Samuel Sprigg, in Error v. The Bank of Mount Pleasant

35 U.S. 257, 9 L. Ed. 416, 10 Pet. 257, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 430
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 11, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 35 U.S. 257 (Samuel Sprigg, in Error v. The Bank of Mount Pleasant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel Sprigg, in Error v. The Bank of Mount Pleasant, 35 U.S. 257, 9 L. Ed. 416, 10 Pet. 257, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 430 (1836).

Opinion

Mr Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case comes up from the circuit court of the district of Ohio, upon a writ of error. It is an action of debt upon a single bill or obligation executed by the plaintiff'in' error and several others, bearing date the 20th of February 1826, for the payment of 2100 dollars, sixty days after date. The declaration is in the usual form. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and five' special pleas. To' the second and sixth pleas the plaintiff replies, and the defendant demurs to the replications; and to the third, fourth and fifth pleas the plaintiff demurs. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff in the court below, on both demurrers.. The material question in the case arises upon the second and sixth pleas, and the replications to them; oyer of the obligation having been craved, and spread upon the record. The second plea sets up in bar of the action, that the 2100 dollars, mentioned in the writing obligatory, was a loan made by the plaintiff to Peter Yarnall & Co.. (the first named obligors), and for their accommodation ; and that the writing obligatory was given to the bank, for the sole and only purpose of securing the payment of the said loan at' the expiration of sixty days from the date thereof; and that the defendant and Richard Symms, Alexander Mitchell and Z. Jacobs, were sureties only, and were so received and treated by tb¿ plaintiffs : that Peter Yarnall & Co. received, for their own exclusive benefit, the entire amount of the said 2100 dollars, and were so entered and charged on the books of the bank; and it is then averred, that when.the writing obligatory became due, the plaintiffs, on payment of 22 dollars, as the discount for sixty days then next following, agreed with the said Yarnall h Co., without the knowledge and consent of the defendant and his co-sureties, to give a fur *264 •Iher credit of sixty days on the said loan, and did give such furthd'r credit; by reason whereof the defendant alleges that he is discharged from all liability on said writing obligatory. The sixth plea is substantially the same, with an additional averment of a further extension of credit on the loan, and the insolvency of Yarnall & Co. To the allegation in the pleas that the defendant and the others named were sureties of Yarnall & Co., the plaintiffs reply: that the defendant ought not to be permitted to plead the same, because they say that, by the said writing obligatory, the defendant and the other obligors by the said writing obligatory, acknowledged themselves to be jointly and severally held and firmly bound, as principals, for the payment of the said 2100 dollars to the Bank of Mount Pleasant. To this replication the defendant demurs; and the real question raised by these pleadings is¿ whether the defendant can set up in his defence that he was only surety in the obligation for Yarnall & Co., in direct opposition to his acknowledgement that he executed it as a principal. It is unnecessary to enter into the inquiry whether it would not have been mote correct pleading for the plaintiff to have demurred to the defendant’s pleas, instead of replying. The defendant craved oyer of the obligation, an'd it is spread upon the record; and is to be taken as a part of the declaration. And if the replication should be considered bad, the plea is open to examination. It is an established rule in demurrers, that although the pleading demurred to may be defective,, the court will give judgment against the party whose pleading was first defective in substance. The question is therefore to be considered upon the validity of the plea. If the defendant can be let in to set Up that he was surety only, the matter alleged is sufficient to exonérate him from liability in the present suit.. It falls within the settled rule of law in relation to sureties, that extending to the principal further time of payment, by a new agreement, will discharge the surety. This, indeed, has not been denied on the argument. It has been contended, that it appearing expressly on the face of the bond that the defendant acknowledged himself as principal, did not vary the question; for that all joint and several obligors in a bond-are, in judgment of law, considered principals. This is true, as a prima facie presumption of law; but is not conclusive upon a party when drawn in question before a proper tribunal. But as matter of estoppel at law, it may stand on a different footing.; and is, at all events, as matter of fact moré conclusive. The doctrine of the law upon this p int is plain and *265 explicit. And it does not require the multiplication of authorities to show, that the rule is well established. In Huntington v. Havens, 5 Johns. Ch. 26, it is laid down that a general recital in a deed will not concluded party; though the recital of a particular part may estop him. Coke Litt. 352, a; Wils. Rep. 9. And in Stow v. Wise, 7 Conn. Rep. 220, it is said by the supreme court in Connecticut, that when a party has solemnly admitted a fact by deed under his hand and seal, he is estopped not only from disputing the deed itself, but every fact it recites. And in the case of Carver v. Aslor, 4 Peters 83, this court, in speaking of the effect-of recitals and their operation by way of estoppel, say; that, the recital of the lease in the deed, was not only evidence between these parties of the original existence of the lease, but was conclusive evidence of that original existence. An estoppel has sometimes been quaintly defined, the stopping a man’s mouth from speaking the truth ; and would seem, in some measure, to partake of severity, if not of injustice. But it is in reality founded upon the soundest principles, as á rule of evidence. That a party has, by his own voluntary act, placed himself in a situation as to some matter of fact, that, he is precluded from denying it; and in its application t.o the dealings and contracts, of men in the affairs of human life, it is a salutary practical rule, that a man shall not be permitted to deny what he has once solemnly acknowledged. In ordinary cases, when sureties sign an instrument without any designation of the character in which they become bound ; it may be reasonable to conclude that they understood that their liability was conditional, and attached only in default of payment by the principal. And hence the reasonableness of the rule of law, which requires of the creditor, that his conduct, with respect to his debtor,.should be such as not to enlarge the liability of the surety, aud make him responsible beyond what he understood he had bound himself. But when one who is in reality only surety, is willing to place himself in the situation of a principal, by expressly declaring upon his contract that he binds himself as such ; there cannot be any hardship in holding him to" the character in which he assumes to place himself. As to that particular contract, he undertakes as a partner with the debtor"; and has no more right to disclaim the character of principal than the creditor would have to treat him as principal if he had set out in the obligation that he was only surety. These observations are only made for the purpose of showing there is no hardship in the case ; for it is most generally from the hardship of particular cases, that attempts are *266 made to.innovate upon general principles.

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Bluebook (online)
35 U.S. 257, 9 L. Ed. 416, 10 Pet. 257, 1836 U.S. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-sprigg-in-error-v-the-bank-of-mount-pleasant-scotus-1836.