Shriver v. Carlin-Fulton Co.

4 Balt. C. Rep. 625
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedSeptember 30, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 625 (Shriver v. Carlin-Fulton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shriver v. Carlin-Fulton Co., 4 Balt. C. Rep. 625 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

O’DUNNE, J.

This caso presents two law points having little or no relation one to the other:

First. Whether on a judgment obtained on a joint and several obligation against one as principal and several as sureties, the entry of “agreed and settled as to one named surety only,” operates, as matter of law, so as to release all judgment debtors.

Second. Whether the salary of $3,-600 a year is exempt from attachment or garnishment, where the earner of it is first V. P., director, salesman and “salesmans ger” of 10 salesmen and 6 clerks, as well as stockholder in a wholesale hardware company, where gross sales are $450,000 a year, hut where the salary is not paid as officer or director, but only as salesman and salesmanager.

Held, no, as to the first, yes, as to the second.

The first point arises on the following facts:

In October, 1917, suit was filed by the plaintiff against several defendants on a bond for building construction, wherein Roland Realty Company was principal, G. Howard White, David M. Fulton, Charles Fulton and J. E. Franklin, sureties. The obligation was joint and several in its nature, and judgment was obtained in June, 1920, in favor of the plaintiff against all the defendants for §5,272.

On July 26, 1920, there was filed an order of “agreed and settled as to G. Howard White only, on payment of costs by said G. Howard White,” which costs were paid, and later, in June, 1925, an attachment was issued on the judgment and laid in the hands of Carlin & Fulton Company as garnishee of one of the defendants, David M. Fulton.

On these facts the contention of the defendants’ counsel is that the order of satisfaction of the judgment as to one of the sureties, G. Howard White, operates in law as a release of all of the defendants, including the principal and all other sureties.

The second point is as to the construction of the “wage and salary” exemption and whether it is applicable to the garnishee of David M. Fulton.

The facts upon which the second proposition of law arises are these:

The Carlin & Fulton Company is a Maryland corporation engaged in the wholesale hardware business, with an authorized capital stock of $125,000, of which only $89,500 has been issued and is outstanding.

Of this amount David M. Fulton is the owner, in his own name and of record, of 15 shares of the 895 shares issued, or $1,500 of the $89,500' par value. In 1922, he was second vice-president, director and stockholder, as well as salesman and general sales-manager of said company. In 1923, lie was made first vice-president and is still such first vice-president and continues to be also director, stockholder, [626]*626salesman and general sales manager. None of the officers of the company, except the president and treasurer, is paid any salary as officers. The directors as such receive no compensation. Pulton received a salary of $250 per month as general sales manager and salesman and also travels as salesman for about one-third of the year, and is allowed $50 per month throughout the entire year to cover traveling expenses, no account of which is required, and if his expenses exceed that amount he is required to defray such excess himself, but if they be less than that amount he receives the same allowance. His duties as general sales manager are to supervise the work of the salesmen, of which there are ten, including himself, the other nine being traveling salesmen working entirely on a commission basis. He also supervises the work of six clerks in the home office of the Carlin & Pulton Company, but has nothing to do with the extension of credit and nothing to do with the financial policy of the company as either salesman or sales manager' (but as first vice-president and director his duties are such as are incident to those offices, which are non-paid- offices). As stockholder for the year 1925, he received 5% dividends on his stock with other stockholders, amounting to $75, and 4% dividends in 1926, amounting to $60. The approximate gross volume of business of said company is $450,000 a year. The fact that said Pulton is director and vice-president of the company has nothing to do with his appointment as sales manager of the company.

On the close of the taking of testimony, the defendant’s counsel offered prayers to withdraw the case from the jury on both of the above grounds, based upon the above facts.

The Court is indebted to counsel on both sides for a very able presentation of the authorities upon which they rely, both in support of and in opposition to the granting of prayers based upon the foregoing facts.

’ With such limited opportunity outside of the oral argument, as I have had for independent examination of the questions and of the authorities cited, I shall endeavor to present such conclusion as I have been able to reach, in the order in which the propositions have been discussed.

Legal Proposition No. 1. Does entry on the docket of “Agreed and settled as to Gt. Howard White only,” (one of the sureties) operate in law as a release of the other sureties not intended to be thereby released, and not entitled, In common justice, to be thereby released?

Professor Williston of Harvard, in his learned article on the release of joint debtors, in 25 Harvard Law Review, p. 204, says:

“It has been settled for centuries that a release of one joint debtor discharges all,” and quotes Coke on Littleton, Vol. 2, p. 232a, as early authority for the broad statement.
Whatever is, or has been, the law of centuries, it is not of universal application, because of limitations and refinements that have found their way into judicial expression of Courts of last resort, in their effort to supplant the technicality of the ancients, by a modern adaptation of the law to changed commercial conditions.
It might also be said that for centuries the doctrine of “contribution,” while applicable among co-sureties in actions “ex contractu,” is unknown as applied to “joint tort feasors.” That also is not universally true, and is not so in Maryland since the Act of 1927, Ch. 540, p. 1114, where provision is expressly made for contribution; i. e., where one- defendant in tort has paid the judgment against his co-defendant in tort, and who has not contributed to the discharge of the judgment. A definite procedure is laid down in the Act as to the assignment of the judgment, or entry to his use. Important in that it also recognizes the right of joint defendants in judgment in tort, to execute with legal impunity, any other such “acquittance papers” they may mutually agree upon (without danger of thereby releasing, by operation of law, other defendants).
Changed commercial conditions, particularly the advent of the automobile and the resulting tort actions which almost clog the machinery of justice, as they multiply on the Court dockets, have doubtless brought about this changed condition, and thereby obliterated the recognized law of centuries, Lord Coke to the contrary notwithstanding.
So that here the judgment of the ancients, and- the “fixed law of centuries,” is swept away, by the enlight[627]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shriver-v-carlin-fulton-co-pactcompl-1927.