Robinson v. Boyd

60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 57
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 57 (Robinson v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Boyd, 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 57 (Ohio 1899).

Opinion

Minshall, J.

The action below was a suit for contribution by one, who, as surety, claimed to have paid the debt of the principal, against two others claimed to have been co-sureties. The case was submitted in the common pleas on the pleadings. The court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, which, on error was reversed by the circuit court, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff against one of the defendants, plaintiff in error, the other being found insolvent; and this proceeding is prosecuted to reverse the judgment of the circuit court.-

• The questions arise upon the averments of the petition, which are not controverted by the answer of either defendant, except as will be presently noted.

It appears from the petition that Estella Everett was in April, 1879, a non-resident minor possessed of property in this state; that James T. Boyd was then appointed her trustee of the property by the probate court of Seneca county, and that he with J. T. Robinson and W„ H. Free, sureties, gave bond according to law for the faithful performance of his duties; that he entered upon the performance of his trust, and there came into his hands a large amount of property; and having filed his final account, the same was settled in the probate court June 5, 1888, by which there was found in his hands the sum of $2,304 — which he was ordered to pay over according to law. That after the account had been filed, Boyd in August, 1887, made and delivered to Robinson, one of the sureties, a mortgage of indemnity on certain real estate; and that after-[62]*62wards, on December 29,1888, the plaintiff, Virginia E. Boyd, to further secure the payment of the amount found due Estella Everett, who was then of age, and at the request of Boyd, who was her husband and of Estella Everett and Robinson, assigned and delivered a policy of life insurance she then owned upon the life of her husband, to be held as collateral security for the sum due on the bond. That she received no consideration for the assignment, and that the policy was simply pledged as surety of her husband. That in June, 1889, the mortgage given Robinson was foreclosed, and the sum realized, $1,236.95, was applied in part payment of the indebtedness, leaving a balance of some $1,278, still due. Boyd died insolvent in September, 1889. Afterwards Miss Everett collected the full amount of the insurance, amounting to $1,559, and applied the sum of $1,311 to the payment of the balance due her including interest. The plaintiff then avers the insolvency of Free; a demand on Robinsion made August 5, 1895, for contribution, and his refusal to contribute.

Robinson, by answer, denied that the policy of insurance was assigned at his request or with his knowledge. Free made a like answer; neither, however, denying any other averment of the petition. Two questions arise upon the case made by the pleadings: 1. Whether there was any consideration for the pledge by the plaintiff of her policy of insurance as security for the debt of her husband, principal on the bond. 2. If so, whether she is entitled to contribution from the sureties on the bond.

1. There is no question but that if the plaintiff was not bound in an obligation to the creditor on the bond — if she was not obliged by the pledge of [63]*63her policy to permit it to be applied in payment of the debt of her husband on the bond, she cannot compel either of the sureties to contribute to her simply from the fact that it was so applied. As will be hereafter seen, the right to contribution arises from the discharge by one of a burthen common to himself and others. If one who discharges a debt was not bound to the creditor to do so, he has no claim against others who were bound to do so. As to such he is a mere volunteer. It is also true that there must have been some consideration for the pledge other than the execution of the bond. At the time the pledge was made the bond had been executed and the rights and liabilities of all the parties to it had been fixed. It was no accommodation to the husband to promise to pay the debt •on the bond, or to pledge her property to secure it, for he had already obtained and enjoyed the trust by the acceptance of his bond with the sureties on it. As to her, the execution of the bond was a past transaction, and constituted what in law is termed an executed consideration. The law applicable to this view of the case is clearly stated by a very learned author, “Where a promise is made^to pay the already existing debt of another, there must be some new consideration, or the promise will be void. The original consideration, which supports the principals contract, cannot be made to operate on the new promise. Such promise is nudum pactumMetcalf on Contracts, 172. But the consideration for a promise, though generally, is not always confined to a benefit to the promisor; any forbearance, detriment, loss or damage given or suffered by the promisee is a sufficient consideration to support a promise to him. Nor is it necessary that the consideration [64]*64for an agreement should be adequate in value. As said by the author just referred to, “however slight the benefit to the promisor, if of any legal value and however slight the damage, loss, or inconvenience to the promisee, if of any legal estimation, is sufficient to support a contract.” . Metcalf on Cont., 165; Clark v. Sigourney, 17 Conn., 511, 517.

. The question then arises, whether by reason of loss or detriment to Miss Everett, the plaintiff was bound by the act of pledging her property as security for the amount due upon the bond as ascertained by the accounting and judgment of the court. There is no such averment in the petition, nor was she required to make such an averment; a consideration will be presumed from the act of making the pledge. This might, however, be controverted; but would be a matter of defense; and no such defense is made by the pleading. A pledgee has the advantage always awarded one in possession; the possession is deemed rightful until' the contrary is made to appear. So that, if, on any reasonable presumption, a consideration may have existed, such presumption will support the promise; for had the defense been made, she might have been able to show the fact. It appears that at the time the pledge was made, Miss Everett had arrived at age, and was entitled to her money; that Boyd was embarrassed, and had given to one of the sureties a mortgage of indemnity. The fair inference then is that Miss Everett was then seeking either payment or security for her claim; and that the policy was assigned in pledge to satisfy her. It is averred that it was made at'her request. Now had it not been given, there is nothing to show that she might not either have obtained payment in money or [65]*65property, or have obtained adequate security by a mortgage on the property of the debtor. The fact then that she may have pretermitted her efforts to obtain immediate payment, or security by mortgage on the property of her debtor, induced by the pledge made by the plaintiff, would have been such a pretermission of efforts on her part to better her condition at a time when she might have done so by obtaining further security, as would constitute a consideration for the pledge then made by the plaintiff, or would estop her from saying there was none. Therefore the plaintiff could not, after pledging her policy under these circumstances, have recovered it, without satisfying the amount due on the bond; and she was therefore bound to the extent of the value of her policy for the payment of the amount due on the bond.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Clark v. Sigourney
17 Conn. 511 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1846)
Monson v. Drakeley
40 Conn. 552 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1873)
Young v. Shunk
16 N.W. 402 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1883)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-boyd-ohio-1899.