Stiles v. Eastman

1 Ga. 205
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 15, 1846
DocketNo. 28
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Ga. 205 (Stiles v. Eastman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stiles v. Eastman, 1 Ga. 205 (Ga. 1846).

Opinion

By the Court

Nisbet, Judge.

The facts in this case are as follows : William A. Howard, having occasion to raise money, made his promissory note, payable at any chartered bank in the city of Savannah, and procured the endorsement thereon of the plaintiff in error Wm. H. Stiles. The banks, declining to discount the note without other endorsers, the endorsement of Moses Eastman and S. C. Dunning was procured. With these endorsers, it was discounted, and at maturity protested. The owners of the note, the [209]*209Savannah Insurance and Trust Company, instituted suits severally against the endorsers, the maker being insolvent, and obtained a judgment against each of them. Stiles paid a part of the debt. Eastman and Dunning, by Mr. H. D. Weed, who advanced the money, paid the whole of the debt remaining due, under an agreement that the plaintiffs, to wit: the Savannah Insurance and Trust Company, would assign to them the judgment against Stiles. It was assigned to Mr. Weed by the Savannah Insurance and Trust Co., for the use of Messrs. Eastman and Dunning; and on the same day satisfaction was entered on the judgments against them, by the plaintiffs’ attorney, in the office of the Clerk of the Inferior Court. The assignees of the judgment against Stiles, threatening to levy upon his property, he filed a bill enjoining it, and calling upon them to account, as securities liable to contribute ; alleging the facts herein stated ; also, that he, Stiles, had paid his proportion of the debt, and that there was an agreement between the endorsers that they should equally share the loss, if compelled to pay the note. This last allegation was not proven on trial.

Upon the trial, the court was asked to charge the jury, by plaintiffs’ counsel:

1st. That endorsers, under the statutes of Georgia, upon promissory notes, endorsing for accomodation only, are mere securities, and equally liable to contribution.

2d. That the payment and satisfaction of the judgments against Eastman and Dunning, as endorsers on the note, was an extinguishment of the judgment against the first endorser, Stiles, which would only make him liable to contribution ; and having paid his part, the whole debt was satisfied as to him.

Which charges the court below declined to give ; but, on the contrary, did charge the jury, that under the act of 1839, Eastman and Dunning, subsequent endorsers, having paid the judgment against themselves, and taken an assignment of the judgment against Stiles, the first endorser, and having shown to the court that they -were not interested in the consideration of the debt, that judgment w'as valid, and they had the right to use and enforce the same to reimburse themselves.

Upon the two points upon which the court declined to charge, and upon the charge which the court did give, the errors in this cause are assigned.

Tfte first point for our consideration is, whether, according to the facts in this case, the endorsers, under the act of 1826, occupy the position of securities, and are liable to contribution ? The act of 1826, (Prin. Dig. 426) by its terms, does not extend to promissory notes which shall be given for the purpose of negotiation, or intended to be negotiated at any chartered bank, or which may be deposited in any chartered bank for collection all such promissory notes are expressly exempted from the operation of the act in the proviso.

Now, as the note upon which these judgments are founded, is upon its face made payable al “ any of the incorporated banks of the city of Savannah,’’and was in fact deposited in a hank for collection, we believe that the act of 1826 has no application whatever to it. It is one of that class of notes excepted from the operation of the act by the terms of the If it was we do not believe that the act of 1826 [210]*210the common law, as to the liability of endorsers. That act, in our opinion, does not make endorsers liable to contribution as securities, but leaves their liability as it found it at common law'-. They are still liable, as endorsers, and the effect of the act of 1826, in its application only to notes not given “for the purpose of negotiation, or intended to be negotiated at any chartered bank, or which may be deposited in any chartered bank for collection,” is, to relieve the holders of such notes from the necessity of demand and notice, in order to charge the endorsers, and to make them liable to be sued, “ in the same manner and in the same action with the principal or maker.” It is, therefore, the judgment of this court, that the court below did not err in declining to charge upon this point, according to the request of the counsel for the plaintiffs.

Had the satisfaction of the judgments against Eastman and Dunning been entered before the assignment to them of the judgment against Stiles, bona fide, the judgment against Stiles would have been extinguished, and the assignment could not have revived it. In that event, there would have been nothing to assign ; both the debt, and the process for collecting it, would have been extinguished. It is true, as argued by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, that a plaintiff having judgment against several for the same debt, can have but one satisfaction. Payment to him of one, discharges all, except as to the costs. And in the case before us, the plaintiff in these judgments, the Insurance and Trust Company of Savannah, being paid, as to them, the judgments are all satisfied ; they can never have another satisfaction. But how stand the facts of this case. ? Eastman and Dunning, being subsequent endorsers, purchase of the plaintiffs their judgment against Stiles, the first endorser, and take an assignment of it to Mr. Weed, for their use. This a stranger could do. Why not they ? A part of the agreement of purchase is, that the judgments against themselves shall be entered satisfied, and accordingly, in pursuance of the understanding, they are so entered, and this is done, not before the assignment, but the same day, and must therefore be considered contemporary ■with it. Without any agreement that satisfaction should be entered upon them, they would have been satisfied by the fact of payment. Such an understanding was unnecessary. The result is, that as purchasers, they are entitled to control the judgments against Stiles ; and that, although extinguished, so far as the plaintiffs are concerned, it is yet vital, so far as their assignees are concerned.

To the mir.d of this court, this case is within the provisions of the act of December, 1839, (Hotchkiss, 546.) That act provides that endorsers upon “ any promissory note, bond, or other contract, made on the face thereof payable at any chartered bank, or which shall be negotiated at any chartered bank, or deposited there for collection, and where said endorsers are not interested in the consideration thereof, a judgment has been rendered against them, and execution has been issued thereon accordingly ; and when such endorser or endorsers shall hereafter be compelled to pay off such judgments or executions, he, she, or they shall be entitled to the full control of each and every judgment and execution, that shall or may be founded upon the same instrument., as against the makers thereof, and all prior endorsers thereon, for the purpose of reimbursing and remunerating him, her, or themselves, out of said maker and endorsers. Provided, the person applying for such control shall make it appear to [211]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stiles-v-eastman-ga-1846.