Dillenbeck v. . Dygert

97 N.Y. 303, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 175
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 25, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 N.Y. 303 (Dillenbeck v. . Dygert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillenbeck v. . Dygert, 97 N.Y. 303, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 175 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Finch, J.

We affirm this judgment upon the ground that the note, which was paid by George W. Snell, although extin *308 guished as such by the fact of its payment, remained in the hands of Snell, the evidence of a right to contribution against his co-sureties, establishing both that they incurred the original obligation to contribute, and the fact of payment by Snell, which made that obligation operative in his favor; that the transfer of the note by Snell to the plaintiff was for a valuable eonsidération, and the court below correctly held that its delivery to the plaintiff passed to him the right of contribution of which it was the evidence ; and that this result is not defeated by the fact that both parties supposed it gave to the transferee a greater right, and held the co-sureties as makers, instead of contributors, for the amount paid by Snell. The novelty and possible importance of the question seem to require that the reasons for our conclusion should be sufficiently developed.

It must be remembered that the exception here argued concedes the liability of the co-sureties defending to somebody ; either to Snell himself, or to plaintiff as his assignee, and the sole inquiry is, not whether they are liable at all, but simply whether.they shall pay Snell, or his alleged assignee. The only question is, which of two is entitled to receive the money that is certainly due to one; and the only interest of the defendants in that question is to know which is the. person to whom they may safely pay a debt, which, on this appeal, must be treated as valid and existing. Since, therefore, it is immaterial to the defendants which of the two they pay, provided only they pay but' once, the practical question remaining is whether Snell, as between him and plaintiff, is entitled to collect and receive this admitted debt notwithstanding what passed between them; and that, again, is the inquiry whether Snell transferred absolutely nothing, and got plaintiff’s money for nothing. We say got his money for nothing, since the proof is that plaintiff advanced to Snell the whole $500; and as it also' appears that at the date of the transfer there was owing to plaintiff by Snell only the two sums of $130 and $100, and that at the time of such transfer some money was paid, the inevitable inference is that upon delivery of the note the dif *309 ference between its face and the amount of Snell’s subsisting debt was advanced in cash. The injustice of denying to plaintiff any right whatever against the defendants, and leaving it in the ownership of Snell, requires us to consider whether any rule of law compels such a result.

For some distance in the appellant’s argument we feel bound to go with him. That the note was extinguished by payment, and therefore the doctrine of subrogation does not apply, we concede. The creditor had nothing but the note. Until it was paid by one of the co-sureties, he could gain no right as against his fellows. Their liability to him depended upon his extinction of the common debt. Subrogation implies a presumed intention to keep the creditor’s. security alive, and the equity of so doing as against a principal debtor. Contribution is among sureties only, and presumes the payment and extinguishment of the debt by one for the benefit of all. It rests rather upon the equity of equality than upon contract, though at law, to save the right, a promise to contribute will be implied. (Campbell v. Mesier, 4 Johns. Ch. 334; Davis v. Perrine, 4 Edw. Ch. 64; Armitage v. Baldwin, 5 Beav. 278.)

It follows, also, as the appellant argues, that the transfer of Snell’s right of contribution cannot be held to have passed as an incident to the transfer of the note as a principal obligation, since payment left it not an obligation at all; and that if the right of contribution passed, it did so as a new and principal obligation, and not as accessary to a dead and extinct note. And that brings us to the fundamental inquiry, what was the effect of the transaction between Snell and the plaintiff.

It is obvious, on the face of it, that both parties intended that some right against the signers of the note should be transferred. The note in the hands of Snell, although extinguished as such by payment, was yet the evidence of the liability to contribution by the co-sureties originally incurred, and also of the payment by Snell which gave him the right to enforce such obligation. (Hodgson v. Shaw, 3 Myl. & K. 183.) If, when Snell paid the note, he had taken from the payee, besides the note, a written receipt acknowledging its payment, *310 and then Snell had transferred both note and receipt to plaintiff for a valuable consideration, there being no other facts but that bare transaction, an intent to transfer the right to contribution would be easily and necessarily inferred. But since the note in Snell’s hands was the equivalent of a receipt from the payee, and equally evidence of payment, the transfer of the note, no other facts being present, would compel an inference that the right of which it was the evidence and which subsisted, and not the right which was gone and dead, was intended to be transferred. If, in just such a case as that supposed, the co-sureties had paid to plaintiff their contributory shares, and thereafter Snell had sued them for contribution as due to him, it is hardly possible to doubt that the paymen t to plaintiff would have been held good. The intent of the party is to be inferred from his acts; the intent to transfer some right, rather than no right, would have been an inevitable presumption; and since no right of which the note was evidence existed, save the right of contribution, an intention to transfer that right would necessarily have been presumed. But'this case does not stop at the bare fact of the transfer. The legal inference of intent deducible from that is claimed to be rebutted and supplanted by facts showing a different intent, and that a purpose to transfer the note as a note, and as a living obligation against the signers for its full amount was proved, which is inconsistent with the primary intent inferable from the bare fact of transfer. The facts relied upon for this purpose were three : first, that plaintiff advanced the full face of the note and not merely the amount due for contribution; second, that Snell steadily paid to him the full interest upon the note which he indorsed thereon ; and third, that upon Snell’s failure the plaintiff proved this note against him in bankruptcy for its full amount, and received and credited a dividend thereon. It seems to us, that none of these facts are inconsistent with an intent deducible from the bare transfer to assign and pass the right of contribution. When plaintiff advanced to the full amount of the note he may very well have assumed that Snell would be liable to him for the full amount of his advance, and the note serve as a *311 memorandum or evidence of that fact, while establishing only as against the other signers a liability, less in amount, and measured merely by their duty of contribution. On that basis, it would be'natural and proper for Snell to pay the full interest, and not strange that its payment was indorsed on the note.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.Y. 303, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillenbeck-v-dygert-ny-1884.