Miller v. Sawyer

30 Vt. 412
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 30 Vt. 412 (Miller v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Sawyer, 30 Vt. 412 (Vt. 1858).

Opinion

[416]*416The opinion of the court was delivered by

Barrett, J.

This case was tried on bill and answer; from which it substantially appears, that in April, 1851, the orator and the defendant became sureties for Perry, on a note for three hundred dollars to the Savings bank at Brattleboro, payable on demand with interest; that on the 1st day of May, 1852, Perry executed his note to the defendant for one hundred and fifty-four dollars and fifty cents, payable on demand, so that the defendant might secure himself at any time for the moiety of said bank note, which he might be made to pay; that in February, 1854, said Perry executed another note to the defendant for thirty-two dollars and fifty cents, for other indebtedness; that in November, 1854, the defendant brought a suit on both of said notes against said Perry, and attached property to secure the same ; that on the 7th of December, 1854, Perry confessed judgment in said suit for the amount of both of said notes, being two hundred and eight dollars and fourteen cents, and for costs, three dollars and ninety-one cents, on which judgment the defendant took execution, and caused it to be levied on the property attached, and said property to be duly sold under said levy, and the proceeds of said sale, exclusive of officers’ fees, were duly paid to the defendant, being one hundred and eighty dollars and twenty-eight cents, leaving due on the execution twenty-seven dollars and eighty-six cents ; that Perry had become insolvent and left the place, and said bank note rested on the sureties to pay; that in January, 1855, the orator, not knowing of any of these transactions between Perry and the defendant, furnished the money with the knowledge and concurrence of the defendant, and paid one half of said note to the bank; being one hundred and fifty-four dollars and fifty cents, and the defendant, at the same time, furnished the money and paid the other half.

The object of the bill is to compel the defendant to account and pay to the orator one half of any payment, or of the proceeds of any security, made to the defendant to indemnify him for signing said bank note.

So far as the case shows, whatever was received by the defendant, as indemnity against the consequences of his sureliship for Perry, came through the instrumentality of the note of May 1st, 1852. In what character, and subject to what rights of his [417]*417co-surety, did the defendant receive, hold, and proceed with that note ?

The leading and well considered case of Deering v. Earl of Winchelsea, et al. 1 Cox 318 (S. C. 2 Bos. & Pul. 270) announces the principle which defines and governs the relations, rights, and duties of co-sureties towards each other. That principle, with entire uniformity, has been promulgated in all the text books, and adopted, illustrated, and applied by the courts in England and this country, so often as cases have occurred involving it. For present purposes it is needless to cite and discuss the books and cases to any considerable extent, in which this subject is treated, and the leading principles of it applied in settling the rights and duties of parties. It may be comprehensively stated, that persons subject to a common burthen, stand in their relation to each other, upon a common ground of interest and of right, and whatever relief, by way of indemnity, is furnished to either, by him for whom the burthen is assumed, inures equally to the relief of all the common associates.

In Hinsdill v. Murray 6 Vt. 136, Judge Phelps, with characteristic comprehensiveness and point says, “ No rule of law is better settled than this, that if one of two co-sureties take a pledge from the principal, or receive property from him as a means of indemnity against the joint liability, the other is entitled to the benefit of it, so far as respects an application of it to the debt; and if the latter is compelled to pay the debt, he is entitled to the fund. This results from his right to indemnity as respects his principal, and the principle of contribution as regards the co-surety.”

In Hall v. Robinson, 8 Iredell 56, Ruffin, Ch. J., in accordance with the uniform voice of the courts, says, The relief between co-sureties in equity proceeds upon the maxim that equality is equity, and that maxim is but a principle of the simplest natural justice. It is a plain corrollary from it, that when two or more embark in the common risk of being sureties for another, and one of them subsequently obtains from the principal an indemnity or counter security to any extent, it inures to the benefit of all. The risk and the relief ought to be co-extensive. * * * It is to be recollected that the indemnity, as soon as it was obtained, inured to the benefit of both sureties. It was precisely the same as if it [418]*418had been expressly declared to be for their joint benefit. If it had been so declared, no one would argue that one of them could deal with it to his own advantage, and to the prejudice of the other, without consulting him. * * * One surety, who gets an indemnity, is a trustee for a co-surety, and can not deal with the fund to his prejudice without his consent.”

In Whipple & Jones v. Briggs, 28 Vt. 65, the court held the same doctrine, and that case in Iredell’s Heps., and another in the same volume, are cited with approbation.

In the case of Bachelder v. Fisk, 17 Mass. 464, the court makes an instructive application of the same doctrine. See also 5 Barb. S. C. R. 399; 4 Hawkes 358.

Without specifically referring to other books or cases, it is sufficient for present purposes to say, that the ground assumed, and most ably and ingeniously defended by the venerable counsel for the defendant, viz : that the rights of the co-surety are the result of, and are to be wrought out through the original contract of suretiship, is not sustainable either upon principle or authority. The case first cited of Deering v. the Earl of Winchelsea, expressly negates such a doctrine. In that case the point was directly presented, considered, and decided. The entire current of subsequent cases, involving this subject, is in conformity with that case.

In the light of the principle thus announced, and which has been illustrated by frequent and various applications, the result of the present case is quite obvious, unless we assume to innovate upon the law of our own courts, as well as of the courts of the other states and of England.

Clearly, in equity, the defendant received and held that note for the equal benefit of himself and the orator; and in his trust relation to the orator, he was bound to render it available for the purposes for which he held it, to the utmost extent that he could, by reasonable diligence and fair dealing. The result of his suit against Perry shows that he could and did secure more on Perry’s property than the amount of that note. If he had sued that note only, the avails of the property attached would more than cover the amount of the judgment that he would have recovered.

Inasmuch as the defendant kept the existence of such an indemnity secret from the orator, notwithstanding the orator’s equal right [419]

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Bluebook (online)
30 Vt. 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-sawyer-vt-1858.