Beville v. Boyd

41 S.W. 670, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 491, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 259
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 670 (Beville v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beville v. Boyd, 41 S.W. 670, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 491, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 259 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Appellant was surety for appellee to the Wise County National Bank on a promissory note in the sum of $1000, which provided for interest at the rate of 10 per cent per annum, "and 10 per cent additional as attorney's fees, if sued upon or placed in the hands of an attorney for collection." When the note matured, and without its ever having been placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, appellant paid it off, or rather took it up and had it indorsed to him, by executing his own note payable at a future date. The bank also held a small note (of $66) against the appellee, which was in the same transaction assigned to appellant.

This was an attachment suit brought against appellee by appellant, in which the affidavit for attachment stated that the appellee was justly indebted to the appellant in the sum of $1178.95, which was the total amount of the two notes, principal, interest, and attorney's fees. The petition, however, merely alleged the execution, payment, and assignment of the two notes, without alleging that either of them had ever been sued upon or placed in the hands of an attorney by the bank, or that appellant had paid the amount specified therein as attorney's fees, and prayed to have judgment for said sums of money and costs of suit, without naming any sums. That is to say, the petition on its face showed a less sum to be due than was stated in the affidavit for attachment, unless appellant was entitled to recover the amount of the attorney's fees specified in the larger note.

Upon this ground the appellee moved to quash the attachment, and pending this motion the appellant amended his petition, alleging that the $1000 note had been placed by the bank in the hands of attorneys for collection, and that he had paid not only the principal and interest, but also the amount of attorney's fees. The trial developed that there was no *Page 492 truth in this allegation whatever, and that the evident purpose of it was to uphold the attachment. The court, however, sustained the motion, notwithstanding the amended petition; and to this action the first error is assigned.

First, was the change made by the amendment essential? and second, was it effectual?

In Carpenter v. Minter, 72 Tex. 370, it was expressly held that a surety paying off the note was entitled to sue upon it and recover the attorney's fees therein provided for from the principal maker, the same as the original holder might have done. This very just rule, which allowed a complete, and not merely a partial, substitution of the surety to the rights of the original creditor against the principal debtor, became the rule of decision in this State as early as 1857. Sublett v. McKinney,19 Tex. 439.

The reason of the rule was thus stated, in the case last cited, by Justice Wheeler: "These latter cases, while they hold the general doctrine that the surety is entitled to every remedy which the creditor has, and to have an assignment of all the securities in the hands of the creditors, yet deny him the right of complete substitution to the rights of the creditor, by having assigned to him the very obligation upon which he was surety, upon this technical idea, that the payment by the surety is an extinguishment of the obligation, and the assignment of it would transfer that which, being extinguished, is no longer any security. But this narrow technical view of the case has not received the approbation of courts of equity generally in this country. The subject was examined with great learning, research, and ability by the Supreme Court of Georgia in the case of Simpkins v. Mills, 4 Georgia, 343, and the doctrine of the two English cases last cited was discarded, as opposed to the great weight of authority, English and American, as unsound in principle, and unfit to have a place in the enlightened remedial justice of a court of equity. The principle which supports the right of substitution to the rights and remedies of the creditor applies equally to his right to have a transfer of the particular obligation or contract as to any other security. `The substitution of the surety,' it is pertinently said, `is not for the creditor as he stands related to the principal after the payment, but as he stood related to him before the payment. He is subrogated to such rights as the creditor then had against the principal; one of which unquestionably was to enforce his bond against the principal.' Id., 349. This is certainly the correct deduction from the universally admitted right of substitution. For if the doctrine were sound, that the obligation on which the surety was bound can not be assigned, because it is extinguished by the payment, it would apply equally to every other security, and destroy the right of substitution altogether. For the payment of the debt operates as complete an extinguishment in equity, of every collateral security, as it does of the obligation of the principal security. So it has been uniformly held by this court in the case of mortgage and other securities."

Following this rule so early and ably enunciated, and a decision *Page 493 directly in point, which was adopted by our Supreme Court as late as 1888 (Carpenter v. Minter, supra), appellant sued out his attachment, February 12, 1895, a few months before the case of Faires v. Cockrell, 88 Tex. 428, was decided, in which the opinion of Justice Brown purports to overrule this line of decisions. Following this opinion, the district judge quashed the attachment. If the case of Faires v. Cockrell be not distinguishable from the case at bar, and the opinion of Justice Brown, in so far as it purports to overrule Carpenter v. Minter, be not obiter, this action of the District Court, though never so detrimental and unjust to appellant under the circumstances, ought not to be disturbed by this court.

After a careful examination of the cases and the principal involved, we have reached the conclusion that the case of Faires v. Cockrell is not itself in necessary conflict with the line of decision followed by appellant in suing out his attachment. It was not the case of a surety who had paid the debt of his principal claiming the right of complete substitution to the position of the creditor, but of a co-obligor seeking contribution on account of his having discharged more than his proportion of the common and equal burden. The question there involved, too, was one of limitation. In the nature of the case, the suit for contribution could not well be maintained on the original obligation. Equality is equity; and where no primary obligation rests upon any particular co-maker of a written instrument, one such co-maker who pays more than his share can only ask for contribution, and subrogation goes no further than is necessary to reimburse him for the overpayment. But where one stands as mere surety for another, it does not lie in the mouth of the principal debtor, for whose accommodation he has become bound, to deny him any of the rights which the contract gave the common creditor, when he is forced to become the creditor himself by the failure of his principal to discharge the duty of payment resting primarily on such principal. This would not be equality and not equity. Of course equity would not allow the surety to speculate off his principal by taking up the note at a discount and then recover the full amount.

In the opinion in Faires v. Cockrell, it is said: "There is no advantage in having the unsecured debt assigned." That was true in that case, but not so here. The original holder of the note had the advantage of enforcing its collection at the expense of the maker, and unless the note providing for attorney's fees be assigned to the paying surety, he loses this advantage.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 670, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 491, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beville-v-boyd-texapp-1897.