Southall v. Farish

1 L.R.A. 641, 7 S.E. 534, 85 Va. 403, 1888 Va. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 L.R.A. 641 (Southall v. Farish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southall v. Farish, 1 L.R.A. 641, 7 S.E. 534, 85 Va. 403, 1888 Va. LEXIS 47 (Va. 1888).

Opinion

Lewis, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The first question in the case is, whether the appellee, A. J. Farish, is entitled, as against the trustees of Thomas L. Farish, to the par value of the deposits in the Charlottesville National Bank, used by him in discharging two judgments in favor of the bank, aggregating $343.45 of principal, recovered on two negotiable notes executed by Thomas L. Farish, with A. J. Farish as endorser, or whether he is entitled to what the trustees claim to be “ the real value ” of the deposits. If the former view be the correct one, then the appellee was rightly allowed by the decree complained of the sum of $879.39 as of the first of October, 1887; whereas, if the latter view be correct, he is entitled only to $482.62 as of that date.

The trustees, the appellants here, contend that the latter view ought to have been adopted by the circuit court, because the sum [406]*406claimed by A. J. Farish and allowed by the decree is greater than the value of what was actually paid by him, or more than he is entitled to recover. The rule is certainly too well settled to be controverted, nor is it disputed that the contract between the principal and the surety is for indemnity only, and therefore if the surety discharges an obligation for a less sum than its full amount, he can only claim against the principal the sum so paid. Blow v. Maynard, 2 Leigh, 29; Kendrick v. Forney, 22 Gratt. 748.

But the question is, what, as between the parties, is to be considered the amount paid by the surety in the present case ? The bank suspended and went into the hands of a receiver in October, 1875, and the dividends subsequently paid to its depositors amounted to only a little over sixty per cent, of their claims ; and if this could be taken as the proper basis upon which to ascertain the value of the deposits with which the judgments were discharged, or, in other words, the amount actually paid by the surety, a reversal of the decree would necessarily follow. But the facts of the case show that this is not the equitable or proper basis of calculation.

It appears that immediately after the suspension of the bank there was an agreement between Thomas L. and A._J. Farish, whereby the latter undertook to discharge the judgments, which were bearing twelve per cent, interest, and the former to repay the amount with interest at six per cent., and in pursuance of this agreement the judgments were discharged. It also appears that the debt, as now claimed by the appellee, was afterwards recognized by Thomas L. Farish, and in the trust deed of August 10, 1885, appointing the appellants trustees, the debt is referred to as “the debt originally due the Charlottesville National Bank by two notes, aggregating about $300, on which A. J. Farish was endorser, and which he discharged by setting off against the same an amount due him by the Charlottesville National Bank at the time of its failure, in .October, 1875.” The deed, it is true, further recites that “ how much will be due the [407]*407said A. J. Farish upon settlement on account thereof is not known.” But we do not perceive any inconsistency—certainly none that is material—between this recital and the deposition of the witness by which the agreement above-mentioned was proved; for the witness does not undertake to give the exact amount of the debt, but simply says A. J. Farish agreed to take up the two notes upon which the judgments were obtained, and that Thomas L. Farish agreed to repay the amount with six per cent, interest. It is quite probable the notes were not at hand when the deed was prepared, and that their exact amount, principal and interest, was not known to or remembered by tbe parties at the time, and hence the guarded recital in the deed. This is rendered still more probable by the fact that the deed refers to a number of other debts due by the grantor without giving, even approximately, the amount of any one of them, or describing them in any other than the most general terms; so that the failure to give the exact amount of the debt in question is a circumstance of no special significance.

To- determine, then, the amount paid by the appellee and, therefore, the sum he is entitled to recover for his reimbursement or indemnity, the question must be determined, what, as between the parties, were the deposits worth when the judgments were discharged ? The appellants contend that they were worth just what the broken bank would pay, and that their value was then certain, though not ascertained, since that is sufficiently certain which can be made certain. In other words, they claim that their value is to be ascertained upon the basis of the dividends subsequently paid by the bank to its depositors. But this, as already said, is not the proper basis of calculation. Their value to the parties at the time was much greater.

It appears that when the bank suspended, the deposits of the appellee therein amounted to several hundred dollars in excess of the judgments, and that on the night of the day of its suspension the appellee contracted with the Charlottesville Milling and Manufacturing Company to transfer to it for flour the whole [408]*408of his deposit in the hank. The appellee, who was examined as a witness, testifies that the next morning he went to the bank to ascertain the amount of his deposit, and while there informed the president of the bank that he had sold his deposit. The latter, however, he says, objected to his transferring the whole amount, saying he would require the judgments above-mentioned to he paid out of it, which was done by charging against the deposit the amount of the judgments. The balance he then transferred for flour, amounting to upwards of one hundred barrels, which he got at a slight advance over the regular price, the deposits being taken by the company at their par value. The company, it seems, was indebted to the hank, and used the certificates of deposit, transferred to it by the appellee, in its settlement with the bank. The appellee further testifies that he after-wards sold the flour for fifty cents less than he gave for it, hut whether this means fifty cents less per barrel, or on the whole purchase does not appear. It proves, however, that the deposits were worth to him about par, and not merely the sum contended for by the appellants. And upon this idea the parties contracted, as they had a right to do, there being no other proof as to what was considered the value of the deposits at the time. Nor is there any evidence to show that if the arrangement had not been made, the judgments could have been satisfied by Thomas L. Narish otherwise than by a payment in full in lawful money.

The position of the appellants that the agreement is a mere nudum pactum, is clearly untenable. Their contention is, that inasmuch as the president of the bank required the appellee to pay the judgments out of his deposits, he had no option in the matter, hut was hound to pay them in that way, and hence the subsequent agreement with Thomas L. Narish, based upon his promise to pay with his deposits, was without a valuable consideration.

To this it is answered that the appellee, being a surety, could have filed a hill in equity to compel the creditor to enforce the [409]*409lien of the judgments against the property of the principal debtor, and thus have obtained absolute control of his deposits; and in support of this position reference is made to Stephenson v. Taverners, 9 Gratt. 398; Kent v. Matthews, 12 Leigh, 585; Hauser v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 L.R.A. 641, 7 S.E. 534, 85 Va. 403, 1888 Va. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southall-v-farish-va-1888.