Austin v. Curtis & Walker

31 Vt. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJuly 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 31 Vt. 64 (Austin v. Curtis & Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Curtis & Walker, 31 Vt. 64 (Vt. 1858).

Opinion

Bennett, J.

This ease, having been argued a second time, before all the judges, at the General Term, it becomes my duty to express the opinion of a majority of the court. The case comes up upon an agreed statement of facts. The defendants, were accommodation indorsers of a note from one John Bradley, and the plaintiff, knowing such to be the fact, discounted the: note for Bradley, and when the note matured, the necessary steps were taken to charge all parties on the paper. After this, the plaintiff accepted the note of John Bradley, bearing date the 1st of May, 1854, payable on time, to the order of Harry Bradley, and by him indorsed as collateral secwity for the note now in [67]*67suit, and for other debts due from John Bradley to the plaintiff, and this was done without the knowlege or consent of the defendants. The necessary steps were taken to charge Harry Bradley on the note indorsed by him, when the same became due ; but he was at that time wholly insolvent and has not at any time since had any attachable property, and no part of the money could be collected of him for that reason. Before the present suit was brought, both Harry Bradley and the maker of the note were requested to pay it, but did not.

The court, on the facts stated in the case and agreed upon by the parties, gave judgment for the defendants. It is well settled that if the facts agreed upon have -established an agreement to give time, obligatory upon the plaintiffs, and by means of which his right of action on the note indorsed by the defendants has been suspended, the defendants are thereby discharged, it appearing that they were but accommodation indorsers, and that this was known to the plaintiff when he took the note; but if such an agreement were not made, the mere fact of giving time would not release the sureties ; mere delay, unaccompanied with a binding contract for that purpose, can have no such effect. It must be an agreement, which ties up the hands of the creditor and deprives him of the right of sueing the principal, and thereby prevents the surety from coming into a court of equity for relief. See Orme v. Young, Holt’s N. P. Cases 84, cited in 15 Johns. 435, n. a. But this is a principle too well settled to need authority. The question then in this case is,« whether there was any giving of time by the plaintiff in consideration of the additional security, which had the effect to defeat or suspend his right of sueing the principal.

It may be admitted for the purposes of the present decision, (and I have no disposition to question the proposition) that the existence of the antecedent debt, due the plaintiff, was a valid consideration for the transfer of the additional security, and that it was in no way competent for the principal to withdraw it at any time at will from the plaintiff, treating the transaction simply as a pledge, and as not involving a promise to give further time by means of the receipt of the additional security. It is said by Campbell, Ch. J., in the case of Poirier v. Morris, 20 Eng. [68]*68Law and Equity 103, “ that where a bill or note is taken as a security, the antecedent-debt is a sufficient consideration.” This, I apprehend, is no new doctrine. See Bolton v. Fuller, 1 B. & P. 539; Collins v. Martin, 1 B. & P. 684; Jervis v. Rogers, 13 Mass. 105; 15 Mass. 389. But it is not sufficient to discharge the surety, that there should be simply a valid consideration for the pledge ; there must also be a promise to give time, founded upon stich a consideration. This case is entirely destitute of any evidence of a promise to give time, unless such promise is to be inferred, as matter of fact, or of law, from the reception of the additional security for the antecedent debt. There is no pretence in this case that the new paper was taken for and on account of the old debt, but the case finds that it was taken merely as collateral security for its payment. This new security does not represent the debt itself, but is a different and a distinct demand, the payment of which the creditor may enforce if he can ; but we apprehend it can have no direct operation upon his relations to the principal debtor, unless it be paid, and in this way result in the satisfaction of the antecedent debt. The case does not show that a single word was said between the creditor and the principal debtor, in respect to giving time of payment on the antecedent debt, and we apprehend no agreement is to be implied from the force of the transaction itself to that effect. In Pring v. Clarkson, 1 Barnwell & Creswell 14, it was expressly held, that the talcing of a new bill, payable on time, as collateral security for an antecedent debt, did not amount to the giving of time to the acceptor of the first bill, so as to discharge a person standing in the light of a surety on that bill. Abbott, Ch. J., in that case says, “ in no case has it been held that the taking á collateral security from the acceptor shall have the effect of giving time on the first bill.” So in Ripley v. Greenleaf, 2 Vt. 129, the principle of the case of Pring v. Clarkson seems to have been fully adopted by our own court. They there held that taking a new note on time, as security for an antecedent debt was no discharge of an accommodation indorser on the first note, unless there was a contract suspending the right of action on such note, of which there was no proof in that case. We apprehend the case of Pring v. Clarkson, followed, as we think it was, in the case of [69]*69Ripley v. Greenleaf, is sound law. The case of Twopenny v. Young, 3 Barn. & Creswell 208, is in point. In that case the defendant signed a joint and several promissory note, payable on demand, with one Bumming, for the debt of the latter. A bill of sale under seal was taken from the principal, to secure this debt and others, and the bill of sale contained a proviso, that it should not be enforced until after three days notice to the principal debtor. It was claimed this discharged the surety, but it was held that the acceptance of the bill of sale had not the effect to give time to the principal debtor, that it was intended only as a further security for the note, that the note continued an existing security, and that the plaintiff might at any time have sued the note notwithstanding the deed, there being no agreement not to sue the note until after the expiration of the three days notice.

In Emes v. Widowson, 4 C. & P 151, the suit was by the drawer of two bills of exchange against the acceptor, and the defence set up was an arrangement between the parties by which the defendant had by deed assigned certain property to the plaintiff to secure the debts in suit, as well as other debts. The deed of assignment contained a power of sale, yet it provided that the power of sale should not be executed until after six months notice. The court held that the deed of assignment was only collateral security, and that the personal remedy on the bills was not suspended, there being no provision in the deed of assignment that it should have that effect.

The case of Gahn v. Niemcewiez, 11 Wend. 312, is so much in point, that I may be permitted to draw rather freely from the very able opinion of Justice Nelson : “ It is well settled,” says that learned jurist, “ that merely taking a new security from the debtor, without agreeing to give time,

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Bluebook (online)
31 Vt. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-curtis-walker-vt-1858.