Grizzle v. Fletcher
Grizzle v. Fletcher
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In Conrad v. Buck, 21 W. Va., at page 410, it is said by Judge Snyder, delivering the opinion of the court: “And it is well settled that where a surety pays a debt of his principal, which is evidenced by a bond, the surety is not substituted to the rights of the creditor so far as to make him a bond creditor. The payment completely discharges and destroys the bond, and leaves the surety to his remedy on his account for money paid for the use of his principal. The only contract available to the surety after such discharge of the bond is an implied promise that the debtor will repay him the amount so paid for his use.” (Italics supplied.)
In 2 Bart. Law Pr. (2d ed.), p. 783, it is said: “A surety in a judgment can never issue an execution against the
For the reasons hereinbefore stated, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Russell county will be amended by quashing the execution sued out on the judgment, and as thus amended it will be affirmed.
Amended and affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Grizzle v. Fletchers.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Principar and Surety—Assignment of Joint Judgment Against ■ Principal and Surety to Surety—Case at Bar.—A creditor obtained a joint judgment against a principal and surety. The surety paid the judgment and took an assignment thereof and caused an execution to be issued in the name of the creditor against the principal alone, reciting that it was issued upon a judgment which had-been obtained in the name of the creditor against the principal. No such judgment in fact had ever been rendered, but the surety claiming to be the owner of the joint judgment against the principal and himself, caused the execution to be issued in this form. This execution was levied on personal property belonging to the principal, who thereupon executed a forthcoming bond payable to the surety. The principal made a motion to quash the execution and forthcoming bond on the ground that no valid execution could be issued on the judgment. The trial court quashed the forthcoming bond but not the execution under which it was taken. Held: That it should have quashed both. 2. Executions—Purpose of Writ of Fieri Facias—Execution Must Follow Judgment—Joint Judgment.—The' purpose of a writ of fieri facias issued on a judgment for money is to enforce the collection of the judgment, and it must follow, in every material respect, the judgment upon which it was founded. If the judgment is a joint judgment against several, or in favor of several, the execution must be joint also. This is true even though one or more of the parties, plaintiff or defendant, has died since judgment was obtained. 3. Executions—Priority Among Debtors—Judgment Against Principal and Surety—Payment of Debt by Surety.—In a common law execution of fieri facias the debtors are all equally bound to the creditor. There' is no priority among them, and the whole execution may be made out of the property of the surety, although the principal has abundant property out of which it could be made. The surety is powerless' to prevent this, because so far as he is concerned the parties are all principals. The result is that when an execution has ¡been paid off by any one of the parties, it is satisfied. 4. Judgments and Decrees—Joint Judgment—Payment of Judgment.—The payment of a judgment by any one of the judgment debtors extinguishes the judgment at law. It is a union of debtor and creditor in the same person and this operates to discharge the debt. A person cannot buy his own debt without extinguishing it. Of course, the creditor may sell the judgment to a third person, but not to one of the judgment debtors, so as to keep it alive at law. 5. Judgments and Decrees—Principal and Surety—Judgment Paid by surety—Subrogation.-—-It is true that a judgment' paid by a surety thereon will be kept alive by a court of equity for the benefit of the surety, but this arises out of the doctrine of subrogation, which is unknown to the common law. If a surety who has paid a debt, in whole or in part, wishes to subject the personal property of his principal by writ of fieri facias, he should proceed under what is now section 5777 of the Code of 1919, which gives him the right to recover from the principal the amount he has paid with interest from the time of payment and five per cent, damages on said amount. 6. Principal and Surety-—Payment of Note by Surety—Assignment of Note to Surety.—I.f there has been no judgment, but a note has been paid off by surety, the surety cannot take an assignment thereof to himself so as to enforce the note as such against his principal, but would have to rely on the implied undertaking of his principal to indemnify him.