10 F. 20 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1881
On the question argued and submitted yesterday I am prepared to announce the conclusion reached by the Court. The liability of this defendant is that of a surety only. The contracts of sureties, as we all very well understand, are to be construed strictly in favor of the surety. The contract of this party was, in substance, that his principal should carry out, in good faith, the provisions of the contract for the building of a public school house. Briefly stated that contract was, that he would furnish the material and build the school house for $ 15,000 within a certain specified time. The present question is, whether the surety can be charged as liable, upon his contract of surety-ship, for certain claims of mechanics’ liens against the public
It was further insisted that the surety as well as the principal was bound by the judgment of the State Court, rendered against the principal after the removal of the cause, so far as the surety was concerned, into this Court. Upon this branch of the case the following opinion was delivered:
McCrary, Circuit Judge:
Upon reflection I am very clearly of the opinion that this defendant, as surety on the bond, has a right to a settlement of his liability upon his bond under the contract, and is entitled to whatever right he would have had if he had been present at a settlement under the contract at the time that the building was delivered over, or at any other time. The rights that his principal had against this plaintiff under the contract he has a right to avail himself of as a defense in this case, the same as if he had been present and had insisted upon all his rights at such a settlement. The ruling, therefore, that has already been made in the case is conclusive of this question. The payment of the mechanics’ lien claims was outside of and beyond the contract Perhaps as between the plaintiff here and the principal on the bond, the plaintiff could pay those claims and charge them to the principal in their settlement with him. At all events, after there was a judgment upon them that concluded them both, they had a right to act upon the hypothesis that they were valid and that the board was bound to pay them; but we have found upon investigation that they were not valid claims, and that their payment did not bind this defendant as surety; I think, therefore, that the objection to the evidence now offeied must be sustained.
It will be unnecessary to go into a discussion of the long line of cases upon the general subject of res. adjudicata, as to how far parties and privies are bound by the judgments of Courts of general jurisdiction, because this case is one of a class of its own and stands by itself. The act of Congress provides, or did provide—for I think that act is now repealed by the later act on the subject, and I am very glad that it is—for splitting a case in the State Court, and bringing so much of it as constitutes a controversy between citizens of different States in the Federal Courts. Under that act so much of this controversy as is between the plaintiff and the suiety upon the bond has been brought here, while so much of it as is between the plaintiff and the principal upon the bond remained in the State Court, and has been tried there. The fundamental principle of this subject is, that a party is bound by an adjudication only where he is, so far, at least, within the jurisdiction of the Court as to be heard in the course of the litigation; he must be a party to the suit or proceeding in such sense as to have a right to appear there, to make motions to the Court, to introduce testimony, to cross-examine witnesses, and to take an appeal. Those are the rights which, generally, a party must have in order to be bound by an adjudication. Now, we must assume that this case was properly removed, as I have before said in considering some preliminary questions, and, assuming that, we are bound to say that after removal, the moment the order of removal was made, this defendant passed from the jurisdiction of the State Court. He had no right to appear there any further, he had no power to introduce testimony, to make motions, to be heard, or to take an appeal. Besides, as counsel have suggested, the whole purpose of the removal act of 1866 would be defeated by the construction which is contended for by the counsel for the plaintiff If the party who brings a part of a case into this Court, for the purpose of litigating it here, is bound, nevertheless, by the litigation in the State Court, from which he removed it, against some other party,