Cornwell's Appeal

7 Watts & Serg. 305
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 Watts & Serg. 305 (Cornwell's Appeal) 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
Cornwell's Appeal, 7 Watts & Serg. 305 (Pa. 1844).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

By the decree of the court, $5256.34 of the money were appropriated to the payment of the four judgments in favour of John Gamber, assigned by him the 6th of May 1836 to George Loucks and Henry Becker. These judgments, as Callicott alleges, were either previously paid or satisfied in some way, or void because entered without authority, and upon this ground he appealed from the decree of the court; but he has failed to show that the facts upon which he grounded his appeal are true, and therefore his appeal is dismissed, with the costs accruing thereon to be paid by him. But John Gamber had another judgment against William C. Cornwell, No. 248 of April term 1834, which he also assigned on the 6th of May 1836 to George Loucks and Henry Becker. Upon this judgment there were due, at the time the money for distribution was made, $2168.62, which the court decreed to be paid to Loucks and Becker as assignees of the judgment. This judgment was given, as has been shown, by William C. Cornwell to John Gamber, to secure the payment of three several bonds of $400 each, given by the said John Gamber [306]*306and William C. Cornwell jointly, with Arthur Patterson as their surety, to Abraham Heistand. Cornwell, however, failed to pay these bonds, in consequence of which the executors of Arthur Patterson, the surety therein, were sued by Heistand or his assignee, and compelled to pay them, who, upon being obliged to do so, called upon John Gamber for reimbursement of the moneys so paid by them; Gamber accordingly paid them above one-half the amount, and gave them his bond for the payment of $825, the residue thereof, at a future day, which still remains unpaid. But George Loucks and Henry Becker, at the time they .obtained from John Gamber the assignment of the judgment No. 248 of April term 1834, agreed under their hands and seals to indemnify and save him (John Gamber) harmless from all such loss, damages or payments of money on account of the three bonds before mentioned, in which Arthur Patterson was surety for Gamber and Cornwell, the same as the judgment itself No. 248 of April term 1834 would have secured or indemnified Gamber, holding its place pro rata with the other judgments of the same date. On the 9th of April 1838, the executors of Arthur Patterson satisfied the judgment, which then amounted to upwards of $2100, obtained against them on account of their testator’s suretyship, as before mentioned, for Gamber and Cornwell, to Heistand. After this, though the precise date does not appear, Gamber repaid the executors the larger portion of the amount so paid by them, and gave them his bond payable at a future day for the residue thereof, amounting to $825. Some time after this, he, on the 15th of October 1841, voluntarily executed a deed conveying and assigning all his property and effects to Jacob H. Gamber and Abraham Peters in trust for the benefit of his creditors, but giving preferences to some over others, to the amount of $58,325; and again on the 17th November 1842 he filed his petition for the benefit of the Bankrupt Law, and on the 20th January 1843 was declared a bankrupt, and John Glenn and James Mason Campbell were appointed his assignees. The sale, however, of the real estate of Cornwell, from which the money in question was raised, was made by the sheriff on the 28th day of February 1839, previously to these latter proceedings; after which Loucks and Becker, on the 10th of May 1839, obtained an assignment “ for value received,” as alleged on the face thereof, of an agreement made by John Gamber, under his hand and seal, on the 9th day of October 1835, with John Evans and John L- Mayer, in the following words:

“ In consideration of services and counsel of John Evans and John L. Mayer, I hereby promise and agree to pay to them, in ten days after the confirmation of the sale of the property of William C. Cornwell, and, if it should not be sold, then ten days after my judgments shall be otherwise satisfied, a sum of money which shall be equal to 10 per cent., or such sum as may be reduced or deducted, directly or indirectly, from the liens or judgments now [307]*307against William C. Cornwell, dated before the 21st of May 1834, except the judgment of J. B. Webb and of J. Lewis, given to secure Creary’s draft; and also a further sum equal to 3per cent. on the amount of my judgment against William C. Cornwell now existing, excepting the credits of $2743 entered on the docket, and of $1500 besides not entered. Witness my hand and seal, this 9th day of October 1835.”

Upon these facts the different claims by the several parties are made to the $2168.62 coming to the judgment No. 248 of April term 1834. First, by Patterson’s executors to the $825 thereof, with interest thereon to the date of the sheriff’s sale, in discharge of their claim for moneys paid by them on account of their testator’s suretyship for John Gamber and William C. Cornwell. Second,'by Jacob H. Gamber and Abraham Peters, trustees of John Gamber under the voluntary assignment made by him, to the whole amount coming on said judgment. Third, by John Glenn and James Mason Campbell, assignees of John Gamber under the Bankrupt Law, to the whole amount thereof. And, fourth, by Loucks and Becker, the appellees, to the whole amount, under their assignment from John Gamber of the judgment itself; and if not entitled to be preferred to the claim of Patterson’s executors, then to the residue of the money applicable to said judgment, by virtue of the assignment from John Gamber of the same judgment, and of the claim which they have against John Gamber under the assignment from Evans & Mayer of his obligation to them.

We will consider the several claims in the order in which they have just been mentioned, which brings the claim of Patterson’s executors first to notice. Were it not for the settlement which they made with John Gamber, one of the principals for whom their testator was surety, 'and the bond which they thereupon took of him, securing to them the payment of the balance which remained unpaid by him to them at the time, it would seem pretty clear that they would have a right upon equitable principle^ tp claim the benefit of the judgment in question, or a right to receive so much of the money upon or coming to it, as would be sufficient to satisfy, the balance of the money paid by them on account of their testator’s suretyship for John Gamber and William C. Corn-well. The bond upon which this judgment was entered was taken by Gamber of Cornwell for the purpose of securing Gamber, as between him and Cornwell, against the payment of the bonds, or money for which Patterson was their security to Heistand, and in truth was given éxpressly “ as security for payment of three several bonds, given by William C. Cornwell and Gamber (joint partners) to Abraham Heistand of York county, with Arthur Patterson as surety, <fcc.” Heistand, had he not been paid, might no, doubt have claimed the benefit of this bond and the judgment obtained upon it, upon the well-established principle in equity that a ere[308]*308ditor is entitled to all the securities taken by the surety of his debtor, either for the purpose of securing the payment of the debt to the creditor, or for the purpose of indemnifying himself against the payment of it. Maure v. Harrison, (1 Eq. Cas. Abr. 93); Wright v. Morley, (11 Vez. 12); Pitman on Principal and Surety 88-9.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Watts & Serg. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornwells-appeal-pa-1844.