12 R.I. 109 | R.I. | 1878
This is a bill for instructions, and to obtain a decree declaratory of the rights of the parties. The point to be determined is the liability, as between themselves, incurred by the complainant's intestate, Elisha Watson, and the respondents, Attmore Robinson and Taylor, Symonds Co., by writing their names, in the order named, upon the back of a promissory note in the words and figures following, viz: —
$1,500. PROVIDENCE, R.I. Dec. 12, 1876.
Six months after date, for value received, I promise to pay the Mechanics Savings Bank of Providence, R.I., fifteen hundred dollars.
CHARLES H. HAZARD.
This note, with the names of Watson and Robinson upon its back, was sent, or taken, by its maker, Hazard, at or about its date, to Taylor, Symonds Co. Hazard was then indebted to that firm, on book account, to the amount of about three hundred *110 dollars, which had been overdue for a considerable time. He and they agreed that they should take the note, get it discounted, deduct from its proceeds the amount of their account and of a new purchase which he wished to make of them, and remit to him the balance. Accordingly Taylor, Symonds Co. took the note and presented it to the Mechanics Savings Bank, the payee named in the note, for discount, but were informed that the bank could not discount it, unless it should first be indorsed or guaranteed by some responsible person residing in Providence, as required by the rule of the bank. Thereupon, to comply with this requirement, without any agreement or understanding with the maker or either of the sureties that they were to do so, Taylor, Symonds Co. wrote their name upon the back of the note underneath the names of Watson and Robinson. The bank then discounted the note, the proceeds of which were receipted for by Taylor, Symonds and Co., for Hazard, and were by them deposited in bank with their own moneys and credited to him in their account. The balance of account due Hazard was remitted to him by them, by their check, payable to his order. When the note became due Hazard failed to pay it, and it was subsequently taken up and paid by Taylor, Symonds Co., by whom it is now held.
The complainant holds a fund derived from the sale of certain real estate mortgaged to Watson by Hazard as security for indorsing the latter's notes. The notes so indorsed, which remain outstanding, are six in number, and exceed in amount the proceeds of the mortgaged property. Among them is the note in question.
Hazard, the maker of the notes, is insolvent, and has made an assignment of his property for the benefit of creditors.
The estate of Watson is also insolvent, and has been so represented to the Court of Probate.
Taylor, Symonds Co. claim that their contract was a contract of guaranty, solely with the bank, and that having taken up and paid the note they are entitled to its entire amount as against the maker, the estate of Watson, and against Robinson, or either of them.
Robinson, with the other respondents, on the other hand, contends that Taylor, Symonds Co., Watson, and himself, were as *111 between themselves co-sureties for the maker of the note, and, therefore, that the estate of Watson and himself are liable to Taylor, Symonds Co. each for only one third of the residue of the note, after deducting from its amount its pro rata proportion of the proceeds of the mortgaged property, and the dividend under the assignment.
In Craythorne v. Swinburne, 14 Ves. Jun. 159, the question whether the defendant was a co-surety with the complainant, or a surety for him and the principal, was made to depend upon the intention of the defendant, who was the last surety. The same rule was adopted in Keith v. Goodwin,
We think it may be fairly inferred from the evidence that Taylor, Symonds Co. intended to become liable on the note only in case of default in payment by the maker and the prior sureties. They entered into the undertaking without the knowledge or expectation of the maker, or of either of the prior sureties, without privity with them or either of them, and solely to comply with the requirement of the bank. And, though they might be precluded by the form of the undertaking from showing this as a defence in a suit by the payee against them, or against them and the prior parties to the note, parol evidence is admissible in suits between sureties to show the true relations existing between them.
In Craythorne v. Swinburne, 14 Ves. Jun. 159, the obligation of the surety was entered into by a separate instrument, and in Keith v. Goodwin,
If the view of the matter which we have taken be correct, it follows that Taylor, Symonds Co. are to be regarded, not as co-sureties with Watson and Robinson for Hazard, but as sureties equally for them and Hazard, and that, having paid the note to the Mechanics Savings Bank, they are entitled to indemnity from all the prior parties to the note, or from either. We are, therefore, of the opinion that Taylor, Symonds Co. are entitled to be paid: 1, a pro rata share of the proceeds of the mortgaged property in the hands of the complainant; 2, a prorata dividend on the residue of the note under the assignment of Hazard; 3, a pro rata dividend upon the residue of the note, not exceeding one half thereof, after the above payments have been made, from the estate of Watson; 4, the residue of the note by Robinson. Or, they are entitled to be paid the whole of the note by Robinson, who will then be entitled, as Taylor, Symonds Co. would have been, to receive the first three of the payments above specified.
Decree accordingly.