Taylor v. Skiles

113 Tenn. 288
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 113 Tenn. 288 (Taylor v. Skiles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Skiles, 113 Tenn. 288 (Tenn. 1904).

Opinion

Mr.' Chief Justice Beard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This bill was filed for subrogation. The facts were as follows: The complainant, Taylor, and defendants Wade, Walker, and Bell, were the sureties of J. M. & W. A. Skiles upon a'note for $1,500 executed to the Exchange Bank of Trenton, in this State. After the delivery of this note, and before payment, the principal debtors were, upon petition of their creditors, forced into bankruptcy, and their assets passed into the custody of the trustee duly elected under the bankrupt laws of the United States passed in 1898. Pending the proceedings so instituted, the bankrupts, in due form, submitted terms of composition to their creditors, which by them were accepted. To enable the Skileses to carry out the composition, defendants Wade, Walker, and Bell (J. C. McDearmon also joining) agreed Avitli the bankrupts to raise for them the sum of $4,000, which they did, on their OAvn note. These sureties, by withdrawing certain claims they had proven against the •estate of the bankrupts, upon which they would have been entitled to distribution, and paying into the registry of the court the $4,000, enabled the Skileses to pay to the creditors the pro rata of their claims offered in their petition for the composition. This being done, the judge of the United States district court, for the eastern division of the western district of Tennessee duly entered an order of confirmation of this composition, and thereupon the assets theretofore in the hands [291]*291of the trustee in bankruptcy were turned oyer by him to the Skileses. Among the creditors receiving a pro rata from this composition fund was the Exchange Bank of Trenton. On its note it received the sum of |500.

In recognition of the assistance thus received by them, immediately upon recovering possession of their property, the Skileses made a conveyance ' of the same to McDearmon, as trustee, Avhich provides as follows: “We, J. M. and W. A. Skiles of Trenton, Tennessee, . . . hereby turn over . . . to J. C. McDear-mon, as trustee, the stock of goods, wares and merchandise • ... in the storehouse . . . near the southwest corner of the public square of Trenton, Tennessee, . . . also all the accounts and notes due the firm ... on various persons. The said McDear-mon, as trustee, is ... to sell the said goods at retail and to replenish the said stock of goods as is necessary to sell the same to the best advantage, and he is to pay out of the said money received by him from such sales, first two notes of five hundred each made by J. M. Skiles and J. A. Bell security . . . and out of the next money received by him, he would pay to J. C. Mc-Dearmon, W. W. Wade, J. R. Walker and J. A. Bell the amounts that they were bound for on certain notes executed by J. M. and W. A. Skiles payable to the Exchange Bank of Trenton, Tennessee. . . .”

Wade, Walker, and Bell each paid one-fourth of the balance on the note held by the Exchange Bank, which [292]*292was due after the receipt by the bank of its pro rata under the composition, and were reimbursed these payments by the trustee out of moneys derived by him from -the assets conveyed to him in trust. The complainant subsequently paid the remaining one-fourth of this note, and filed this bill to enforce indemnity out of the trust estate acquired by M'cDearmon as trustee, and also a ratable contribution from his cosureties, Wade, Walker, and Bell, from the proceeds of the trust property so received by them. The chancellor dismissed the bill, so far as McDearmon was concerned, and entered a decree against each of the cosureties named for a fixed amount, the total of which would indemnify the complainant for three-fourths of the sum which he had paid in the discharge of the note.

There are two theories upon which complainant rests his right to relief. The first is that the instrument hereinbefore set out, by its terms, secures, among others, the $1,500 note, and that, as surety on-this note, he was entitled to have the trust estate applied to its extinguishment. If wrong in this, then the insistence is that complainant is entitled to a ratable contribution from Wade, Walker, and Bell, under the well-established equitable rule that the surety is entitled to share with the cosurety in any fund furnished to him by the principal debtor for the indemnity of the cosurety against loss on a debt upon which both are bound as sureties. It evidently was upon the assumption that [293]*293this rule applied in tbe present case that the chancellor gave the complainant relief.

We do not think the first contention is sound. It is clear from the reading of the instrument that the intention of its makers was to furnish personal indemnity to Wade, Walker, and Bell, and not to secure the debt of which they were sureties. The provision is that the trustee shall pay these parties “the amounts they are respectively bound for on certain notes executed,” etc., “payable to the Exchange Bank.” The name of the bank at which the paper is payable is used simply for the purpose of identification, and not with the view of protecting that bank, if it were the holder. The effect of the terms used is to give protection to the parties named. The makers intended no more, and it would do violence to their intention, as not only clearly indicated in the paper itself, but as gathered from the surroundings, to hold that the bank was named as beneficiary in this trust.

The soundness of the other contention depends upon the legal status of the Skileses at the time of creating this trust, and their relation to the note in question, and the several parties who were bound for its payment.

As has been stated, they had effected in the bankrupt court, under the proceedings instituted against them by their creditors, a composition, which had been' accepted by these creditors, and approved by the court having jurisdiction of the .subject-matter and the parties. This order of confirmation of the composition served hs a [294]*294discharge of the bankrupts, and no further discharge was required. Brandenburg on Bankruptcy, sec. 319.

But as to the Exchange Bank accepting, as it did, the benefit of the composition, it was more than a mere discharge of the bankrupts. It was an agreed extinguishment of the debt, so far as it was concerned. It is very generally held that, in the case of a discharge of a debt under insolvent or bankrupt laws, a subsequent promise to pay by the insolvent or bankrupt will revive the original debt and make it enforceable at law. But it is otherwise where the creditor comes to terms with his debtor under a valid composition, and agrees to, and does, accept a part of his debt for the whole. When this is done, the debt is extinguished. The parties having met on common ground, and -agreed on terms of settlement which have been carried out, there is no longer even a moral obligation resting upon the debtor as to the balance of the original liability. So that a new promise after composition is without consideration, and will not afford a cause of action. Warren v. Whitney, 24 Me., 561, 41 Am. Dec., 406; Stafford v. Bacon, 1 Hill (N. Y.), 532, 37 Am. Dec., 366; Evans v. Bell, 15 Lea, 569.

So it is that when the Skileses made the transfer of their property to McDearmon, trustee, the debt due to the Exchange Bank, so far as they were concerned, was as if it had never existed. They were as much strangers to it as any one who had never had connection with it. Being such strangers, and furnishing, at their [295]

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