66 N.Y. 255 | NY | 1876
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *257 The plaintiff claims that he was a co-surety with the defendant upon the note of Brown of $1,000, which he has paid, and that he is entitled to contribution. The difference of opinion among the learned judges who have considered the case is unusual. The decision of the referee was for the plaintiff — that of the General Term for the defendant, but with one dissenting judge. In the Commission of Appeals, four of the commissioners were equally divided, and one took no part, so that of the eight judges, including the referee, who have passed upon the case, in three different tribunals, they were equally divided in opinion, four for the plaintiff and four for the defendant. It is, therefore, presumable that the case is quite evenly balanced, and might, perhaps, be decided either way without violating any rule of law. The difference of opinion has arisen not so much from a difference as to rules of law as upon the character of the transaction. The facts are undisputed; but upon their proper construction and the inferences to be drawn from them depend the application of legal principles, and, as to such construction and inferences, it is quite natural that lawyers and judges should differ. I have examined the case with considerable care and have arrived at a conclusion adverse to *258 the plaintiff's right of recovery, and, without elaborating the subject, I shall briefly state the reasons which have influenced my judgment.
The right to contribution between co-sureties depends upon principles of equity rather than upon contract. It is well settled that the liability exists, although the sureties are ignorant of each other's engagement. (14 Ves., 160; 2 Seld., 33; 2 Kern., 462.) The equity springs out of the proposition that, when two or more sureties stand in the same relation to a principal, they are entitled equally to all the benefits, and must bear equally all the burdens of the position. In such a case the maxim "equality is equity" applies. It is not sufficient that both parties are sureties — they must occupy the same position in respect to the principal, and without equities between themselves, giving an advantage to one over the other. (
The real question is, whether the same relation to Brown, within the comprehensive equitable rule referred to, did exist between these parties. On the part of the plaintiff, it is claimed that it is a case of ignorance on the part of the defendant, as to the fact that the plaintiff was a surety, and a signing on his part, under a misapprehension of the fact, induced partly by the representation of Brown, for which the plaintiff was in no sense responsible, and that the case of Norton v.Coons (
I do not deem it necessary to consider the effect (if any) which should be given to the fact that the money was paid into the firm to the credit of Brown.
I am in favor of affirming the order of the General Term.
All concur.
Order affirmed. Judgment absolute against appellant.