his principal or against his creditor. In such a case the surety may proceed in a court of equity against the principal to compel him to pay the debt, or against his creditor to compel him to proceed at law to collect his debt from the principal. 1 Story’s Eq. sec. 327; Wright v. Simpson, supra; Hayes v. Ward, 4 Johns. Ch. 123; Bishop v. Day, 13 Vt. 81. This well established equitable jurisdiction appears to preclude the right claimed in this case for the surety — the right to. notify the creditor to proceed, and, upon failure of the creditor to do so, to stand released at law. For, if the surety could thus of himself put the creditor in motion, it is difficult to see why he should resort to a court of equity to do for him what he could do for himself.
“ This power to put the creditor in motion appears to be more safely reposed in the discretion of a court of equity than vested as a legal right, at his option, in the surety. The diligence of creditors is generally to be trusted; and when they forbear it is generally from prudential motives, having regard to all the interests con
After referring to the decisions in New York and Pennsylvania to the contrary, he continues: “But we believe that the doctrine of Paine v. Packard, as a rule of judicial construction, is confined to those two states. There is a full and learned note to Paine v. Packard and King v. Baldwin, in the court of errors, by the learned authors of Am. Lead. Cases, by which it appears that the doctrine of those cases does not prevail in England, in the federal courts, or in the courts of any other state in which it has not been adopted by statute. The learned counsel of the respondent cited cases against the doctrine from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Illinois, South Carolina and the federal courts. A review of these cases would fully sustain our view. And the learned counsel for the appellants cited in support of his position only cases in New York, Pennsylvania and in Alabama, Arkansas and Tennessee, which go upon statutes, approving of the rule of Paine v. Packard. But these cannot avail for the unsound doctrine against the strong and universal current of authority outside of the infected states. Indeed, the adoption in those states of such statutes may be regarded as a strong concession against the rule, independent of them.”
The authorities are decidedly in favor of the proposition, in absence of any statutory provision controlling it, that if, after the debt is due, the surety request the creditor to sue the principal, who is then solvent, and the ■creditor fails to do so, and the principal afterwards be
The averment in the answer, that the plaintiff theretofore agreed to and did release the defendant from all liability on the note, is the averment of a legal conclusion,- and the further averment that the plaintiff then and there told the defendant to rest easy, that he would not look to him for the payment of the note, but that the principal was good enough for him, and that he would trust him for the payment thereof, is a promise without a consideration, and would not have prevented the plaintiff, the payee, from at once commencing an action against the surety to collect the note. .
The averment in the answer that the plaintiff, without the consent of the defendant, the surety, gave the principal debtor further time in which to pay the note, is deficient in two particulars at least. The time of payment does not seem to have been extended from any definite' period, or for any consideration.
The answer did not state a defense to plaintiff’s action,, and the motion for a judgment in favor of plaintiff, notwithstanding the answer, was therefore properly granted. The judgment is affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.