Woodworth v. Bowes

5 Ind. 276
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Ind. 276 (Woodworth v. Bowes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodworth v. Bowes, 5 Ind. 276 (Ind. 1854).

Opinion

Stuart, J.

Bill in chancery to enforce contribution among sureties.

Alden Bowes, the defendant in error, filed the bill. He alleges that one Case held a note for 321 dollars, in which the firm of Bowes and Noyes (composed of William Bowes and Edward Noyes) were principals, and Lewis Woodworth, John R. Boioes and Alden Bowes were co-sureties. That after judgment against all the parties and execution thereon, he, Alden Boioes, was compelled to pay the amount, with interest and costs. He therefore prays contribution, &c., from his alleged co-sureties, John JR. Bowes and Wood-worth.

John R. answers, alleging payment of his share to Alden before suit brought.

Woodworth answers, admitting the note, the parties to it, and the legal proceedings thereon, but not the payment of the judgment by Alden Bowes. He denies that John R. and Alden Bowes were his co-sureties as alleged in the bill, but insists and sets up that they, together with Bowes and Noyes, were principals,' and he, Woodworth, the sole surety for all the other parties. In support of this, he gives in detail the history of the note: that Bowes and Noyes owed Woodworth, for which' they gave their note, with Alden Bowes as surety. This note Woodworth sold and assigned to Case. To obtain further time, Bowes and Noyes proposed to give a new note, with John R. and Alden Bowes as their sureties. But Case declined giving up the old note, on which was Woodworth?s indorsement, unless the latter would also become a party to the new note. Accordingly, he signed it “Lewis Woodworth, as security;” and the old note was given up. On this new note, the Case judgment was recovered.

The evidence fully sustains the history thus given of the last note, and the parties to it.

The only question presented by counsel is, was Wood-[278]*278worth the sole surety, and the other parties principals, as claimed in the answer? or were Bowes, Woodworth and Bowes co-sureties? The Court below took the latter view of it, and decreed contribution.

There is no brief filed for Alden Bowes.

We are referred in argument to only two reported cases, which are not accessible, and which counsel do not claim to have examined, further than the digest. The syllabus is thus: “ Where a party signs a note as surety for another, and a third person also affixes his name, adding ‘surety for the above,’ the first surety can not, upon payment of the note, compel contribution against the second surety, unless it is made satisfactorily to appear that the second surety intended to place himself in the relation of co-surety with the first.” 1 U. S. Digest Sup. p. 417, No. 39; and there the reference is to 4 Dev. and Batt. 404. The other case cited from the digest is 2 Halstead 71, and is equally inaccessible to the Court. Hence the necessity of the 29th rule

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Related

Gray v. American Surety Co.
175 N.E. 686 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ind. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodworth-v-bowes-ind-1854.