Furber v. Bassett
Furber v. Bassett
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
Amos Bassett, being the surety of E. Bassett in a replevin bond, on the 8th of December, 1859, wrote to appellant, the plaintiff in said bond, that he had his consent to stay the execution on the bond until the 1st of April thereafter, “and longer if he ashed it.”
In January, 1861, another letter was addressed by E. Bassett to appellant, asking further indulgence; and in February, 1864, another letter was written to appellant by E. Bassett, perhaps more pressing than any previous letter, for still further indulgence. From 1860 to May, 1864, no execution was issued on said replevin bond; and after one was issued at the last named period, A. Bassett enjoined the plaintiff from proceeding against his estate therewith on the ground that he, as the sufety in the bond, was discharged from any liability to pay the debt, because the plaintiff had failed to issue an execution on said bond for a period of more than one year after the issue of one in 1860.
On final hearing, the court below • perpetually enjoined appellant from, proceeding to collect the debt from A. Bassett, adjudging that he was discharged from all liability to pay the same, and appellant now seeks to reverse that judgment.
Although A. Bassett, in his letter of the 8th of December, ■ 1859, limited the indulgence at first to the 1st of April following, he, in the next sentence, removed that restriction, and substantially authorized appellant to extend to E. Bassett anyt indulgence that he might ask; thus, in effect, constituting E. Bassett his agent to continue his responsibility as his surety as long as he might feel that he needed indulgence, and saw proper to ask it.
That letter, fortified by the fact that the obligors in the replevin bond were brothers, and that A. Bassett must be presumed to have known the pecuniary condition of E. Bassett, authorized appellant to look to the surety for indemnity, notwithstanding more than one year had elapsed without an
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.