Davis v. Mikell

1 Free. Ch. 548
CourtMississippi Chancery Courts
DecidedJuly 1, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Free. Ch. 548 (Davis v. Mikell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Chancery Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Mikell, 1 Free. Ch. 548 (Mich. Super. Ct. 1844).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The complainant files his bill for the purpose of being .relieved against a judgment at law in favor of the present defendants, founded upon the joint promissory note of one John McKnight, with the complainant and others. Upon the face of the note the makers all appear as principals. It is alleged, however, by the bill, and admitted by the answer of the defendant Robinson, (who is. now the sole executor of Moore,) that the complainant was, in point of fact, a mere surety, and that McKnight was the principal debtor.

It appears, from the proofs in the case, that, after the judgment was recovered, an execution was issued and levied upon a quantity of land belonging to McKnight, which was regularly advertised for sale. In the mean while, and' before the day appointed for the sale of the land, the sheriff levied the same execution on some personal property of McKnight, and took a bond with sureties from him, conditioned for the delivery of such property, in the [569]*569manner .required by the statute on that subject, and thereupon, abandoned the levy made upon the real estate. The complainant, being one of the defendants in the judgment, was required by the sheriff to unite in the bond so taken, that it might conform to the execution; but he expressly refused to sign it, and remonstrated against a- dismissal of the levy on the land, and urged that it should be sold according to the advertisement, saying that he would make it bring the amount of the judgment and costs.

The defendant admits that he agreed to receive the.,bond as it was made. This bond was afterwards quashed, on motion of the obligors, in the circuit court, and the plaintiffs at law (who are defendants in this court) have resorted back to their original judgment, and are attempting to enforce its collection by execution against the complainant.

It is admitted that McKnight and the other parties to the judgment have in the mean time become entirely insolvent. Whether these facts entitle the complainant to any relief, in his character of surety, is the question to be examined. There is, however, a preliminary question made by the counsel for the defendants, which must be disposed of before I proceed to notice the case on its merits.

It is contended, as the complainant appears from the face of the note to be a joint maker, without any designation of the character in which he signed it, that he is to be regarded as a principal, and is estopped by the form of his contract from averring the contrary. The rule at law in England seems to be this: where several persons bind themselves jointly and severally by the terms of their contract, and nothing appears from the face of it to show that there exists the relation of principal and surety, all are to be- regarded as principals. In such case it is said that the form of the contract precludes a party from averring at law that he signed as surety. Rees v. Barrington, 2 Ves. jun. 542; Theobald on Principal and Surety, 117. But in a court of equity, so far as I can find, it has not been doubted, either in England or in this country, that the true relation of the parties may be shown, notwithstanding the form of the contract holds them all out as principals. The’ authorities referred to expressly admit this position. The same distinction is recognized, and the same doctrine admitted, in the [570]*570case of Sprigg v. Bank of Mount Pleasant, 10 Pet. R. 257; also in the case of The People v. Jansen, 7 John. R. 336.

I think, then, that this preliminary objection cannot be sustained. Whether the complainant is not precluded from the relief which he seeks, by reason of the judgment against him, is a question of much graver character.

In the case of Bay v. Talmadge, 5 John. Ch. R. 305, chancellor Kent held, that after a judgment against a surety, he becomes bound as a principal debtor; that it is then too late to inquire into the antecedent relations between the parties, and that, the surety cannot afterwards avail himself of any want of diligence on the part of the creditor, in pursuing the principal debtor.

The case of Lenox v. Prout, 3 Wheat. 520, is supposed to be an authority to the same effect.

A different rule has been laid down in the case of Baird v. Rice, 1 Call. 18, and of Bullitt’s Executors v. Winstons, 1 Munf. 269. These cases show that a surety will be relieved after judgment, upon the same principles which would entitle him to relief before judgment.

The case of Sneed’s Executor v. White, 3 J. J. Marshall, 527, sustains the same doctrine.

I am relieved from deciding between these conflicting authorities by a decision of our own supreme court upon the point in question. Newell & Pierce v. Hamer et al. 4 How. Rep. 684. I understand the doctrine of that case to be, that a judgment against a principal and surety does not convert the surety into a principal debtor, so as to strip him of any equity he might subsequently have against the creditor, growing out of his character, as surety. I not only yield to that decision as a binding authority, but humbly conceive that it is fully sustained by the soundest principles. I perceive no solid reason for dispensing, with the same measure of good faith, on the part of the creditor towards a surety, after judgment, which he is required to observe before judgment. The whole doctrine of equity, in extending relief to sureties, rests upon the moral and equitable obligation of the creditor to obtain payment from the principal debtor, or at least to do no act by which the liability of the surety is increased, or the means of recovering the debt from the principal may be lost. It [571]*571is difficult to see how the act of the creditor, in reducing his debt to a judgment, can absolve him from any pre-existing duty which he owed to the surety, or take away the right of the surety to avail himself of any subsequent act of the creditor, by which the payment of the debt is attempted to be unjustly and exclusively thrown upon him, without the hope of remuneration.

Having thus shown that the complainant is not estopped, by his attitude in this case, from seeking relief, it remains to be seen whether he is entitled to the relief which he asks. This must depend upon the effect of the levy made upon the land, and the subsequent abandonment thereof, and upon the privity and connection qf the defendant with that procedure.

There can be no doubt, upon principle, that if the first levy had been made upon sufficient personal property of McKnight to satisfy the execution, it would have effectually discharged the complainant, notwithstanding any subsequent release of the property so seized. This consequence would have followed from the fact that the judgment was a joint one against the principal debtor and surety. 3 Serg. and Rawle, 465; 2 Dallas, 373. Although a levy may be released by the consent of the plaintiff and principal defendant, and a new levy made as to such defendant, yet I apprehend that where such release is made not only without the consent of the surety in the case, but in the face of his declared remonstrance against it, he would be thereby discharged.. This question was directly decided in the case of Baird v. Rice, 1 Call’s Rep. 18. In that case the property of the principal debtor was seized under a writ of fieri

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Related

Lichtenthaler v. Thompson
13 Serg. & Rawle 157 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1825)
Lenox v. Prout
16 U.S. 520 (Supreme Court, 1818)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Free. Ch. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-mikell-misschanceryct-1844.