Townsend v. . Whitney

75 N.Y. 425, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 881
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 75 N.Y. 425 (Townsend v. . Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Townsend v. . Whitney, 75 N.Y. 425, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 881 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Earl, J.

The defendant and Solomon A. Ferris were appointed by the surrogate of Ulster county administrators of the éstate of John J. Ferris, deceased; and upon such . appointment, they gave the bond required by law, signed by them and by William II. Townsend and another who is • now dead, as sureties. Subsequently the administrators accounted before the surrogate, and he made a decree by which he- ordered them to pay certain sums to Mrs. Love, Mrs. Ferris, and Mrs. Elting respectively as their distributive shares of the estate. These sums not having been paid, subsequently a certificate of the decree was obtained from the surrogate, and the decree was docketed in the clerk’s office of Ulster county, under the provisions of chapter 460 of the Laws of 1837, as ainended by chapter 104 of the *428 Laws of 1844. The decree did not become merged by docketing the same. The docket did not make it a judgment, but simply made it a lien upon real estate for the amounts shown in the certificate ; and executions could thereafter be issued to enforce the same, as upon judgments recovered in the county court. After the decree was thus docketed, the persons in whose favor it was docketed had two remedies to enforce payment of the money due them ; one by attachment against the administrators in the surrogate’s court, and another by executions based upon the docket. The two remedies are not inconsistent, but concurrent or cumulative; and they may both be pursued until the decree has been complied with.

Executions were issued and returned unsatisfied, and then, upon application, the surrogate assigned the bond to the persons in whose favor the decree was made, for the purpose of prosecution by them. (§ 65, chap. 460 of the Laws of 1837.)

Mrs. Love, Mrs. Ferris, and Mrs. Elting then commenced actions upon the bond against the administrators and Townsend, the surviving surety, and recovered each a judgment for the amount due her. Then Townsend, the surety, with his own money paid the amounts of the judgments to Mrss. Love, Ferris, and Elting, and procured them to assign the judgments and also the decree of the surrogate to the present respondent, his wife. This he did for the purpose of enabling her to proceed by attachment against the administrators to compel payment by them. She then applied to the surrogate for an attachment against the administrators for not paying the money as directed by the decree, and he denied the remedy on the ground that the payment of the judgments by the surety, in the manner above mentioned, discharged both the decree and the judgments. But his decision was upon appeal reversed by the Supreme Court, and the administrator, Whitúey, has appealed to this court.

The appellant now claims that the decree was merged in the judgments subsequently obtained upon the bond, and *429 hence that an attachment to enforce it is unauthorized. This claim is not well founded. The decree was the principal debt, and the bond was a collateral security for such debt. The judgments were not recovered upon the decree, but upon the bond. It is too clear to need argument that a judgment upon a collateral security does not merge the principal debt, and does not suspend, so long as it remains unpaid, any remedy upon the principal debt. (Day v. Leal, 14 J. R., 405; Baker v. Martin, 3 Barb., 634; Supervisors of Livingston Co. v. White, 30 id., 72.) The parties entitled to payment under the decree had the right to pursue their remedies upon the decree and also upon the bond, until they obtained- satisfaction.

It is also contended, on behalf of the appellant, that the payment of the judgments by Townsend, m the manner above mentioned, satisfied both the decree and the judgments. It is probably true that the case is not altered by the assignment to Mrs. Townsend. She had no separate estate, and no means. Iler husband furnished the money to pay the judgments, and the assignments to her wore merely formal, to enable him, in her name, to enforce the decree. This case may therefore be treated as if the surety had paid the judgments, and then taken an assignment of them, and also of the decree, for the purpose of enforcing them against the principal debtors. (1 Story’s Eq. Jur., sec. 499, b.)

Where one of two joint debtors, both of whom are principals, pays a joint judgment., the judgment becomes extinguished, whatever may have been the intention of the parties to the transaction; and it is not in their, power, by any arrangement between them, to keep the judgment on foot for the benefit of the party making the payment. (Harbeck v. Vanderbilt, 20 N. Y., 395.) The remedy of the party thus paying is by an action against his co-debtor for contribution.

But a different rule prevails where one of the joint judgment debtors is a surety upon the obligation put into judgment. Under the civil law, a surety paying the joint obli *430 gation is entitled not only to be subrogated to all the securities which the creditor holds for the payment of the debt; but he is entitled to be substituted, as to the very debt itself, to the creditor, by way of cession or assignment. It treats the transaction between the surety and the creditor, according to the presumed intention of the parties, to be not so much a payment, as a sale of the debt. (1 Story’s Eq. Jur., sec. 500; 1 Domat, bk. 3, tit. 1, sec. 6, art. 1.) But this, broad rule of equity has not been fully adopted in England. There, it seems to be the general rule, that a payment of a joint obligation by a surety extinguishes the obligation both • at law and in equity, and that it cannot be kept on foot for his benefit. But a surety thus paying is entitled to all the' collateral securities held by the creditor for the payment of the debt : (Copis v. Middleton, 1 Turn. & Russ., 224 ; Reed v. Norris, 2 Milne & Craig, 361; Hodgson v. Shaw, 3 Mylne & Keene, 183.) It is there held that the surety cannot be subrogated to the very obligation paid, because it docs not survive payment, and there is nothing left to which ho can-be subrogated; and that he can be subrogated only as to such securities and remedies as survive the payment of the principal obligation. But it has not always been easy to define the cases in which subrogation could be had ; and the English authorities arc not all consistent. It would be useless to criticize and attempt to reconcile or distinguish them.

The general American doctrine in favor of Sureties is more liberal than that of the English courts; and I will refer to only a few of the cases decided in this State. In Cuyler v. Ensworth, (6 Paige, 32), four persons became jointly ' liable in the official bond of a county treasurer, vrho after-wards misapplied the funds of the county and died insolvent, and a judgment was thereupon recovered against the four sureties in the bond, jointly, and three of them after-wards paid the whole amount of the debt and costs, and an execution was issued upon the judgment for their benefit, on which the sheriff was directed to levy one-fourth of the amount of the judgment of the property of their co-surety, *431

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. 425, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-whitney-ny-1878.