Harris v. Newell

42 Wis. 687
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 42 Wis. 687 (Harris v. Newell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Newell, 42 Wis. 687 (Wis. 1877).

Opinion

ByaN, O. J.

I. On the face of the promissory note, the appellant appears as a principal. We entertain very grave doubt whether it would be competent for him, as against the holder of the note, so far to vary his contract by parol as to [690]*690show that be signed the note as surety for the other maker. See 1 Parsons'on Bills, 233. We have lately held that an indorser cannot vary the legal contract of indorsement by parol. Charles v. Denis [ante p. 56]; Eaton v. McMahon [ante, p. 484]. The contract of a surety, and the contract of a principal, signing a promissory note, vary in some respects, different from that set up by the appellant in this case. And it is difficult to see why the same rule should not apply to the contract of maker and to the contract of indorser.

The appellant sets up the knowledge of the payee, at the time, that he signed the note as surety. This could not well affect the admissibility of parol evidence to vary the contract as he signed it. Where one, being a surety as between him and his principal, executes the contract as a principal himself, it may well be that the other party relies on his liability as principal, and would not have accepted his liability as surety. He may know that, as between themselves, one of the parties with whom he contracts is a surety; but he may accept their contract because, as to him, both are principals. In any view, it is difficult to see on what principle the surety may be admitted .to limit his written contract by parol.

This question was not raised at the bar, and is too important to be passed upon without argument. Our first inclination was to order a reargument on the point. But as the other question was very ably discussed, and as we are prepared to do so, we have concluded to decide this case upon it, as if the appellant were a surety in form.

II. A disposition is shown in some of the cases to overlook somewhat the distinction between sureties and guarantors ; but the contract of a surety is essentially different from the contract of a guarantor. Oxford Bank v. Haynes, 8 Pick., 423; Craddock v. Armor, 10 Watts, 258. The contract of a surety is collateral to the contract of his principal, and binds the surety for the contract of the principal. It is not merely a contract to perform upon failure of the principal, but binds [691]*691tbe surety equally witb tbe principal for tbe performance of tbe’ contract of the principal. Tbe surety assumes for himself tbe liability of bis principal. And, as Lord EldoN remarks in Wright v. Simpson, 6 Vesey Jr., 714, as between tbe creditor and tbe surety, the creditor assumes no obligation of active diligence against bis principal; and it is tbe business of tbe surety, not of tbe creditor, to see that the principal performs.

This is tbe legal contract. Eut, because the surety has no interest in tbe contract of bis principal, and because tbe creditor or tbe principal debtor may prejudice tbe surety by delay, equity will sometimes interfere in behalf of tbe surety, either against bis principal or against bis creditor. In such a case tbe surety may proceed in a court of equity against tbe principal, to compel him to pay tbe debt, or against the creditor to compel him to proceed at law to collect his debt from tbe principal. 1 Story’s Eq., § 327; Wright v. Simpson, supra; Hayes v. Ward, 4 Johns. Ch., 123; Bishop v. Day, 13 Vt., 81.

This well established equitable jurisdiction appears to preclude the legal right claimed in this case for the surety: the right to notify tbe creditor to proceed, and, upon failure of tbe creditor to do so, to stand released at law. For, if tbe surety could thus of himself put tbe creditor in motion, it is difficult to see why he should resort to a court of equity to do for. him what be could do for himself.

This power to put tbe creditor in motion appears to be more safely reposed in tbe discretion of a court of equity, than vested as a legal right at his option in the surety. Tbe diligence of creditors is generally to be trusted; and when they forbear, it is generally from prudent motives, having regard to all interests concerned. Tbe legal right of a surety to interfere against such forbearance might well be mischievous and oppressive. It is true that tbe creditor and principal debtor may collude to -tbe prejudice fof tbe surety. • That [692]*692would be a proper ground for equitable interference. But it is safer, in any case, to leave the surety to the equitable remedy, to be exercised in view of all the circumstances, than to make him his own chancellor to control the action of his creditor.

And it is not to be overlooked, that this jurisdiction of courts of equity does not proceed upon any limitation of the legal right of the creditor, or of the legal liability of the surety, but upon the general principle of equitable jurisdiction, to prevent oppression by the inequitable exercise of legal right.

The legal doctrine that a surety may interfere, on his own motion, between his principal and their creditor, and thus limit his own liability upon his own contract, may be said to be quite modern, and has not been generally adopted. It has always been held by all courts that mere delay of the creditor, without suspending his right to proceed against the principal, will not, in the absence of fraud, discharge the surety. But in Pmip v. Packard,, IB Johns., 174-, the court inaugurated the new doctrine, that notice by a surety to the creditor to proceed against the principal, and failure of the principal to proceed, to the injury of the surety, will1 operate to discharge the surety from his liability. And this appears to be still the rule of decision in New York. Remsen v. Beekman, 25 N. Y., 552.

In King v. Baldwin, 17 Johns., 384, Spencer, C. J., says, “ that the creditor is under an equitable obligation, and such is the essence of the contract, to obtain payment from the principal debtor, and not from the surety, unless the principal is unable to pay the debt.” This is bringing the contract of a surety very near to the contract of a guarantor. And so "Weight, J., who delivers the opinion of the court in Bemsen v. Beeleman, supra, reiterating the doctrine, calls the surety a guarantor, and his contract a guaranty.

We entertain, in common with the whole profession, the [693]*693most profound deference for tbe judgments of Chief Justice SpbNOER. But even the authority of so illustrious a common-law judge ought not to mislead us. And we cannot but think that he confounded the equitable remedy of a surety with his legal liability. The creditor is indeed under an equitable obligation, which a court of equity will enforce, to obtain payment from the principal debtor; and that may be said to enter into the contract. But the essence of the contract is the legal undertaking to pay the debt, which a court of law will enforce; quite consistent with the equitable remedy. And it seems to us manifest that the rule in New York interpolates a condition into the contract of the surety, that he will not pay when the'creditor neglects his notice to exercise active diligence against the principal.

It is not a little singular that the court of chancery in the same state appears to have adhered to the strict legal construction of the contract, while the courts of law were varying it by an equitable construction. After the decision of Pain v. Packard, and commenting upon it, Kent, C., says in King v. Baldwin, 2 Johns.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Wis. 687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-newell-wis-1877.