Morrison v. Citizens National Bank

20 A. 300, 65 N.H. 253
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 20 A. 300 (Morrison v. Citizens National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrison v. Citizens National Bank, 20 A. 300, 65 N.H. 253 (N.H. 1889).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

The case comes up on a demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill, with an answer and an agreement that “ the allegations of the bill and answer are to be taken as facts, except where it is otherwise specifically agreed.” It is considered as if all the undisputed facts were alleged in the bill. Upon the whole case, some of the material facts are left in doubt. The view of them most favorable to the plaintiff is this: April 12, 1881, the defendant bank brought against Dearborn (1) an action to recover a promissory note on which the plaintiff was liable as indorser, and caused Dear-born’s property to be attached,. (2) several other actions on unsecured demands in which the same.property was attached subject to the former attachment, and (3) an action against the plaintiff as indorser. The property attached was sold on the writs by consent of the parties, and the avails held by the officer for application according to law. G. L., c. 224, ss. 19, 38. October 5, 1881, the bank obtained judgment in all the suits. The avails of the attached property were insufficient to satisfy the judgments. The bank placed the' executions issued on the judgments founded upon their unsecured demands in the hands of the officer, who within thirty days after the judgments were rendered, and (as the plaintiff says) on the third day of November, 1881, by the bank’s direction, applied upon them “the avails of the attached property, leaving them partly, and t'he judgment on the indorsed note wholly, unsatisfied. On the 25th day of March, 1882, the plaintiff, in ignorance of the foregoing facts except of the action against himself, paid the judgment against him, and by his bill seeks to recover of the bank the amount so paid.

It is assumed without inquiry that the plaintiff stands in the *277 position and has all the rights of a surety, though, so far as appears, he indorsed the note and procured it to be discounted by the bank in the ordinary course of business. Duncan v. Bank, 11 Ch. Div. 88—S. C ., 6 App. Ca. 1; Hurd v. Little, 12 Mass. 502; Pitts v. Congdon, 2 N. Y. 352. A surety, upon payment of the debt, may take an assignment of the creditor’s judgment and execution, or of his pending action against the principal, and for his own benefit prosecute the action against a defence made by the principal’s subsequent attaching creditors, levy the execution upon the property attached, or, by suit in the attaching officer’s name, recover it of the receiptor. Edgerly v. Emerson, 23 N. H. 555 ; Brewer v. Franklin Mills, 42 N. H. 292. In both of these cases the assignment was voluntarily made by the creditor, who in neither case had any interest in or claim upon the property attached, except for the security of the debt paid by the surety. Though the question has never been determined in this state, it may be that equity would compel the creditor to make the assignment, or would subrogate the surety to his rights without an assignment in cases of this character. The subsequent attaching creditors and the receiptor are not injurious^ affected by the subrogation; they remain in the same jjosition they would occupy, if, without the intervention of the surety, the creditor pursued the action and made the levy, and no one else has apparently any cause to complain. Whether the surety, on payment of the debt, would be entitled to a like assignment of, or subrogation to, the rights of a creditor who has on the same property subsequent attachments for the security of other demands which it is insufficient to satisfy, so that either he or the surety must suffer loss, is a different question.

The plaintiff has no reason to complain of the agreement between the two banks. As to him, his case stands as if all the sued demands against Dearborn were the property of the defendant bank. Dearborn’s property was insufficient to satisfy all of them. As between him and the bank, it was immaterial which of the attachments was first. By them the bank acquired the legal right to apply the attached property on their judgments, not merely in the order of the attachments, but in such order as they pleased. They could apply it on the judgment in the last as well as in the first attachment suit, or pro rata on all the judgments, or in such other manner as their interest required. This right of appropriation was a valuable part of their security. It is as if Dearborn had delivered the property to the bank in pledge, with express authority to sell it and*apply the proceeds in satisfaction of such of their claims as they might see fit; or as if he had given the bank a mortgage of the property to secure all their demands, without stipulating for its application on any one of them in preference to another. The plaintiff, by paying the debt on which he was liable, could not deprive the bank of the right to apply the property at their election on the other debts. In order *278 to entitle himself to the benefit of the security, he was bound to pay all the debts for the payment of which it was held by the bank. Gannett v. Blodgett, 39 N. H. 150, 153, 154, and cases cited. The assumption that the plaintiff had a lien on Dearborn’s property superior to the bank’s second attachment, has no foundation in law or in fact. He had in truth no lien by attachment or otherwise, but merely the equitable right to acquire by subrogation the security obtained by the bank by attaching that property. If this right of acquisition could properly be called a lien, it had no priority over the attachment lien held by the bank. The equitable right of the bank to the application of Dearborn’s property to the satisfaction of their unsecured claims against him was at the least equal to that of the plaintiff to have that property appropriated to the payment of the debt for which he was Dearborn’s surety. By the attachment the bank acquired in addition the legal right. “ When two or more have equal claims in equity and one has the legal title, the legal title shall prevail.’’ Eastman v. Foster, 8 Met. 19, 29. The surety’s right of subrogation to "securities held by the creditor is subordinate and not superior to the rights of the latter. His right is, to be put in the same position as the creditor, not in a better one. He cannot have the benefit of the security without assuming the burden to which it is subject, — ^without discharging* the indebtedness for the payment of which it is held. His right rests not upon contract, but upon principles of natural justice. Hayes v. Ward, 4 Johns. Ch. 123, 130. It would be unjust to permit him, on payment of part of the debt or one of several debts, to appropriate to the satisfaction of such debt or part of a debt a security which the creditor holds for the satisfaction of the entire indebtedness. It would be putting him, not in the same position as the creditor, but in a better one. It would tend to “defeat the object and end of suretyship,” and might in some cases place the creditor in a worse position than he would occupy without a surety. Gannett v. Blodgett, 39 N. H. 150, 154, 155. To hold that the plaintiff on payment of his debt only was entitled to be subrogated to the attachment, is to hold that he could compel the bank to-appropriate the attached property to the satisfaction of that debt, and deprive them of their right to apply it on the other debts. It is.

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Bluebook (online)
20 A. 300, 65 N.H. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrison-v-citizens-national-bank-nh-1889.