Shields v. Reynolds

9 W. Va. 483, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 51
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 W. Va. 483 (Shields v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shields v. Reynolds, 9 W. Va. 483, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 51 (W. Va. 1876).

Opinion

EdmistoN, Judge :

This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Kanawha county, perpetuating an injunction to a judgment obtained by the appellant against the appellees, and one Davis H. Estill. The said Estill made his note to the appellees, for the sum of $250, on the eighteenth of September, 1872, negotiable and payable at “The First National Bank of Charleston,” in sixty days after its date, which note he sold to Reynolds, the endorsers being merely accommodation endorsers. This note had been renewed once, or oftener. Afterwards, when it fell due, the endorsers requested Reynolds to bring suit, which he did, and at April court, 1873, a judgment was entered for the amount of the debt and costs. The record does not show that an appearance was made for any of the defendants, but at the foot of the judgment an entry, in these words, was made: “ Execution stayed six months.” After the six months elapsed, execution was sued out, and levied upon the property of the endoi’sers. They obtained the injunction, on the ground that they had requested the suit brought, so that the money might be añade out of the property of Estill, and that the principal had agreed with Reynolds to make no defence to the suit if he -would give - him time, to which Reynolds agreed, and the entry aforesaid was made upon the record, without their knowledge, or consent. The evi-[485]*485denee in the case shows/that it was an agreement between Reynolds and Estill, without the assent of of the endorsers. The appellant claimed, in his answer, that the stay was given to all the parties ; that it was a favor to the endorsers, and not to the maker, who was insolvent then, and so remained, and therefore the stay was a favor, and not an injury, to the endorsers. It also appears in the record, that Estill executed, on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1872, a deed of trust upon some personal property, to indemify- these endorsers, as well as some other creditors and endorsers, which was also to operate for their benefit, if renewals were made.

When the cause was heard in the circuit court, the injunction was made perpetual with costs, &c.

Reynolds appealed to this Court, and claims that the decree of the circuit court is to his prejudice.

The first question to be considered in this case, is to ascertain the rule which governs courts of equity in giving relief. In Norris v. Crummey, 2 Randolph, on pages 333-4, Judge Green says: “The long settled rule of courts of equity, and which has been adopted, to its full -extent, in the courts of law, in England, is, that if a creditor, by agreement, or any other act, precludes himself at law from proceeding against the principal, after the debt is due, for a moment; or if the agreement be such as would induce a court of equity to prohibit the creditors proceeding at- law; the surety is discharged, because the creditor thereby inflicts an injury upon the surety, and deprives him of the means of relieving himself, either by paying the debt, and immediately proceed-ing against his principal, (for in that case he would be substituted to the rights of the creditor; and if the creditor has deprived himself, by any act, or agreement, of the right of proceeding immediately against the principal, this right of the surety would be impaired or frustrated), or by filing his bill quia timet, to compel the [486]*486debtor to pay the creditor, for the exoneration of the i *n which case, if the creditor could not himself, bi consequence of his own act, or agreement, compel the principal to pay, neither could the surety, who, in such case, asserts the rights of the creditor for his own safety.” “As a judgment, with a stay of execution, entered of record, prevents the plaintiff from proceeding at law immediately, and absolves the surety, and an agreement to give time, founded on valuable consideration, such as giving a new security, would be obligatory, and would be enforced in equity, such an agreement would also discharge the surety.” And after reviewing several English cases, in which the surety has been, in some, discharged, and others not, he says, on page 338, “ It is. sufficient to know, that the sole ground of relief to sureties, in such cases, is settled, and avowed to be, that they have been deprived, by the act of the creditor, of a legal or equitable remedy for relieving themselves; or, that such remedy has been impaired by his act.”

He deduces this rule for the relief of a surety from various English cases; one is the case of Nisbet v. Smith, 2 Bro. C. C. 579; which was to this effect. The surety called on the creditor to sue the principal, which he did, and took a confession of judgment, with a stay of execution for three years. This agreement was endorsed on the power of attorney to confess judgment. The original contract was merged in the judgment; so that, if the surety had paid the debt to the creditor, and he had ceded to the surety his rights, the latter could not have proceeded against the principal until after three years;, and so, if he had filed his bill quia timet, the principals could not have been compelled to pay, until after three years. The remedies, therefore, of the surety were deeply impaired by this act of the creditor.

Another case was that of Rees v. Berrington, 2 Ves. Jr. 540, in which the creditor took new notes of the principal, giving further time for the payment than that stipulated by the bond. The chancellor said: “The [487]*487surety has a right, the day after the bond is due, to come here, and insist on its being put in suit. The o I > 1 i had suspended that, until the time contained in the notes run out. Therefore, he has disabled himself to do that equity to the surety which he has a right to demand.”

■ The rule laid down in 2 Randolph, by Judge Green, has been approved, and acted upon, in a great number of cases, since that time, and has always furnished the test by which, in such cases, relief was given, or refused. A reference to them is deemed unnecessary. It has become a matter of autlcritv, that a cqaitne hem at this day, could not be allowed.

The nest question arising^necessary to be ascertained is, do the plaintiffs below occupy the relation to the parties, debtor and creditor, and the debt, that entitles them to the relief sought and obtained in the circuit court? Or in other words, are they sureties within the meaning of that term, so as to be entitled to this relief? That an endorser of negotiable paper is not a “surety” in the strict and legal meaning of that term, I think, is clear from the authorities, and when we consider the nature and character of the undertaking of a surety; in the legal meaning of the term, as compared with that of an endorser, the difference is manifest. The contract of the former is absolute and unconditional. He generally, if not always, signs an instrument, which binds him absolutely with the principal, to pay so much money or other thing, or to do some other act. But the endórselas undertaking is conditional, and his liability also conditional and contingent. This liability is not fixed and absolute until due presentment, demand, and notice of the dishonor of the note. The endorser stands in the attitude of the drawer of a new bill, and is not primarily liable to make the payment, but only in case of the default of the maker, and proof of due presentment, protest and notice of dishonor. It is said that an endorser contracts with the endorsee and every subsequent holder [488]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 W. Va. 483, 1876 W. Va. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shields-v-reynolds-wva-1876.