Carman v. Noble

9 Pa. 366
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 13, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 Pa. 366 (Carman v. Noble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carman v. Noble, 9 Pa. 366 (Pa. 1848).

Opinion

Coulter, J.

The agreement on which the action is founded, stipulated that the defendants below would keep the plaintiff, Car-man, harmless from “debt or damage, in the matter of security [370]*370that the said William Carman entered into for Wm. L. Eox, as assignee,” &c.

One of the errors assigned is, that the agreement is not supported by a sufficient consideration; and it would seem the most convenient in order to notice this first, although it is not the first in the series. This objection proceeds on the ground that the agreement is gratuitous, and all on one side. In the Roman law, a contract merely gratuitous, in which the promisor was not bound to anything, was called nudum pactum; and the distinction was adopted in the common law of England, and thus composes a rule in our jurisprudence. The party making the promise must have obtained some advantage, or the party to whom it is made must °have suffered some loss, or sustained some injury and inconvenience, in consequence of the promise. By this rule, which appears to be sound, I will test the promise in this case. In Doctor and Student, Diag. 2, ch. 24, it is observed that “ these are called naked promises, because there is nothing assigned why they should be made.” Here the reason for making the promise is assigned in the writing, to wit, that Carman had entered into bond as the surety of Eox. Was that sufficient ? Signing the bond was, to be . sure, a bygone act, but it was continuing, as a consideration; no damage or loss had yet accrued to the surety. It was to indemnify him from debt or damage that might thereafter accrue to him, that the instrument upon which the suit is brought was given. All parties looked to a future contingency, and that future liability was the consideration of the promise. And that contingency, so far as it was disastrous to Carman, he might have averted, perhaps, if he had not been lulled into security by the act of the defendants, and seduced thereby into supineness; for he might have made application, under the statute, to compel additional surety. Can it be pretended, then, that he suffered no inconvenience, and encountered no danger, in consequence of the promise of the defendants ? Carman undoubtedly became the surety of Eox, originally at the request of Eox; the law will imply that much. And Eox would be legally bound to indemnify him if he suffered loss thereby. It cannot be pretended, therefore, that there was no consideration as to him. Thus it has been ruled, that if the plaintiff has become security for the promisor, or has accepted bills, or imposed upon himself any legal liability at the request of the promisor, there is a sufficient consideration to support a promise of indemnity, and render it binding in law, although no actual benefit or advantage has resulted to the promisor: Baily v. Croft, 4 Taunt. 611. Yery slight [371]*371circumstances will, in such cases, establish a request in point of law: Law v. Wilkin, 6 Ad. & E. 718. A bygone act or service rendered, pursuant to a previous request of the promisor, is sufficient to sustain an action on the promise: Dyer, 272 b, n. These cases go on the ground stated in Doctor and Student, because they show a sufficient ground on which the promise was made; which is therefore not naked. In accordance with these principles, is the case of Carroll v. Nixon, 4 W. & S. 517, and Hinds v. Holdship, 2 Watts, 104; and also Greeves v. McAllister, 2 Binn. 591; and also the case of Lonsdale v. Brown, 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 148; where it was ruled, that a promise to pay on a consideration executed, if it was induced by some previous duty, or if the debt be continuing at the time, is good to maintain assumpsit. That a duty rested upon Fox to indemnify Carman as his surety, cannot be doubted; and the other defendants, by joining with him in the contract to keep Carman harmless, made themselves jointly liable with him for a consideration moving from Fox and to him, and thus became his sureties. It may be observed as ancillary, that all the defendants were partners, and that the funds which Fox received as assignee, were placed by him in possession of the firm, instead of applying them according to law. And that, in consequence, Carman might have made application to the Court of Common Pleas, to remove the assignee, or compel him to give additional security. There was, therefore, an actual benefit accruing to the defendants, however small, and the magnitude of the benefit is of no importance. We are of opinion that the agreement was supported by a sufficient consideration.

The next in importance in the series of errors, is that which alleges that the judgment recovered against Carman on the surety-bond was not the measure of damages in this action, because Car-man had suffered no loss except the payment of the attorney fee of |100.

But that is of no consequence. It was not necessary for him to wait until the judgment was recovered off him, nor until he had paid the money. He stood in jeopardy; and that judgment, with .the costs, he could be compelled to pay by legal process. The condition of a bond of indemnity against all claims of A. is broken whenever the claim is made, and the obligor is compellable by law to pay. He is not bound to wait till an action is brought against him: Leber v. Kauffelt, 5 W. & S. 440. And more exactly in point is Stroh v. Kimmel, 8 W. 157; where it was ruled, that where a promise of general indemnity is made, and judgment is [372]*372recovered against the promisee, such judgment is evidence in a suit against the promisor, without proof of payment of the judgment. Closely allied to this assignment, is that which imputes error to the court for admitting the record of the judgment in evidence, because, as alleged, the judgment was void, and because it was not between the same parties nor privies. The judgment, however, was not void, but valid and subsisting, and capable of being enforced by execution. The court could regard it in no other light whatever. Even admitting that it was irregular, yet the court could not reverse or impugn it in a collateral suit. It was a judgment in fact and in law. There was not a formal or technical judgment in favour of the Commonwealth, for the amount of the bond; nor was the finding in money denominated damages.

But the old maxim, that what can be made certain, shall be considered as certain, will solve the difficulty. The bond is for $27,100 penalty; and the statute provides that the cautionary judgment for the Commonwealth shall be for the amount of the bond, and that the judgment in favour of the plaintiff, as the statute denominates the cestui que %ise, shall be for the amount of the damages he shall establish. Now, the judgment is not for the amount of the bond. But it is for the amount of debt due to the United States,'with the interest. The sum named, therefore, must have been damages for the breach of the condition, in favour of the plaintiff, for whose use one of the plaintiffs, that is, the commonwealth, sued.

According to the terms of the statute, there ought, in such cases, to be two judgments — one for the amount of the penalty of the bond, which would be cautionary, and the other for the plaintiff, as the cestui que use is denominated in the statute, for the amount of damages he should prove.

The verdict in this case is for the plaintiffs $15,000, thus recognising two plaintiffs, which is the fact as it exists, because the statute requires two judgments.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williams v. Wolf
83 Pa. D. & C. 399 (Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, 1952)
First Natl. B. Spring Mills v. Walker
137 A. 257 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1927)
Clark v. State
276 S.W. 849 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1925)
W. H. Keech Co. v. O'Herron
41 Pa. Super. 108 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1909)
McAbee v. Cribbs
44 A. 1066 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1899)
Commonwealth ex rel. John T. Baldwin & Co. v. Yeisley
6 Pa. Super. 273 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Reger v. Manhattan Brass Co.
6 Pa. Super. 375 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Pa. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carman-v-noble-pa-1848.