Wing v. Cooper

37 Vt. 169
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 37 Vt. 169 (Wing v. Cooper) 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
Wing v. Cooper, 37 Vt. 169 (Vt. 1864).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.

On the 20th of September, 1851, the orator, William P. Briggs, now deceased, by whom this suit was originally commenced, and in whose right it is now prosecuted by his executor, was indebted to Joseph Reed of Montpelier on two promissory notes, both of which were signed by him, and one of which was signed by the defendants Cooper, Russell, and Whipple as his sureties, and the other of which was signed by Ransom Jones as his surety. Both of these notes had then been over due for several years. There was then due for principal and interest on the note signed by the defendants Cooper, Russell, and Whipple as sureties a sum exceeding twenty-one hundred dollars, and on the note signed by Jones as surety a sum exceeding three hundred dollars. At the same time, Briggs was indebted to the National Life Insurance Company at Montpelier on another note which was signed by him and also by the defendants, [174]*174Russell and Whipple and Saul Bishop and Merrill Fellows as his sureties, on which there was then due for principal and interest about eleven hundred dollars, and this note also had been for some time óver due. After the defendants Cooper, Russell, and Whipple became sureties for Briggs on the note to Joseph Reed above mentioned or on the debt represented by that noté, Briggs and one Lyman Field, who was originally a principal with the said Briggs on the said debt, executed to them a quit-claim deed of certain' lands' in the town of Worcester, or of an interest or share therein, — which deed, though absolute in form, was intended and understood by the parties thereto to be a security and indemnity to the grantees named therein for or on account of their liability as sureties as above stated. The land conveyed by this deed, though numbering many hundred acres, was wild and uncultivated, and of uncertain value. Suits were commenced on the 20th of September, 1851,-or about that time, by writs returnable to the Washington County Court, on the notes above mentioned, by the payees against the makers of the same respectively, and the writs in the said suits having been delivered to the defendant Gleason, who was then a deputy sheriff of the county of Chittenden, for service, he attached thereon all the personal property of Briggs which was subject to attachment, and also his real estate, including the home farm, on which he then lived, situated in the town of Richmond. These attachments were made on the 22d of September, 1851, — that in favor of the Life Insurance Company being the -first in priority, — and all of the attachments on the personal property were subject to the lien of certain attachments on writs against Briggs before that time made by Gleason as deputy sheriff, and of certain executions against Briggs which Gleason, as deputy sheriff, then held in his hands for collection, and which he had levied on the same property. The personal property so attached, consisted of a large number of cows, young cattle, oxen, horses, and the hay, grain in the straw, and other farm produce on the farm of Briggs, and other articles. On the 13th of November, 1851, which was before the return of the writs in favor of Mr. Reed and the Life Insurance Company and while those writs were still in Gleason’s hands, the cows and other stock which had been attached on these writs as above mentioned, were sold by Gleason, with the consent in writing of Briggs, and the [175]*175proceeds of the sales, amounting to about one thousand dollars, were received by Gleason. The writs in favor of the Life Insurance Company and Mr. Reed were duly returned and entered in court, and judgments were rendered in those suits against the defendants therein respectively in the county court for Washington county at the March Term, 1852, and executions on these judgments were issued and delivered to Gleason as deputy sheriff for levy and collection. On the 26th of April, 1852, while holding these executions in his' hands, Gleason sold at public auction the residue then remaining of the personal property which had been attached as above stated, but the executions were returned unsatisfied, and alias executions were subsequently issued on each of the three'judgments, which were also delivered to Gleason as deputy sheriff to levy. These alias executions were levied by Gleason on the home farm of Briggs in Richmond, or on the equity of redemption of Briggs in that farm, — the two executions in favor of Mr. Reed being levied in July, 1852, and the execution in favor of the Life Insurance Company being levied in August, 1852. These levies were in fact made for the benefit of the sureties of Briggs on the notes included in the respective judgments on which the executions were issued, and the interest of the execution creditors in these levies respectively was subsequently duly conveyed to the defendant Hodges, who held the sanie for the benefit of the sureties. At the time when these levies were made, the premises levied upon were subject to the incumbrance of a mortgage deed executed by Briggs on the 6th of August, 1850, to one George Bowland of Boston, for the benefit of Thomas Reed of Montpelier, to secure the payment of a note for five thousand dollars with interest thereon annually. On the 8th of January, 1853, which was a very few days before the expiration of the time allowed by statute for the redemption of the premises from the levies above mentioned, Briggs and the defendants Cooper, Russell, and Whipple, after some preliminary negotiation, entered into an agreement which was put in writing, and consisted of. a quit-claim deed of that date executed by Briggs to these defendants, conveying the land referred to and included in these levies, and a bond in the penal sum of fifteen thousand dollars of the same date executed by them to Briggs. The whole controversy in this case depends mainly on the effect which [176]*176shall be given to the provisions of this bond. The present suit was commenced by Briggs in his life-time and is now since his decease prosecuted by his executor, on the claim that this deed and bond, taken together, created the relation of mortgagor and mortgagees between himself and these defendants, and that he, as mortgagor, was entitled to redeem the land so conveyed to the defendants from the claims which they were properly entitled to assert under the conditions of the bond as incumbrances upon the land. The orator’s bill is in substance a bill to redeem this alleged mortgage, and this suit was commenced on the 27th of August, 1856.

No question is made by these defendants that a bond was executed by them to Briggs at the time of the execution of his quit-claim deed to them ; but they claim that the bond presented by him as the bond executed by them to him on that occasion is spurious and was forged by him, and that another bond, a copy of which is annexed to the answer of Whipple, was the true and only bond which was ever at any time executed by them to him in respect to the land conveyed by his deed to them. The bitter and excited feelings which are apparent upon the bill, answers, and testimony in this case are to be attributed in a large measure to the allegations on the part of the defendants in respect to the genuineness of the instrument presented by Briggs as the true bond executed to him by them, and to the positive character of the issue made by them on that point. The testimony in respect to the qitestion as to which of the bonds was the true bond does not leave the subject free from mystery or doubt, but our examination of the testimony, and particularly of the instrument which is sought to be impeached, impresses us with the belief that the preponderance is in favor of the claim of Briggs and of the genuineness of the bond presented by him.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Vt. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-v-cooper-vt-1864.