United States v. Ryder

110 U.S. 729, 4 S. Ct. 196, 28 L. Ed. 308, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1734
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1884
Docket156
StatusPublished
Cited by116 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 729 (United States v. Ryder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Ryder, 110 U.S. 729, 4 S. Ct. 196, 28 L. Ed. 308, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1734 (1884).

Opinion

Me. Justice Beadlet

delivered the opinion of the court.

After stating the facts in the foregoing language, he continued:

The grounds on which relief seems to be claimed by the bill, as far as can be gathered from the statements and the argument of counsel, are: First. That the United States is a judgment and execution creditor, whose remedy at law is exhausted, and that the funds in the hands of Ryder are equitable assets which ought to be applied in satisfaction of the judgment: Second. That the recognizance operated as a lien on the real estate of Williams from the time of its acknowledgment and recordation: Third. That under the act of Congress in that behalf, the United States is entitled to priority over all other creditors of Williams, he being insolvent, and having madda general assignment of his ‘property for the benefit of his creditors, and his property being attached as that of an absconding debtor: Fourth. That the sureties of Williams have, by way of subrogation, a right to the enforcement of all the remedies which the United States is entitled to against Williams’ property, before resort can be had against them and their property, or to indemnify them in case of their, satisfying the claim of the United States; it being conceded on the argument that the bill was filed, and that the suit is prosecuted in the interest and *732 for the benefit of the sureties. The allegation on this subject in the bill is as follows:

“ And your orator further shows that the said sureties, being aware that the said Seth B. Ryder has in his hands a large amount of money belonging to their principal and subject to the statutory claim of your orator to priority, as aforesaid, have claimed, as a right belonging to them as sureties, that your orator before selling their lands under said execution should seek relief in this court to compel the said Seth B. Ryder to apply the said fund to the satisfaction of said execution, as he is bound to do by the statute, giving your orator a priority upon said fund, in order that the said moneys of their principal in the hands of said Ryder may be applied to yóur orator’s claim in exoneration of the said sureties, so far as the same will extend.”

At the coining on of the argument on this appeal, the Solicitor-General of the United States stated, in open court, that the government has no interest in the suit, the amount of the recognizance having been paid by the sureties; and that the suit is prosecuted for the benefit of the sureties only; and this statement • was admitted by the counsel' for the sureties, who alone argued the cáuse for the appellants.

The questions for'us to decide are:

First, Whether, since the recognizance has been paid by the sureties, they are subrogáted to the rights of the United States:.-

Secondly, Whether, if thus subrogated, they are entitled to prosecute in the name of the United States:

Thirdly, If the first two questions are to be answered in the affirmative, whether a case is made by the bill to entitle the complainants to relief.

' First: Are the sureties subrogated to the rights of the United States? The general right of sureties, when paying the debt of their principal, to be subrogated to the rights of the 'creditor, whether as a mortgagee, pledgee, or holder of a judgment or execution, or any other security, has been so often and so fully discussed that nothing further need be added on that subject. The recent treatise of Mr. Sheldon on the Law of Sub- *733 rogation, and tbe notes to Dering v. Earl of Winchelsea, in 1 White and Tudor’s Leading Cases in Equity, 100, refer to the authorities, and exhibit the general results deducible therefrom; and in Mr. Burge’s Treatise on Suretyship the rules of the civil law on -the same subject are fully set forth. The doctrine is, that a surety paying the debt for which he is bound, is not only entitled to all the rights and remedies of the creditor against the principal for the Avhole amount, but against the other sureties for their proportional part. This is clearly the rule where the principal obligation is the payment of money, or the performance of .a civil duty. And in England the sureties of a debtor to the King (as for duties, taxes, excise, &c.), have always, since Magna Charta at least, had the right, upon paying the debt, to have the benefit of prerogative process, such as extent, or other Crown process adapted to the case, to aid them in coercing payment from the principal, and compelling contributions from co-sureties. Thus, where upon a scire facias issued against the heir and executor of one surety, the defendant paid the debt,- it was ordered that he should stand in the place of the Crown, and have the aid of the court to recover either the whole against the principal, or a moiety against a co-surety. Manning’s Exch. Pract. 563. And where a collector of a township [or parish] was a defaulter, and the township was re-taxed for the deficit, the same relief was given. "Macdonald, Ch. Baron, said :

“ The parish stands very much in the nature of sureties ; and it is a reasonable practice that the party was has made good to the Crown the default of' the defendant, should have the same remedy that the Crown itself would have ; it is besides unanswerable that this is a debt upon record and still subsisting ; nor can it be satisfied by the re-assessment of the parish.” Rex v. Bennett, Wightwick, 1, and cases in note. See also Regina v. Salter, 1 Hurlst. & Nor. 274.

The last observation of the Chief Baron (that the debt of the collector was still subsisting), was made in view of the opinion which long prevailed in England, that payment of the debt by the surety extinguished it, and took away the remedies for en *734 forcing it, even a judgment recovered, and thereby deprived the surety himself of all advantage of such remedies, and left him to his action for money paid — a result not recognized or admitted by most of the courts of this country, and remedied in England by the Mercantile Law Amendment Act, 19 and 20 Viet., c. 97, by virtue of which a payment of the debt by the surety has virtually the effect of an assignment thereof to him. Sheldon on Subrogation, §§ 135-138.

This rule of subrogation in favor of the sureties to the prerogative rights and remedies of the Crown seems to be confined to cases of Crown debtors, such as collectors, receivers, accountants and other fiscal officers, and persons bound for qustoms duties excise, taxes and other civil duties. We have not been able to find any English case in which it has been applied, or allowed, in fayor of bail in a criminal proceeding. It has even been held that the law raises no liability on the part of the person bailed to indemnify his bail for what they have been compelled to pay on their recognizance by reason of his default.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 729, 4 S. Ct. 196, 28 L. Ed. 308, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ryder-scotus-1884.