Turney v. Penn
Turney v. Penn
Opinion of the Court
This case is, as we understand it, entirely free of the difficulty presented to the mind of the court in Camden et al. v. McCoy et al., 3 Scam. R. 441, and is settled by the principle there laid down. Without proof or explanation in that case, in relation to a blank indorsement of Ms name by a third person, the court was called upon to determine what kind of a contract the holder was authorized to write over the signature. But all the members of the court in that case, and the decisions in the several cases referred to, and reviewed, seem to concur in holding a party bound as a surety, where the proofs, or the writing he signs, show that to have been the true intent and meaning of the parties.
. Upon that view of the law, but one conclusion is admissible from this record. At the time and place of making and signing this lease, and a part of the transaction, Nichols added his undertaking, in language which clearly shows that he was not a lessee, but that by agreement he became responsible as such, as surety.
“ I hereby become security for John J. Penn, for the rent specified in the within lease,” is the form and substance of his intent and meaning. He could not have made his meaning plainer by words. There is no room left for speculations, or presumptions of law, other than that he meant what he said, and the court can only enforce the obligation thereby assumed.
But the difficulty in this case is not in the meaning and extent, but in the character of the obligation. Penn entered into a lease under seal, and Nichols into a written contract without seal. A joint action of debt is brought upon the sealed lease, against Penn and Nichols. While the contract of Nichols makes him liable for the money, as surety to Penn, still it does not make him a party to a sealed obligation which he never signed or sealed, and consequently his liability is not joint, nor is he liable to an action brought upon the lease. The lease may be evidence of the debt which he undertook to pay, but not of the obligation entered into by him. If he be sued for this debt, it must be upon the contract he entered into, and not upon the contracts of others. Surely covenant would not lie against him upon this contract without seal, and yet it may as well lie as debt. Debt will lie, though covenant will not, on this simple contract, but neither lies against him, jointly or severally, upon the lease, which was neither signed or sealed by him. No case is referred to hi support of this position; we know of none, nor any principle of distinction in the books, that will authorize us to make a precedent.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- James Turney, in Error v. John J. Penn, in Error
- Status
- Published