Mead v. Merrill
This text of 30 N.H. 472 (Mead v. Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
It may safely be admitted, as a general principle, that a surety has a right to receive frank and explicit-statements in reply to his inquiries relating to the risk of his undertaking, and which are made for the purpose of satisfying his own mind as to the safety or propriety of assuming it. Among these inquiries, are those which respect the consideration of the debt to which he is requested to lend his name; for a man that would take the hazard of aiding his friend in that manner, in a prudent adventure, might well be supposed to decline it, in a case in which the debt proposed is an imprudent one, the property purchased of doubtful utility to the principal at any price, or purchased at a price above its practical and real worth. If the payee of a note, or other creditor, under such circumstances, deceive the surety on such a subject, and by means of misrepresentations as to the consideration and origin of the debt, induce him to enter into a contract of guaranty in behalf of the principal, which, but for such misrepresentation, he [475]*475might be supposed to have declined, there is good ground, as well upon the reason of the thing as upon authority also, for saying that the surety might found upon such circumstances a substantial defence to any action that might be brought upon his promise, at least beyond the extent and value of any indemnity he may have taken.
The question does not arise, but for the present purpose, it may well be conceded that if the surety were, as the case finds, induced to sign the note for five hundred dollars, by the payee’s representations that such was the sum paid for the property described, while, in point of fact, the principals had undertaken, for two hundred more, as against the payee, who had deceived him in that particular, the facts would furnish the surety with a good defence.
But a different question is presented by this case. Here, the principal himself seeks to take advantage of the fraud supposed to have been committed against the surety.
The defendants, as the case supposes, bought the property for seven hundred dollars, and for their own uses and purposes. There is no pretence that they were misled by any representations of the vendor as to the nature and quality of the chattels sold, or as to the title. Nor does any thing appear in the ease which they pretend would constitute any defence whatever in this action, except what arises from their having strengthened their engagement to pay a part of the price, by adding to their own names the guaranty of James Johnson.
The defence which they set up, arising from that circumstance, is this: That when Johnson assumed the suretyship, he did it in consequence of the representations of the payee, that the price of the chattels sold was no more than five hundred dollars, while in fact there was a private agreement of the defendants to pay two hundred more; that he would not have become surety upon any other conditions, or if he had known the whole truth. That the agreement to give the two hundred dollars in addition being, therefore, in fraud [476]*476of the surety, as tending to counteract the benefit he designed that the principal should derive from that act, was an un» lawful agreement, which the court will not enforce.
We have attentively examined the authorities adduced to sustain the legal theory of this defence, and are clearly of the opinion that they fail to do so. They, without doubt, show that there are contracts which may be avoided by the parties making them, upon the ground that they secure to the other contracting parties advantages which the interests of third parties, protected by public policy, preclude them from taking. Of this nature, are agreements in fraud, of compositions arranged by creditors for the discharge of their debtors, and some others. But none of these cases bear any other than a very remote analogy to the one before us.
The case of Jackson v. Duchaire was briefly this. One Welch, to aid the defendant, bought of the plaintiff some furniture for ¿£70, and took a bill of sale to himself. But the defendant had been prevailed on to give to the plaintiff her notes for ¿£80 more, for the same thing. The cause was decided upon the two-fold ground that the transaction was a fraud upon Welch, and that there was no consideration for the notes.
The latter was a sound and extremely obvious defence. The case, therefore, is but a feeble authority for the principle involved in the former. But perhaps a still greater objection to the case, as a guide and as an exponent of the law is, that it does not intelligibly limit and define the principle itself upon which the court intended to base their decision. But however that may be, it comes far short of enunciating any principle applicable to the case of a surety in ordinary business.
The surety has no interest in the transaction between the principal and creditor, beyond his own indemnity. He is not supposed to stipulate or assume that the principal shall receive any specific benefit from’the transaction, analogous [477]*477to that which parties to a creditors? composition arrange fox their common debtor. The principal stands in no relation of tutelage or wardship to the surety, that lays the foundation of any presumption that the latter, in assuming suretyship, is arranging an advancement, or the like, for the principal.
If a case were presented, in which facts so extraordinary should actually appear, there would then, perhaps, be a fair question as to the applicability, of the doctrine of the case last referred to, and of the rights of sureties standing in the peculiar relation, of parents, relations or other benefactors. But nothing of the kind appears here ,• and nothing presented by the report of this case, distinguishes it from ordinary eases of suretyship.
If we were to decide that the defendants were not liable in this case, we must do so, as it would seem, upon grounds that would avoid the whole contract. And this might leave the plaintiffs, who have parted with their property, in a position in which they ought not, but upon well considered grounds, to be left.
On the whole, we are decidedly of the opinion that no defence is disclosed upon the case; that the verdict, therefore, must be set aside, and a
New trial granted..
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30 N.H. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-v-merrill-nhsuperct-1855.