Crane v. Alling

15 N.J.L. 423
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 N.J.L. 423 (Crane v. Alling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane v. Alling, 15 N.J.L. 423 (N.J. 1836).

Opinion

Ford, J.

John Ailing and Prudden Ailing became jointly and severally bound, the 26th of September 1810, to Stephen Crane, in an obligation of four thousand three hundred dollars, for the payment of two thousand one hundred and fifty dollars, the 1st of April 1815. On this bond, Jediah Crane and Joanna Crane, executors of Stephen Crane, deceased, brought an action against John Ailing, one of the obligors ; but they shortly after discontinued it on the terms hereafter mentioned, in consideration of his paying them four hundred dollars on the bond [424]*424Then Joanna Crane, who became surviving executrix, resorted to this action against Prudden Ailing, the other obligor, in order to recover the residue of the money from him; and having demurred to the fourth plea, by him pleaded, she died, and the argument of the demurrer is brought on by David D. Crane, administrator de bonis non of the obligee.

The defendant, in his argument, went back of his plea, and objected to the manner of laying the breach of the bond, in the declaration; in which it is averred that Prudden Ailing had not paid, &c. instead of charging that neither John nor Prudden had paid. But this objection cannot be allowed; for in an action against one of the obligors only on a'joint and several bond, no notice need be taken of the other obligor; it being a settled rule that, “ if the obligee sues only one of the obligors, he acts upon it as a several bond.” 1 Saund. Rep. 291, note 4; 2 Ohitt. Plead. 116, note (if) Id. 486, note (r;) Chitt. on Rills, 346. And this mode of laying the breach is productive of no injury to the defendant; for he may always plead that the other obligor has paid the money. But if we should concede this breach to be defectively laid, it would be only a defect in form, which'is always cured by pleading to the declaration, instead of demurring to it, specially. The declaration is therefore good in substanoe, and what remains, is to consider the objections to the plea.

The substance of the plea is this — That while an action was depending on this bond against John Ailing the other obligor, the executors received of him four hundred dollars, and by a certain writing under their seals, in consideration thereof, promised and agreed, that they would cause the said action against him to be discontinued, that they would prosecute no kind of action thereafter on the bond against him, and, that if they did, that this agreement should then become a good bar to such action, and operate as an absolute release and acquittance of the bond to him. And so, that the executors did release-the said bond to John Ailing the other obligor, and thereby released the same to the said Prudden Ailing.

The agreement described in the plea, was actually made by the executors. It is called by the defendant, a release ; but by [425]*425the plaintiff it is called a deed of covenants. If it he an actual, technical, release of the bond to one of the obligors, it is unquestionably a discharge to both. The law is inflexibly settled, as laid down in Coke Littleton, and other writers, that, “ if two men be jointly and severally bound in one obligation, and the obligee release to one of them, both are discharged.” Co. Litt. 232, a; Clayton v. Kynaston, 1 Lord Raymond, 420; Bac. Abr. Release, G. The reason why it is a discharge to both is a cogent one; a release is a legal, formal admission by the creditor that the bond is all paid. Bank v. Messenger, 9 Cowen, 38 ; it is tantamount to a receipt in full; and it requires no proof that when a bond is paid in full, the bondsmen are all discharged. It makes no difference by which of the obligors the debt was paid; for if any one of them paid the money, the bond is discharged against them all. Now a release under hand and seal, is better than a receipt in full, because it is stronger evidence of lull payment. A receipt in full, may be explained and disputed; but what a creditor does by deed of release under hand and seal, estops and concludes him forever; for a man can never be allowed to gainsay his own deed. A formal, technical release being therefore conclusive evidence of a payment in full, it is reasonably and necessarily regarded in law as & performance and extinguishment of the bond, and consequently a discharge of all the obligors therein named. On the other hand, a covenant not to sue one of several obligors, is no evidence of the payment of the bond, but exactly the contrary, and therefore it can never have the effect of a release; nothing will extinguish the bond, but an actual, technical release. In the case of Cheetham v. Ward, 1 Bos. and Pul. 634, Heath, J., uses the epithet “ actual ” release. When this point occurred again, years afterward, in the case of Rowley v. Stoddard, 7 Johns. Rep. 210, Thompson, J., delivering the opinion of the whole court, says, that a receipt given to one obligor for part only, though • expressed to be in full of all demands, will not answer the purpose; it must be a “ technical ” release. Many years after •the last case, when the point came up again, between the Catskill Bank and Messenger, 9 Cowen, 88, Savaq-e, C. J,, [426]*426delivering the opinion of the whole court, says, a covenant not to sue one, will not answer the purpose, it must he a “ technical ” release ; the reason he assigns is, “ because it (that is a technical release,) is an admission by the creditor that the debt is paid, whereas a covenant not to sue one of the obligors contains no such admission, but the contrary, that it is not paid. • Now this agreement of the executors, is so far from being any admission that the debt is all paid, that it explicitly states the principal debt to have been two thousand one hundred fifty' dollars, in the year 1815, and that only four hundred dollars have been received towards it. How then can this instrument be, like a technical release, an admission that the whole debt is paid ? It is deficient in the very vital principle that makes the release of one, a discharge of all. It was argued, that a release by operation of law is as good as a technical one ; as appears by the case of Cheetham v. Ward, before mentioned, where the obligee of a bond, made one of the several obligors therein mentioned, his executor, and this was held to discharge them all. But this fulfils the whole requirement of the law; it amounts to a forgiving of the debt, and an extinguishment of the bond, so-as to leave no debt remaining. It proves everything that could be proved by a technical release. But the agreement of the executors not to sue John Ailing, taken in its utmost latitude, does not forgive the debt to him. Lord Chief Justice Holt, emphatically said in Lacy v. Kynaston, 12 Mod. 552, if A and. B be jointly bound to C, and C covenant not to sue A ; this is no covenant not to sue JB; so the executors do not covenant not to sue Prudden Ailing. If they recover of Prudden. Ailing, the balance of the bond, suppose it be three thousand! dollars, will he not sue John

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.J.L. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-alling-nj-1836.