Moorman v. Wood

19 N.E. 739, 117 Ind. 144, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 128
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1889
DocketNo. 14,140
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 19 N.E. 739 (Moorman v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moorman v. Wood, 19 N.E. 739, 117 Ind. 144, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 128 (Ind. 1889).

Opinion

Elliott, C. J. —

The first paragraph of the appellant’s complaint counts on a promissory note, in which the appellant is the payee. The second charges that the defendant so negligently and unskilfully conducted an action in which he was employed as an attorney by the plaintiff as to cause the plaintiff great loss. The second paragraph of the answer is ad- ' dressed to the first paragraph of the complaint. This paragraph of the answer alleges that the defendant endorsed the note for the accommodation of the makers; that the appellant sued on the note and recovered judgment against the makers; that, at the time the judgment was entered, Jacob B. Blazer, one of the makers, was the owner of two hundred acres of land of the value of ten thousand dollars, and that the judgment became a lien on this land; that the land, over [146]*146all encumbrances, far exceeded in value the amount of the judgment; that the land was ample security for the judgment obtained on the note; that while the judgment was still in full force the appellant assigned all of his interest in it to Cornelius Corwin.

The assignment of the judgment transferred the lien to Corwin, and it seems clear that Moorman could not enforce payment from the endorser after parting with the judgment against the makers of the note. As to the makers, the note was unquestionably merged in the judgment. Bowen v. Eichel, 91 Ind. 22, and authorities cited.

We confess that we are unable to perceive how the assignee could hold the judgment against the makers, and the assignor still have a right of action against the endorser. The assignment of the judgment carried the note bound up in it, and if there is any right of action against the endorser it must be in the assignee of the judgment. The assignee became the exclusive owner of the judgment, and as such owner he was invested with all its incidents. We can not conceive upon what principle it can be held that one party may have a right of action against an endorser, while another has the whole claim against the makers. One incident of the judgment was the lien, and as this lien was in the assignee of the judgment, Moorman did not, and could not, control the security which it afforded. The right to this security being in Corwin, there was nothing to which the endorser could have resorted if Moorman had enforced payment from him. In the event that the endorser should pay the note, he would unquestionably be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the creditor of the principal, and might take, as an indemnity, the security held by. the creditor. Sheldon Sub., sections 119-123; Brandt Sur., sections 370-373; Sample v. Cochran, 82 Ind. 260.

But Moorman, although he once held a judgment lien, holds no security, for the lien of the judgment has passed from him to his assignee, and it must follow that the only [147]*147privity of contract.is that which exists between the assignee of the judgment and the appellee.

We agree with the appellant’s counsel that a pleading must proceed on a definite theory, and that it must be sufficient on the theory adopted. Mescall v. Tully, 91 Ind. 96, and cases cited; Lane v. Schlemmer, 114 Ind. 296, and cases cited. We also recognize and approve the doctrine declared in the cases cited by appellant, that a party will be field to the theory he assumes to develop. Graham v. Nowlin, 54 Ind. 389; Reissner v. Oxley, 80 Ind. 580; Carver v. Carver, 97 Ind. 497, 516; Buchanan v. State, ex rel., 106 Ind. 251; Louisville, etc., R. W. Co. v. Wood, 113 Ind. 544, 564. But we can not agree that the opposing counsel may assume, without proof, what the theory of a pleading is, and this we think the learned counsel of the appellant have done in this instance.

We can not see that the decision in Rodenbarger v. Bramblett, 78 Ind. 213, supports appellant’s contention. It may be that if Moorman had remained the owner of the judgment he could have maintained an action against the appellee, but he divested himself of all right in the judgment, and thus transferred the security. If Wood should pay the note to Moorman, the payment would not destroy the rights of Moorman’s assignee; he might still enforce his judgment. This must be true, or else it must be true that a payee may obtain judgment against the makers of a note, assign that judgment, then accept payment from an accommodation endorser, and thus extinguish the judgment as in favor of his assignee, although the assignee had the prior right and ample security. This result can only be avoided by holding that the entire debt evidenced by the note passes, as against a surety or an endorser, to the assignee of the judgment. This conclusion is the only one which will preserve the endorser’s right of subrogation, and, as this right must be preserved, this is the only valid conclusion. The note is not the debt, it is simply the evidence of the debt, and when the debt [148]*148passed to Corwin, Moorman was no longer in a situation to extinguish it, or to impair his assignee’s lien, or to destroy the endorser’s right of subrogation.

The case of Noble v. Merrill, 48 Maine, 140, is not in point, for what was there held is, that the assignment of a part of a judgment does not extinguish the part not assigned. There is no such question here. The question here is, can a creditor, who has assigned the whole judgment taken on a promissory note, recover judgment against an endorser?

An entire demand, such as a promissory note constitutes, can not be split into parts, and, as the answer avers that the judgment was taken on the note, it is made to appear,prima facie, at least, that it was for the entire demand. Especially is this so, for the reason that the answer avers that the judgment was rendered on the note for $-, since the most that can be said, in any event, is that there is some uncertainty in the pleading. The remedy for such a defect is by motion.

The name of the payee is written in the body of the note, and Wood’s name is written on the back. Prima facie, the situation of Wood is that of an endorser, as the note is negotiable by the law merchant. The law imports into the endorsement of a promissory note governed by the law merchant, a contract which, as a general rule, can not be contradicted by parol evidence. Pool v. Anderson, 116 Ind. 88; Knopf v. Morel, 111 Ind. 570; Stack v. Beach, 74 Ind. 571; Kealing v. Vansickle, 74 Ind. 529.

We need not here inquire whether there are, or are not, exceptions to the general rule, for all that we are required to decide is that the endorsement created, prima facie, the liability of an endorser. We are not concerned with a question between the debtors themselves as to their respective rights against each other, but our investigation relates solely to the rights of an endorser against the payee. The question is, therefore, essentially different from what it would be if the case were one between the makers and the endorser. Knopf v. Morel, supra.

[149]*149The appellee occupied a position so far analogous to that of a surety as to be entitled to be subrogated to the securities held by the creditor. Pownal v. Ferrand, 13 Eng. C. L. 230; Carter v. Black, 4 Dev. & Bat. 425.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E. 739, 117 Ind. 144, 1889 Ind. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moorman-v-wood-ind-1889.