Reeves v. Pulliam

66 Tenn. 119
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 Tenn. 119 (Reeves v. Pulliam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reeves v. Pulliam, 66 Tenn. 119 (Tenn. 1874).

Opinion

Deaderigk, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the July term, 1874, of the Circuit Court of Fayette county, Cache and Dortch, executors of Josiah Higgerson, recovered a judgment against E. J. Reeves, principal, and I. G. Reeves and plaintiff, as sureties.

Defendant, Pulliam’s testator, W. G. Day, was a co-surety on the note upon which the judgment was obtained, but was not sued in the action.

Pulliam was qualified as executor of Day’s estate in January, 1865, and made his settlement in 1871.

At the July term, 1871, of said Circuit Court, and after said judgment had been rendered against him, plaintiff entered a motion for judgment over against his principal and co-sureties.

On the 31st of March, 1874, the plaintiff paid $710.46, the amount of the judgment and interest thereon, and the sum of $12.80, the costs of suit; and on the 10th of July, 1874, he dismissed his mo[121]*121tion entered at July term, 1871, and on the said 10th of July, 1874, entered this motion against defendant, the executor of his co-surety, Day.

The defendant relies upon the statutes of limitations of two years and six months, all the parties being residents of said Payette county, and of seven years as a bar to the recovery.

By secs. 3625j, 3625 a of the Code, a right to a judgment by motion is given to a co-surety against whom judgment has been rendered, or who has paid said judgment or more than his ratable share thereof against all the parties to the instrument for their proportion, whether they were included in said original judgment or not. By the next section, 3,626, this remedy lies both for and against the representatives of deceased parties.

It will be observed that the right- to make the motion accrues upon the rendition of the judgment against the surety, or upon payment by him of the original judgment, or more than his ratable share of said original judgment.

The right of recovery in this case depends in part upon the question whether the failure to prosecute the motion upon the ground of the rendition of the judgment gives the defendant the right to rely upon the statute of limitations from the time said judgment was rendered against a motion entered and prosecuted against defendant upon the ground that plaintiff had paid the judgment, or whether the statutes would begin to run against the latter motion only from the time of payment of the judgment.

[122]*122The statutes clearly give the co-surety the right to the motion, upon the payment of the judgment, as a distinct and substantive cause of action. And the 'statutes of limitation would only run against such cause of action from the time it accrued, and that time would be when the judgment was paid.

This is the construction placed upon sec. 3625 of the Code by Judge Caruthers in his History of a Lawsuit, and it is a sound one. See, also, 10 Yer., 521, where it is expressly adjudicated in conformity to this construction.

In this view, neither secs. 2279, 2281, 2784 nor 2786 being acts of limitations of two and seven years, bars the action in this cause, as these statutes run only when there is a cause of action. 5 Hum., 629; 9 Yer., 57; 3 Yer., 319;. 7 Yer., 165.

But it is insisted that the statute of limitations having barred the original debt against defendant, the administrator of the co-surety of plaintiff, it cannot be revived against him by the recovery of a judgment against plaintiff, co-surety of his intestate, and having a complete defense to the original cause of action under the statute of limitation, he cannot be made liable to pay the co-surety any part of the debt due to the original creditor which his co-surety has been compelled to pay.

In the case of Marshall v. Hudson, 9 Yer., 57, this defense was made, and it was held that the surety was liable, although the administratrix of the principal had succeeded in defeating the recovery of the creditor against her by the plea of the statute of limitations. [123]*123The court held that although she had succeeded in her plea of the statute of limitations against the creditor of her intestate, yet, as soon as Marshall had been compelled, as intestate’s surety, to pay the debt, he became her creditor, and was entitled to judgment against her.

It is by the payment of the debt of the principal that the surety becomes creditor of his principal, or his representative, by the express provisions of the statutes, and then his cause of action accrues. Code, secs. 3625, 3625 a; 10 Yer., 521.

And in 10 Yer., 521, it is held that the same rule applies as between co-sureties, that when one of the co-sureties has paid the debt he may, within two years from that time, make his motion, or bring his action against the personal representative of the deceased co-surety for contribution; that the act of limitation begins to run against him from the time he paid the judgment, and not from the time the judgment was rendered against him.

So it has been held by successive adjudications of this court—

1. That although the administrator of a principal in a note may defeat the recovery upon the note by the plea of the statute of limitations, yet the exoneration of such administrator does not relieve the sureties of his intestate from liability. Bank v. Campbell, 7 Yer., 353.

2. That although the administrator of a deceased principal debtor by note may, by the plea of the statute of limitations, defeat the creditor’s recovery [124]*124against him, yet when the surety on such note. is compelled to pay the debt, such surety then has a cause of action against such administrator for the amount so paid; that this cause of action commences in point of time and is founded upon the» payment of the debt by him. Marshall v. Hudson, adm’r, 9 Yer., 57.

3. That where one of two co-sureties pays a judgment recovered against him, he may have his motion against his co-surety’s executors for contribution within two years from the time he paid the judgment, although more than two years had elapsed from the time 'of the rendition of the judgment against him, and as it appears more than two years from the qualification of the executor of the deceased co-surety had elapsed.

The cause of action is the payment of the judgment, and the statute of limitations only begins to run from that time. Maxey v. Carter, 10 Yer., 521,

In the case of Goss v. Gibson et al., complainant filed his bill against his co-sureties for contribution. Complainant and defendant were ■ all co-sureties of one Marshall. In December, 1842, all the defendants were declared bankrupts and discharged from all their debts and liabilities.

In September, 1(343, judgments were rendered against the complainant upon claims upon which he and defendants were co-sureties for Marshall, and complainant was compelled to pay them, and then filed his bill for contribution as above stated. Defendants insisted that they were discharged from all liability on [125]*125said claims by their certificate in bankruptcy. And so they were.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Tenn. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reeves-v-pulliam-tenn-1874.