3 N.Y.S. 43 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1888
This is an action upon a promissory note. The maker does; not defend. The court at circuit directed a verdict against the indorser, and ordered the exceptions to be heard, in the first instance, at general term. One-of the defenses of Francis George, the indorser, was that Marshall Spring, the-plaintiff’s intestate, brought a suit on the note against him and Cornelius Stokem, the maker, in 1870; that he obtained a warrant of attachment under which the sheriff levied upon sufficient property of Stokem, the maker, to satisfy the note; and that subsequently Spring, without the knowledge or consent of George, the indorser, directed the sheriff to abandon the levy, and release the attached property, since which time the maker, Stokem, has become-insolvent. The defendant offered evidence to sustain this defense, some of which was received by the trial court, and some of which was excluded. It-was proved by a witness who was a deputy-sheriff in the city of New York, in 1870 and 1871, that he had an attachment against the property of Cornelius Stokem in favor of Marshall Spring, and that after a man had been put-in charge of the attached property the attachment was withdrawn by reason, of a notice from the plaintiff’s attorney. Stokem, the maker of the note, also-testified to the fact of the attachment, and that the property levied upon was-worth four or five thousand dollars, or considerably in excess of the amount
It is doubtless true, as a general rule, that mere delay on the part of a creditor to enforce an obligation, as against the principal debtor, will not operate to relieve the surety. People v. White, 28 Hun, 289, 294. And it has been held that the holders of a promissory note owe an accommodation indorser no active diligence to secure or protect his interests, and are not obliged on his account to sue the note, or enter judgment thereon, or issue execution. Smith v. Erwin, 77 N. Y. 466. Biit when the' creditor, in the course of legal proceedings based upon his claim, once gets hold of property of the principal which is applicable to the payment of the debt, the surety is entitled to insist that the creditor shall not voluntarily let the property go; and if he does so, and the claim subsequently proves to be uncollectible from the principal, the surety is discharged. Such seems to be the meaning of the rule approved by the court of appeals in. the case of Shutts v. Fingar, 100 N. Y. 539, 546, 3 N. E. Rep. 588. “But although the creditor is not bound to take active measures to enforce payment of the debt, and may therefore stop short in those which he has taken, even though their further prosecution would have been successful, yet he is not entitled to relinquish any hold which he lias actually acquired on the property or estate of the principal, and which might have been made effectual for the payment of the debt. This is the necessary result of the rule that a creditor shall not arbitrarily shift the burden of a debt from the party primarily liable for its payment, and impose it on another whose liability is secondary.” In Smith v. Erwin, supra, the accommodation indorser claimed to have been released from liability because the holders of the note, after obtaining judgment and issuing execution against the maker at a time when the latter had property enough to meet the demand, did not direct the sheriff to levy until more than six months after'the execution was issued, when no property could be found. The decision was adverse to the indorser, but turned upon the fact that the plaintiffs in the first instance directed the sheriff not to levy until he should receive further orders from them. It was held that this rendered the execution dormant in the mean time, and that the defendant’s property was not bound thereby until the subsequent order was given. Hence no lien ever was acquired, and none had been lost. But from the manner in which the question was treated, and from the language already quoted from Shutts v. Fingar, it is plain that if the execution had been issued to the sheriff to be executed immediately, at a time when the defendant had sufficient personal property to satisfy the same in his open and visible possession, and after an actual levy thereon, the plaintiffs had given directions to the sheriff, which deprived them of the lien thus obtained, it would have been held that the indorser was discharged. In the case before us, the property of the principal debtor was taken under a warrant of attachment instead of an execution. But the creditor thereby certainly acquired a hold on the estate of the principal. The latter does not appear ever to have interposed any defense to the claim made against him as the maker of the note; and it is obvious that the hold thus acquired “might have been made effectual for the payment of the debt” by simply retaining the property until judgment was obtained by default, and execution was issued thereon. The doctrine that a creditor is under no obligation to a surety to proceed actively against the principal debtor should not be carried so far as to justify the creditor in releasing the property of the principal debtor which he has
Van Brunt, P. J., and Brady, J., concur.