Mathews v. . Aikin

1 N.Y. 595
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1 N.Y. 595 (Mathews v. . Aikin) 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
Mathews v. . Aikin, 1 N.Y. 595 (N.Y. 1848).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

It is a general and well established principle of equity, that a surety, or a party who stands in the situation of a surety, is entitled to be subrogated to all the rights and remedies of the creditor whose debt he is compelled to pay, as to any fund, lien, or equity which the creditor had against any other person or property on account of such debt. The general doctrine, as a rule of equity, is not controverted on the part of the appellants, but is fully conceded. It is insisted, however, by their counsel, that the guarantor in this instance did not become such at the request of the debtor ; that as to the debtor, he was a mere volunteer, having no remedy over against him, and never acquiring the character of a surety so as to be entitled to subrogation to the rights and remedies of the creditor.

*600 The objection.seems somewhat narrow and technical when addressed to a court of equity whose peculiar province is to mete out substantial justice where the'.more restricted powers ofthe common law fail in its administration. But it leads us to examine carefully into the grounds and principles upon which the right of subrogation rests. Does it rest upon the foundation of a contract binding in a court of law between the debtor and his surety ? In other words; does it turn substantially upon the question whether or not the surety who has paid the debt to the creditor has a remedy over, on his contract, against the principal debtor for money paid in an action at law ? or does it not rest rather upon the broader and deeper foundations of natural justice and moral obligation ? Chancellor Kent says, in Hays v. Ward, (4 John. Ch. 130,) “This doctrine does riot belong merely to the civil law system. It is equally a well settled principle in the English law that a surety-will be entitled to every remedy which, the principal debtor has, to enforce every security, and to stand in the place of the creditor, and have those securities transferred to him, and to avail himself .of those securities against the debtor. This right 'stands not upon contract, but upon the same principle of natural justice upon which one surety is entitled to contribution against another.” Lord Brougham, in Hodgson v. Shaw, (3 Mylne & Keene, 183,) said : “ The rule here is undoubted, and is founded on the plainest principles of natural reason and justice, that the surety paying off a debt shall stand in the place of the creditor, and have all the rights which he has for the purpose of obtaining his reimbursement. It is scarcely possible to put this right of substitution too high ; .and the right results more from equity than from contract or quasi contract unless in so far as the known equity may be supposed to be imported into any transaction, and so to raise a contract by implication.” Sir Samuel Bomilly, in his argument in Craythorne v. Swinborne, (14 Ves. 159,) stated the rule to be, that, “ a surety will be entitled to every remedy which the creditor has against the principal debtor to enforce every security by all means of payment, to stand in the place of the creditor not only through the medium of contract but *601 even by means of securities entered into without the knowledge of the surety, having a right to have those securities transferred to him, though there was no stipulation for that, and to avail himself of all those securities against the debtor.” And this exposition of the rule was fully sanctioned by Lord Eldon in giving judgment in that case..

The equity is certainly as strong, and it seems‘to me somewhat stronger in favor of substitution, as against the creditor at least, than it is between sureties for contribution where one has paid the whole debt, and it has been likened to the case of contribution between sureties. As between them the rule in equity is clear that the ground of relief does not stand upon any notion of mutual contract express or implied, but arises from principles of equity independent of contract. Story's Eq. § 493, and notes, where the authorities are all collected. This is also substantially the rule in courts of law. (Norton v. Coons, 3 Denio, 130.) In that case the circumstances under which the defendant became co-surety were 'such as to repel the presumption of any promise to make contribution. But the court held that his being a surety on the same contract without qualification in terms vms sufficient to fix his obligation to contribute, and that for the purposes of giving the plaintiffs a remedy the court would presume a promise. A promise was therefore imputed where none confessedly existed, in order to provide a remedy for the party where there was no doubt as to the legal liability; and the legal liability in such cases springs from the equitable obligation ; the law courts having borrowed their jurisdiction in these particular cases from the courts of equity. In the present case it seems to me, if it were necessary, a court of equity ought to imply a promise on the part of the creditor to subrogate the surety to all his rights and remedies, in case he resorted to the latter for payment of the debt upon his guarantee. The equitable obligation resting him to do so seems to me most manifest.

It is true, the case shows that the principal debtor informed the guarantor that he was under no promise or obligation to give security, which seems to have been insisted upon by the *602 creditor, and that he advised his father not to give the guaranty. There is nothing, however, in the case to show that the debtor did not' subsequently assent to it, even at the time the guaranty was executed, or that the money was not paid at his express request afterwards. But the case does show that the guaranty was executed at the repeated and urgent solicitations of Wood, the original creditor, and of Hasbrook, to whom Wood proposed to transfer the debt, and to whom, by arrangement between them, the bond and mortgage were executed. As to the creditor Mathews, therefore, who now stands in the place of Hasbrook, Abraham Áikin was not a voluntary surety for the debt of his son, but became so at his express request, or that of the mortgagee under whom he claims, and it seems to me, after Mathews has pursued Abraham Aikin to judgment and fixed his liability as surety for his son in a court of law, it does not lie with him to turn round and say he is a mere volunteer in assuming the obligation and paying the money, and therefore not entitled to the rights and privileges of a surety. The creditor should not be permitted in a court of equity to question the rights of the surety after the obligation has been incurred at his request, and he has fixed the character upon him by suit and judgment in a court of law. As to him at least, Aikin, the father, was surety for the debt of the son, and was compelled to pay that debt, or a portion of it; and it is immaterial as to the creditor what the state of the case is, or the legal rights are, as between the principal debtor and the surety. There is no reason why the creditor should set up a defence for the debtor. It is sufficient for him that he has received his debt of the surety to create the obligation on his part to surrender to the surety the securities in his hands.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathews-v-aikin-ny-1848.