Stearns v. Aguirre

6 Cal. 176
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 6 Cal. 176 (Stearns v. Aguirre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stearns v. Aguirre, 6 Cal. 176 (Cal. 1856).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by Mr. Chief Justice Murray.

Mr. Justice Terry concurred.

This was an action in the Court below, by Stearns as plaintiff, against the defendants upon a joint and several promissory note. One of the defendants made default, the other answered, and pending the proceeding, final judgment was entered against the defaulting defendant. This is alleged as error, and it is contended that the defendant Arguello is discharged by the judgment against his co-defendant, such judgment operating as a merger of the note, and the substitution of a higher security.

If the contract declared on was joint, and not joint and several, the case would be relieved from, all its embarrassment, as we are satisfied, upon the weight of authority, the plaintiff would have lost his right of action against the appellant.

In the case of Sheehy v. Mandeville, 6 Cranch, the Supreme Court of the United States held, that a several suit and judgment against one of two joint makers of a promissory note, was not a bar to a joint action against both on the note, and that the whole of such note was not merged in the judgment against one on his individual assumpsit. This decision has never met the approbation of the bar, and has been questioned by the Courts of most of the States. In New York, in the case of Robertson v. Smith, 18 John., this question came before the Supreme Court of that State, and an exactly contrary doctrine was holden. In commenting on this case, after stating the point decided, the learned Judge says: “ It is undoubtedly true, that a suit and judgment against Jameson wasnot a judgment against Mandeville; but that the doctrine of merger, or extinguishment, would be applicable only to a case in which the declaration was on a joint covenant, and not to a case in which the declaration in the first suit was on a sole contract, I must beg leave to deny, not in the terms in which the proposition is stated, but upon the facts of that case, and of the one now under consideration. In both cases, the declaration was upon a joint promise; and in the one case, a judgment had been rendered against one of the two defendants, on the same joint contract, and in the other against two of them on the same promises. Now, if the general issue had been pleaded, and under that, evidence could have been given of the recovery of the judgments against some of the defendants, I beg to know whether, as regarded such defendants, the promises were not merged in the judgments ? It seems to me that this is an undeniable proposition; else, there may be several judgments against the same person for one and the same debt or duty. If, then, as respects the defendants, against whom the judgment had been recovered, the simple contract was merged in the judgment, and they had ceased to be answerable upon the simple contract, the plaintiff must fail, because he has not maintained his declaration in showing a subsisting indebtedness in all the defendants, [181]*181in the manner alleged in his declaration; but on the contrary, it would appear that the plaintiff, by his own act, through the instrumentality of the law, has suspended his remedy against some of the defendants, by changing their indebtedness from that of a simple contract to a debt of record. Nor do I perceive how the Court could disengage themselves from the intricacy of the inquiry, which it was admitted would have arisen, had Jameson and Mandeville joined in the plea, (which in that case, it seems to be admitted, would have been a bar in favor of Jame-son,) because Mandeville ■ alone pleaded. If a judgment rendered against one of several joint promissors, extinguished, merged, or suspended the plaintiff’s right on that contract against one, and, as a consequence against the other, then, certainly either of them could plead that matter. And how the legal state of the question could be varied, by the same matter being pleaded jointly or severally, I am at a loss to discover. Upon the whole, I am not satisfied by the train of reasoning adopted in the case of Sheehy v. Mandeville. My conclusion is, that the judgment against two of the defendants is a bar to a suit brought on the same cause of action against those two, and Peter Smith and Van Santvoord, as long as that judgment remains in full force. Whether the Court would not allow the plaintiff to move to vacate the judgment, is a different question.”

The same doctrine was held in the cases of Smith v. Black, 9 Sergeant & Rawle; Ward v. Johnson, 13 Mass.; Moale v. Hallins, 11 Gill., and John Taylor v. Claypool, 5 Blackford, and in Illinois, in 1 Scammon, 52; 2 Scam., 86, 319 and 574. We deem it unnecessary, upon our part, to adduce any argument for adopting a rule different from that laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in Sheehy v. Mandeville, other than the decisions which we have referred to, and which, to our mind, are a sufficient answer to the opinion of the learned Judge who decided that case. It now remains to determine whether there is any difference between a joint, and a joint and several contract, where the plaintiff proceeds jointly against the makers.

At common law, when a party brought his action against two or more defendants, he was bound to make out his case against all, or he could not recover against any one of them; the allegata and probata must correspond. The defendant was called into Court to answer a joint demand as against himself and others, and could not be compelled to submit to a several judgment, except, perhaps, in certain cases where his co-defendants interposed privileged pleas, such as infancy, or discharge in bankruptcy. In all cases of joint and several contracts, the plaintiff may elect whether ho will sue the defendants severally or jointly, and having elected to treat his demand as joint, for the purposes of his action, it would be difficult to say on what ground he was entitled to separate judgments, or how the case differs from an original suit brought upon a joint contract. The plaintiff had his election to consider the obligation, for the purpose of this suit, as joint and several, or joint, but not both. 1, Chitty on Pleadings, §§ 42-3—4-5.

If then we are right in this position, that by bringing a joint action, [182]*182the plaintiff must be governed by the same rules which would have v applied as if his contract originally had been joint, and not joint and several, it is clear that there was an error in entering separate judgment, against the defendants. At common law, where a joint action was brought against several defendants, and one of them was not served, no judgment could be entered against the "rest, until such defendant was driven to outlawry. To avoid the expense and delay of such a proceeding, our statute has made provision as to defendants not served, leaving the law to stand as it did before, as to those brought in by summons.

It was assumed on the argument of this case, that the rule contended for only applied to joint contracts, and that no adjudications were to be found in a case precisely in point. As we have already remarked, we are unable to distinguish any difference in the principle of the two cases. Many of the cases cited arose upon partnership transactions, and for aught we can gain from opinions, the Courts may have been inclined to the doctrine that partnership contracts were joint and several obligations, or they .may have been declared so by statute, although this doctrine is expressly repudiated by the case already quoted from 18 Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Cal. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stearns-v-aguirre-cal-1856.