Alley v. Hawthorn

1 La. Ann. 122
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 La. Ann. 122 (Alley v. Hawthorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alley v. Hawthorn, 1 La. Ann. 122 (La. 1846).

Opinion

The judgment of the court was delivered by

Eustis, C. J.

The plaintiffs having obtained judgment against Cary Robinson, the latter appealed, and, on the 12th of June, 1839, John N. Hawthorn became his surety on an appeal bond. Pending the appeal,' Robinson made a surrender of his property in one of our courts, became a bankrupt under the bankrupt act, and afterwards died. The syndic, the assignee, and the curator of his estate, were made parties to the appeal, and the judgment was affirmed in June last. 11 Robinson, 190. The plaintiffs took out their execution against Robinson, which was returned nulla bona, and applied, after motion made in court and due notice, for judgment on the bond against the surely, which was awarded. The surety'has appealed; and, considering that the plaintiffs can take nothing by reason of their execution, it is necessary to consider his rights without reference to it.

The state of the law'in relation to judicial sureties on appeal bonds has been liable to misconception, but it is necessary that it should be settled ; and, in so doing,'it will be necessary to examine the subject of suretyship somewhat in detail. On this subject, our Code'is so-clear in its provisions, that there is no necessity of any reference to jurisprudence in order to explain it.

Suretyship is an accessory promise to satisfy an obligation, if the debtor dons not. Civil Code, art. 3004.

The obligation of the surety is to pay the creditor, in case the debtor himself shall not satisfy the debt; and the property of the debtor must be first discussed or seized, unless the surety shall have renounced the plea of discussion, or should be bound, in solido, with the debtor- Ibid. art. .3014. But to these general principles of suretyship, there is an exception in relation to judicial sureties.

The judicial surety cannot exercise the privilege of discussion, but is bound absolutely for the debt. Ibid. art. 3035.

The effects of judicial suretyship are determined in the laws regulating judicial proceedings. Ibid. art. 3037. Accordingly, in the Code of Practice, tide different kinds of judicial suretyship incases of attachment, sequestration, injunction, &c., and the conditions requisite in each case, are provided for. The 575th article of that Code provides for the security on an appeal to the Supremo Court. The obligation of the surety is required for the payment of. the amount of the judgment appealed from, in case the same be affirmed. Articles 576, 577 and 578, provide for the amount of the surety. Article 579 says :

“ In the appeal bond it must be set forth, in substance, that it is given as surety that the appellant shall prosecute his appeal, and that he shall satisfy whatever judgment may be rendered against him, or that the same shall be satisfied out of the proceeds of the sale of his estate, real or personal, if he be cast in his appeal; otherwise that the surety shall be liable in his place.’ ’

We have seen that, by the .contract of suretyship, the obligation of the surety is to satisfs the debt in case the debtor does not; that by article 575,.tho [124]*124surety on an appeal bond is bound for the payment of the judgment, if the debtor himself is bound to pay it; and that the judicial surety has not the benefit of discussion; and it is with reference to these principles that we must construe the remedies against sureties. It will be observed that, article 579 does not profess to require the particular form of the bond, but only that it should contain, in substance, certain conditions, which, in no reasonable sense, ought to beheld to countervail the principles of the law of judicial suretyship as provided for in the Civil Code; but, on the contrary, ought to be so construed as to carry out and give effect to them.

The law certainly contemplates that the creditor should have immediately an additional security, of a good solvent person, to answer for his debt, when an appeal is taken from his judgment; and that this security should be available, it makes provision not only for the solvency, but even for the residence required of the surety. Civil Code, arts. 3011, 3012. Should the judicial surety become insolvent, his place must be supplied by another; and while, in 'the case of an ordinary surety, the Civil Code gives a direct recourse against the surety, under the reservation of the right of the surety to have the property of the debtor first discussed, yet, in the case of judicial sureties, the privilege .of discussion is not allowed.

The right of discussion must be exercised by the surety at his own expense, and by designating available and unincumbered property sufficient to satisfy the debt, and by furnishing the means of having the discussion carried into effect. So that this right,, on the part of the surety, in point of fact operates little to the detriment of the creditor. To him it is indifferent, whether his debt be satisfied out of the property of the debtor thus tendered to him for seizure, without expense, by the surety, or out of the property of the surety himself. It becomes merely a question as to which property shall be taken to pay the debt — a mere exceptio ordinis, as it was termed under the Roman law. Muh-lenburg, Doctrina Pandectorum, § 486.

Article 596 of the Code of Practice, provided for a summary remedy against the surety on an appeal bond, if on the execution there should not be made sufficient property to satisfy the judgment; and, by a law of 1839, the creditor, on the return of the execution that no property had been found, was entitled to judgment ugainst the surety after ten days notice. Laws of 1839, p. 170.

The appeal bond sued on is dated on the 12th of June, 1839, subsequent to the law last cited, and its obligations, strictly speaking, ought to be tested by a reference to that law, the creditor having saught to obtain relief by proceeding under it.

The decisions of the late .Supreme Court have made no discrimination between article 596 and the law of 1839. In point of fact the difference between them is not material; and there is no necessity for discriminating between them in examining the decisions which the counsel for the appellant has submitted- to us, and on which he rests his defence. Both the .article and the statute fix the obligation of the surety on the appeal bond, on the failure to satissfy the debt Op the execution, of which fact the return is the best evidence. The decisions relied on by the defendant are made in the cases of Chalaron v. McFarlane, 9 La. 227. Flower et al. v. Dubois et al. 10 Rob. 191. Saulet v. Trepagnier et al. 11 Ib. 268.

■ Tho first caso, that of Chalaron) was determined in 1836, .and it .was theft [125]*125held by the court that, the liability of a surety .on an .appeal bond only beg;ns, when, on a sale of the whole, estate of the d«btor, the proceeds are found insufficient to pay the debt.

In the case of Flower, the court say : “ It 'is tr.ue that, in the .ease of Chala-ron, v. McFarlane, this court established the principle that, from the nature of the obligation of sureties in appeal bonds and the terms of their .engagements, they derive the right of resisting a recourse against them until it is clearly shown by the creditor, that the sale, of all the estate and effects of the principal has proved insufficient to discharge his demand.

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Bluebook (online)
1 La. Ann. 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alley-v-hawthorn-la-1846.