Thomas v. Wason

8 Colo. App. 452
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Colo. App. 452 (Thomas v. Wason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Wason, 8 Colo. App. 452 (Colo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinions

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought upon the following undertaking for injunction:

[453]*453“ Petition of The Bachelor Transportation Company in the suit of Mason B. Carpenter and William N. McBird,
Plaintiffs. \
vs.
The Wason Toll Road Company and William H. Cochran,
Defendants.
Undertaking on Injunction.
“ Whereas, The above named petitioner has filed a petition in the above action in the District Court of the Second Judicial District of the State of Colorado, in and for the said County of Arapahoe, against M. Y. B. Wason, Receiver in said action, and has applied for and obtained a temporary-restraining order against said M. V. B. Wason, as said Receiver, enjoined and restraining him from the commission of certain acts, as in the petition filed in the said action is more particularly set forth and described, and as set forth in said restraining order.
“ Now, Therefore, we, the undersigned, residents of the County of Arapahoe, State of Colorado, in consideration of the premises, and of the issuing of said restraining order, do jointly and severally undertake in the sum of three thousand dollars, and promise to the effect, that, in case said order shall issue, the said plaintiff will pay to the said Wason as Receiver, all such costs and damages as shall be awarded against the complainant in case the said injunction shall be modified or dissolved in whole or in part.
“Dated this 16th day of December, A. D., 1893.
“ The Bachelor Transportation Company,
“ By C. H. Pierce, Its Attorney.
“W. H. Bryant,
“ C. S. Thomas.”

The injunction was ‘dissolved, and the plaintiff, receiver, brought this action to recover his costs and damages.

The undisputed facts as they appear from the evidence [454]*454are as follows: After the injunction was dissolved, the receiver brought suit upon the undertaking against The Bachelor Transportation Company, and Thomas and Bryant, in which judgment was rendered against the Transportation Company, alone, for $1,130. When Thomas and Bryant signed the undertaking, they exacted and received an indemnifying bond, in which the obligors covenanted to make good to them whatever loss they might sustain by reason of the undertaking which they had signed. Summons had been served on the Transportation Company some time before service was had upon them, and at the time judgment was rendered against the company the period within which they were required to answer had not expired. An execution was issued upon the judgment, and by means of it the sum of $4,300 of money belonging to the Transportation Company was secured. About a month after the rendition of the judgment, an agreement was entered into between the attorneys representing the receiver and the company respectively, which provided that the judgment against the company should be vacated, and the execution recalled, and another judgment entered against all the defendants, the attorneys for the receiver stipulating to make the money, if possible, out of the defendants other than the company. In accordance with this agreement the judgment against the company was set aside, the execution recalled, the money which had been secured released, and a new judgment entered against the Transportation Company and the sureties, Thomas and Bryant, jointly, and an execution issued upon it against Thomas and Bryant. Until the issuance of this execution the latter had no knowledge of the agreement we have mentioned, or of any of the proceedings which were subsequently had in the case. Thomas and Bryant having received information of the agreement, and of the subsequent proceedings, upon their application the judgment was set aside as to them, and they answered; and the trial which followed resulted in a judgment against them for $808.70, from which they [455]*455have prosecuted an appeal to this court. Upon this trial the facts appeared as we have detailed them.

Several points are made for a reversal of the judgment, but the only question which we deem it important to consider concerns the effect of the proceedings of the plaintiff in relation to the judgment against the Transportation Company upon the liability of the sureties. In Brandt on Surety-ship and Guaranty, section 378, we find the following general rule laid down : “ If the creditor recovers a'judgment against principal and surety, or against the principal alone, and execution is issued thereon and levied upon real or personal property of the principal subject thereto, and such property is, by the act of the creditor, released from the levy, and lost as a security, the surety is discharged to the extent that he is injured thereby.” The doctrine of the text is fully sustained by the adjudications. But we are met on behalf of the plaintiff by the proposition, as an exception to this general rule, that where sureties are indemnified they are not released by a release of the principal; and it is contended that the facts of this case bring it within the exception. As sustaining this proposition we are cited to the following adjudged cases. Moore v. Paine, 12 Wend. 123; Hubbell v. Carpenter, 5 N. Y. 171; Chilton v. Robbins, 4. Ala. 223; Morrison v. Bank, 65 N. H. 253; Jones v. Ward, 71 Wis. 152.

If counsel’s doctrine is correct, a release of the principal debtor cannot be pleaded by the indemnified surety, no matter what may be the nature of his indemnity. We think the proposition is too comprehensive ; and, except within limits outside of which this case falls, it is not sustained by the decisions to which we have been referred. In Moore v. Paine, the sureties were secured by a bond and warrant of attorney,, executed by the principal for the payment of $1,000, and authorizing the confession of judgment against him for the amount. The bond and wai’rant were executed with the intent to place money in the hands of the sureties to enable them to pay the bond on which they were sureties. They caused a judgment upon their bond to be entered, and col[456]*456lected upon the judgment $750, which they retained. The amount for which they were liable as sureties was $500. The court said : “ The sureties received from the debtor the whole amount to become due on the bond in question, and after that, as between him and them, they were the principals and owed the debt.” In Chilton v. Robbins, the sureties had obtained from the principal a deed of trust on property to secure themselves against liability on their suretyship, which was ample for that purpose. The court held that the taking of the trust deed was, in effect, an appropriation by them of that portion of the effects on the principal to the payment of the debt. The court, in Jones v. Ward, illustrated the rule by which it held the indemnified sureties liable, notwithstanding the release of the principal, as follows: “ A. becomes security for B. to C. for the payment of $1,000. B. puts property into the hands of A., worth $1,000, to indemnify him against loss because of the obligation thus assumed by him. C. releases B., the principal debtor, from all liability on account of the debt, but receives no payment thereon.

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Related

Hubbell and Curran v. . Carpenter
5 N.Y. 171 (New York Court of Appeals, 1851)
Moore v. Paine
12 Wend. 123 (New York Supreme Court, 1834)
Jones v. Ward
36 N.W. 711 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
8 Colo. App. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-wason-coloctapp-1896.