Sauer v. Detroit Fidelity & Surety Co.

213 N.W. 96, 237 Mich. 697, 51 A.L.R. 1485, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 591
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1927
DocketDocket No. 99.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 213 N.W. 96 (Sauer v. Detroit Fidelity & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sauer v. Detroit Fidelity & Surety Co., 213 N.W. 96, 237 Mich. 697, 51 A.L.R. 1485, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 591 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Snow, J.

There was considerable delay in bringing to a hearing a chancery suit for an accounting between Joseph Sauer, Cornelius Stomler, and Sydney C. McLouth, copartners engaged in dredging sand from the 'bays and channels of the St. Clair river. Sauer and Stomler each claimed McLouth owed 'him several thousand dollars for sand he had removed, and, after the case had been pending for more than a year, McLouth was required by order of the court to give them a bond in the sum of $5,000 conditioned to pay “any and all sums of money to be found by the said court to be due them for sand removed from the said 4th day of October, A. D. 1922, until the trial of said cause and the decree of said court.” Seven months *699 later, upon order of the court, he gave a second $5,000 bond, with the same obligation, except that it covered sand removed “heretofore and hereafter until the trial of said cause and the decree of said court.” The present action is one to recover on these bonds, and was tried before the court without a jury. From a judgment in plaintiffs’ favor, the defendant brings error.

It claims it is not liable on either of the bonds because the condition in each was to pay a sum “to be found by the said court to be due,” and that as a matter of fact the court never found any sum whatever to be due, as the decree was entered by consent of its principal and plaintiffs, without contest, and pursuant to a written agreement fixing the amount due, and that the making of such settlement without the surety’s consent constituted such a material alteration of its undertakings that it was thereby discharged.

It is true that the accounting case was not tried in the sense that evidence was received and passed upon. There was no necessity for it. Before the case could be heard McLouth died, and his administrator, negotiating with his partners, determined and agreed upon the quantity of sand he had removed and the sum in which he was indebted. The sum considerably exceeded the amount of the bonds. It was allowed by the probate court as a claim against the estate, and a five per cent, dividend paid thereon, which was all that the assets of the estate would permit. By consent this was likewise the amount named as due them in the accounting decree, to recover which from the surety this action is prosecuted. No one has ever claimed the amount thus determined was not correct, or that there was any mistake, fraud, conspiracy, or collusion between any of the parties in arriving at it.

In fact, upon the trial of the instant case, the parties stipulated in open court in part as follows:

*700 “The attorneys for the respective parties in this case, for the purpose of expediting the trial and avoiding loss of time to the court and counsel attendant upon the proof herein stipulated to, agree and stipulate as a fact, to be considered by the court, as follows: That Sydney C. McLouth, the principal named in the bonds declared upon, and defendant in the chancery case in which said bonds were given, removed an. amount of sand from the waters adjacent to Dickinson Island during his lifetime and covered by said bonds, worth in excess of $10,000, the total penalty of said bonds over and above the quarter interest therein of the said Sydney' C. McLouth as tenant in common with the plaintiffs herein.”

It will be remembered that the obligation of the surety on the bonds was to pay “any and all sums of money to be found by the said court to be due them for sand removed.” The amount due was first agreed, upon by the parties and reduced to writing. On this writing the court based the decree. Defendant contends this is not a finding by the court as is contemplated by the bond; in effect, that to arrive at such a finding the court would have to hear the proofs and try the case, and that because this was not done the surety is released. In other words it seeks to avoid its obligation contracted by saying:

_ “I have no fault to find with the amount my principal has been decreed to pay, but because that amount was determined by the court from conceded facts, rather than disputed ones, it does not amount to a determination at all, and I am thus released.”

While, as contended, there may exist some conflict of authority upon the proposition, we have no hesitancy in holding that, in the absence of fraud, mistake, collusion or conspiracy between the principal and other persons, a surety is not released from his obligation to pay the amount found due in a decree or upon judgment, because his principal did not contest the same or 'because he consented thereto; that such *701 a decree or judgment is in fact and effect a finding by the court. And in this holding we find support in the great weight of authority.

Defendant’s counsel urge as contrary authority the case of Wright v. Hake, 38 Mich. 525, in which the surety was released. But counsel themselves point out the distinction between that case and the one at bar when they say:

“We recognize that the court found the agreement between the principal and the obligee to be collusive, an element not charged in the instant case, but we believe the holding to apply as well in any case where the obligee and the principal compromise lawsuits by stipulated judgments.”

The case was decided solely upon the ground that the principal had obtained by fraud and collusion an advantage of which he sought to avail himself on the bond, which, as counsel point out, is not present in the instant case. The text in 21 R. C. L. p. 1091— “judgments confessed by a principal or allowed by default do not bind the surety,” cited by counsel, finds no support in the authorities there cited or elsewhere, and is manifestly a wrong conclusion of the text writer. Another case claimed to sustain defendant’s position, cited in counsel’s brief, is Columbus, etc., R. Co. v. Burke, 54 Ohio St. 98 (43 N. E. 282, 32 L. R. A. 329). Here the surety became liable only in the event that it should be “judicially determined that the injunction was properly issued.”

It was held the surety could not be bound by a determination of this question by a board of arbitrators. The case is not in point. The distinction is obvious.

We think Spencer on Suretyship, p. 356, correctly lays down the rule that should govern the instant case:

“Where the surety has, by the express or implied terms of his contract, agreed to abide by the result of litigation against his principal, a judgment against the latter is quite uniformly held to conclude him, in *702 the absence of fraud or collusion. As the surety has contracted so is he bound.”

It is a general rule that a judgment against a principal is prima facie evidence against the surety. Norris v. Mersereau, 74 Mich. 687; McPharlin v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 162 Mich. 145; 1 Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.), p. 1009; 21 R. C. L. p. 1088.

It is said under the title of Principal and Surety, 21 R. C. L. p. 1089;

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Bluebook (online)
213 N.W. 96, 237 Mich. 697, 51 A.L.R. 1485, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sauer-v-detroit-fidelity-surety-co-mich-1927.