Thomas v. Carter

63 Vt. 609
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 63 Vt. 609 (Thomas v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Carter, 63 Vt. 609 (Vt. 1891).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MUNSON, J.

It is claimed that this judgment cannot be 'sustained because of the proceedings against the defendant in insolvency. This claim is not based upon the final adjudication, for the debtor did not obtain his discharge. It is not contended but that if the suit had been pending at the time the petition was filed, it could have been kept alive until the question of discharge’was settled, and judgment have then been taken. But the suit was brought after the filing of the petition; and it is insisted that from the filing of the petition until the failure to obtain a discharge, the plaintiffs were not entitled to sue.

The purpose of the insolvent law is to secure the equal distribution of the debtor’s estate among his creditors, and, if certain requirements of the law are met, to relieve the debtor from further liability. There is always the possibility that the debtor may be left liable for the debts not satisfied by his estate. In some instances the creditor may lose the benefit of this liability,if [611]*611tbe commencement of a suit must be deferred until the right to talce final jiidgment is established. The bringing of a suit during insolvency proceedings by a creditor who does not present his claim is nowhere expressly prohibited, and we see nothing in the general tenor of the law which indicates an intention to prohibit it. It seems to have been considered that nothing more ivas needed for the protection of the debtor, than the obligation placed upon the court to stay suits upon application as long as the determination of the question of discharge is not unreasonably delayed. The language of the section which pinvides for a stay of suits is -not inconsistent with its application to suits brought after petition. R. L. 1797.

It is also claimed that the defendant is not liable to the plaintiffs jointly. The suit grows out of a contract of suretyship. The plaintiffs, with Jones and Hall, were sureties for the defendant on a note given to the Passmnpsic Savings Bank. The bank brought suit on the note, and obtained judgment against all the signers. An execution taken out on this judgment was in part satisfied from the property of the defendant. The balance of the judgment was paid by the plaintiffs in the manner hereafter stated.

Hall having been adjudged insolvent, his assignee paid the plaintiffs $600, they agreeing to save the estate from further loss. At the time of this arrangement, the plaintiffs entered into an agreement among themselves to share equally the profits or losses arising from their liability as sureties. Before it was known what amount would be needed, the plaintiffs placed in the bank, to their joint credit, a deposit of $1,250, which was to be held by the bank as collateral security for the payment .of such part of the judgment as might not be satisfied from the property of the principal. This deposit was made up of the $600 received from Hall’s assignee, $230 furnished by the plaintiff Dunnett, and three sums of $110 furnished severally by the other plaintiffs. The balance of the judgment was satisfied from the money so deposited, and this suit is brought to recover the amount paid.

[612]*612It is well settled that if sureties pay tlie debt of their principal from a joint fund they have a joint action against him; but considerable difficulty has arisen in determining what shall be considered a joint fund, and it is insisted that the deposit from which this payment was made does not come within the rule established by the decisions. "We are not aware of any case in which the fund presented the characteristics of the one in question, but a reference to some of the cases may aid us in giving to this fund a proper classification.

In Osborne et al. v. Harper, 5 East 225, a judgment had been recovered against the plaintiffs jointly, and the case showed that this judgment had been paid by the plaintiffs’ attorney at their request. During the argument the court expressed great doubt as to the right of a joint recovery. Lord Ellenborough finally said that if the plaintiffs had borrowed the money jointly of their attorney it might be considered a joint payment by them, and so support a joint action, but that if each of the plaintiffs contributed his share of the money put into the attorney’s hands, the demand against the defendant would not be joint, and each must sue separately for his advancement. The attorney was then directed to make an affidavit, stating in what manner the money paid by him had been obtained; whether he had paid it out of his own pocket upon the joint credit of the plaintiffs, making them jointly liable to him for the whole, or whether each of the plaintiffs had in the first instance contributed so' much of his. own money. The affidavit disclosed that the attorney had advanced a part of the money upon the joint credit of the plaintiffs, and had borrowed the remainder upon their joint note. It was thereupon held that this created a joint fund for the discharge of the execution, and that consequently the plaintiff’s were entitled to maintain a joint action.

' In Lombard et al. v. Cobb, 14 Me. 222, the plaintiffs had become sureties for the defendant on a bond given by him to the town of which he was collector, and the town had afterwards [613]*613taken tlie plaintiffs’ note and endorsed the amount of it on the bond. The plaintiffs had subsequently paid their note, but it was not shown by whom the amount was paid, nor from what fund. The court held that inasmuch as it did not appear whether the payment was made from a joint fund or separately by each, nor that there was any partnership or joint interest, the presumption was that each fulfilled his duty by paying his own share. It was asserted in argument that the payment was in fact made out of a joint fund, obtained by the plaintiffs’ performing a joint contract for the support of the poor, and it was said that if this had been shown it would have been sufficient to enable them to maintain a joint action.

In Pearson et at. v.Parker, 3 N. H. 366, the plaintiffs being called upon to take up a note which they had signed as sureties for the defendant, paid a part of the demand with money obtained on their joint note, and satisfied the balance by giving their joint note. The court considered that this was payment from a common stock, and that the joint action was properly brought. In Doremus et al. v. Selden, 19 Johns. 213, which was a suit by endorsers against prior endorsers, the plaintiffs, although jointly liable on the note as partners, had paid it by giving their separate notes ; and it was held that as there was no community of interest in the money paid a joint action could not be maintained.

In Clapp et al. v. Rice, 15 Gray 557, the holder of the note on which the plaintiffs and defendant’s intestate were endorsers, had recovered judgment against the plaintiffs and issued execution thereon, and this execution had been satisfied in one payment made by the plaintiffs, each contributing an equal share of the part which it was for the defendant’s intestate to pay. The court said: “We are of opinion that when three persons, each of whom is responsible for an entire sum due from another, join in making the payment of that sxun by a contribution agreed on among themselves for that purpose,-they may join in one action [614]*614to recover it from the person for whose benefit the payment has been made.”

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Bluebook (online)
63 Vt. 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-carter-vt-1891.