Prindle v. Page
Prindle v. Page
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action of assumpsit, to recover of the defendant the moiety of a note executed by the plaintiff and the defendant, as the sureties of one Farnsworth, to the town of Fairfield, and which the plaintiff has been compelled to pay. Upon the facts detailed in the bill of exceptions the county court rendered judgment for the plaintiff; and in so doing the defendant insists there was error.
1. For the reason, that the plaintiff entered into an arrangement with Farnsworth, the principal, by which the plaintiff bound himself, under seal, to pay the note in question.
If the plaintiff received of the principal an equivalent for the purpose of enabling him to meet the payment of the note, it would seem to be quite clear, that he could not call upon his co-surety for contribution ; for the amount so received would, in law, enure for the benefit of the defendant, as well as the plaintiff. Indeed, should he refuse to apply the amount so received to the payment of the note,
The action is an equitable one, and the claim is certainly most equitable; and is there any rigid and unbending rule of law, which, when applied to the facts in the case, must necessarily deprive the plaintiff of this highly equitable claim ? If so, it must be upon the principle, that the plaintiff is bound by his covenant in the lease to pay the note, notwithstanding there are no covenants on the part of the lessor, to which the plaintiff can resort for redress, and notwithstanding the plaintiff’s eviction from the premises by an elder and paramount title, by means of which the plaintiff has been deprived of all benefit and advantage from the lease. And such, the defendant insists, was the legal effect of the plaintiff’s covenant. To this proposition we cannot yield our assent. And for the purpose of
2. It is farther urged, that the plaintiff paid the note by reason of his supposed liability arising from his covenant, and that, in so doing, he acted as principal, and not as surety. We do not think this objection warranted by the facts in the case. The payment was made to the town of Fairfield after the commencement of the action of ejectment, and at or about the time of the recovery in the same. He must then have known his liability to the mortgagee for the rents and profits, and that he was absolved from his covenant to Farnsworth by reason of the eviction; and to hold that he made the payment, under such circumstances, by reason of his covenant would be doing violence to every fair and reasonable presumption. Had the payment been made before the commencement of the suit in ejectment, and while he might have entertained a reasonable expectation of retaining the possession of the demised premises, it might, perhaps-, have deserved a different consideration. But at the time he' paid the note, a state of things existed, which discharged him from his covenant. The fair presumption, therefore, is, that he paid the note by reason' of his original liability as surety upon the same.
3. It has been said in the argument, that, inasmuch as the plaintiff, during the summer of 1843, had the use of certain farming implements, which were leased to him by Farnsworth, the fair value
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Martin Prindle v. William Page
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- 1 case
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- Published