In April, 1830, Kenneth West died intestate, seized and possessed of a large real and personal estate, leaving a widow and three children. The defendant Rhodes became his administrator and the defendants Mhoon and one Webb became his sureties on his administration bond. In 1832, Rhodes left the State, and in 1834 failed in business, and has ever since been insolvent. Rhodes and the plaintiff married sisters, and there was great intimacy and friendship between them. The plaintiff had been much in the habit of endorsing for him, and when he left the State the plaintiff and his son, George W. Capehart, acted as his agent in the settlement of some of his other business.
In 1842 the plaintiff and James Allen came to a settlement of Rhodes' liability to the widow and the next of kin of Kenneth West, he (Allen) *Page 150 (179) having married one of the daughters, and the plaintiff admitted a liability to the amount of $4,000, part of which he paid, and for the residue gave his note to Mrs. West, as guardian of her children. This liability was assumed by the plaintiff on the supposition and belief that he was one of the sureties of Rhodes on his administration bond. It appears, indeed, that Mr. Allen said this to the plaintiff, honestly believing it to be so. The plaintiff states in his bill that he believed this to be the case from the fact of his intimacy with Rhodes and his habit of becoming surety for him whenever called on to do so, and excuses himself for his remisses in not fully informing himself as to the fact from bodily infirmities. The bill prays for an injunction against the note thus given and for reimbursement of the sums thus paid under a mistake. The administrator Rhodes and the real sureties, Mhoon and Webb, are made parties, and the plaintiff prays, in case the primary equity asked for against Mrs. West and her children shall be refused, that he may be subrogated to the rights of the next of kin of Kenneth West on the administration bond against the real sureties thereto.
An injunction issued, which, on the coming in of the answer of Mrs. West, was dissolved (44 N.C. 30) and the bill continued as an original. Proofs were taken, and, being set for hearing, the cause was sent to this Court. This cause was before the Court at December Term, 1852, upon an appeal from an interlocutory order made in the court below, on the motion of Mrs. West, one of the defendants, to dissolve an injunction which the plaintiff had obtained against a judgment in her favor at law and in which her children, who are some of the defendants, were interested. Her answer being considered full, fair, and sufficiently responsive to all the material allegations of the bill, and having denied all the facts upon which the plaintiff's claim to equitable relief was founded, the order dissolving the injunction was directed to (180) be affirmed. See 45 N.C. 30. The bill was therefore held over as an original, and after many proofs were taken on both sides, the cause was set for hearing and transmitted to this Court, where it now comes on to be heard.
The ground upon which both the primary and secondary relief is sought is based upon the allegation that all the payments made to Mrs. West and the note given to her as mentioned in the bill were made upon a mutual mistake of fact existing between the plaintiff and her attorney *Page 151 and agent. That such a mistake is a good ground of equitable jurisdiction, has been long and well established, but it is equally well established that no person can claim the aid of a court of equity who does not exercise a reasonable diligence to ascertain the truth. Fonb. Eq., book 1, chap. 2, sec. 7, note v; 1 Stor. Eq., sec. 149 et seq. It is to the vigilant, and not the supine, that the Court gives its aid. This principle is clearly set forth and strongly illustrated in a case decided in this Court (see Crowder v. Langdon, 38 N.C. 476), in which the material facts were that the plaintiff, defendant, and one Whitaker were partners in the mercantile business, of which the defendant first and Whitaker afterwards were the active partners. The plaintiff being ignorant of such matters became dissatisfied and proposed a dissolution of the firm, to which the defendant objected, but proposed to sell to the plaintiff his interest in it at a certain price upon the basis of a statement made by the defendant from the books and information received from Whitaker, and which the defendant assured the plaintiff was correct. The amount of the debts due from the firm were stated from the recollection of the defendant and Whitaker as no account of them was found in the books. The sources from, and the manner in which the statement was made out, were known to the plaintiff. It was afterwards ascertained that the statement was erroneous, particularly in the amount of the debts which the firm owed, and the plaintiff filed his bill for relief upon the grounds both of fraud and mistake. The Court declared that the proofs failed to establish the charge of fraud, and decided against the plaintiff upon the ground of mistake, because he had not used reasonable (181) diligence in endeavoring to ascertain the true condition of the partnership affairs before he made his purchase from the defendant. In relation to this subject, it was said by the Court that "the general rule unquestionably is that an act done or a contract made under a mistake or ignorance of a material fact is relievable in equity. But where the means of information are alike open to both parties, and when each is presumed to exercise his own judgment in respect to extrinsic matters, equity will not relieve. The policy of the law is to administer relief to the vigilant and to put all parties to the exercise of a proper diligence. In like manner, where the fact is equally unknown to both parties where each has equal and adequate means of information, or where the fact is doubtful in its own nature, in any such case, if the party has acted in entire good faith, a court of equity will not interpose. Where each party is equally correct, and there is no concealment of facts, mistake or ignorance is no foundation for equitable interference." For these positions, the Court refer to the works which we have already cited, and also to 1 Maddock's Ch. Pr., 62, and 1 Pow. on Con., 200. *Page 152
These principles, applied to the case before us, show clearly that the plaintiff is not entitled to the primary relief which he asks against Mrs. West and her children, the widow, and next of kin of Kenneth West. The mistake under which he acted in making the settlement with Mr. Allen was one into which he would not have fallen had he used ordinary prudence and diligence to prevent it. The administration bond to which he supposed he was one of the sureties he well knew was in the office of the clerk of the county court, and he might at any time, either in person or by an agent, have inspected it. His bodily infirmity and his other excuse for not having done so amount to nothing, because he does not even pretend that he ever made an attempt in any manner or at any time, before the settlement, to see the bond or to have it examined. But he says that his mistake was caused by the positive assertion of (182) Mr. Allen that he was one of the sureties. He exculpates Mr. Allen from the charge of having made a willful misrepresentation by asserting that he was laboring under a mistake. Supposing that to be so, how did it happen that he fell into the error? We think it highly probable that he did so for the causes assigned by the plaintiff to explain the reason why he so readily acquiesced in the truth of Mr. Allen's assertion. He states that he was the brother-in-law and intimate friend of Mr. Rhodes, the administrator, and was in the constant habit, both before and after the administration bond in question was given, of signing instruments for him as his surety. When Mr. Rhodes left the State, before he had made a final settlement of the estate of Kenneth West, upon which he had taken out letters of administration, the plaintiff and his son, George W. Capehart, had, or appear to have, in some way the management of it. The plaintiff was undoubtedly to a considerable extent connected with the unsettled affairs of his friend and brother-in-law. Under these circumstances, it was not at all unlikely that Mr. Allen should suppose that the plaintiff was one of the sureties to the administration bond given by Rhodes, and should so say, but we cannot see how that can relieve the plaintiff from the imputation of negligence in not going or sending to the clerk's office to ascertain from an inspection of the bond itself the truth of the matter. The court of equity ought not to encourage such negligence by giving relief to one guilty of it. Especially ought the Court to withhold its aid since a court of law will not redress the alleged injury of a person who complains of a fraud if by the exercise of even ordinary prudence he could have prevented it. "It is a very reasonable principle," said Taylor, C. J., in Fagan v. Newsom, 12 N.C. 21, "that the purchaser should not be entitled to an action of deceit if he may readily inform himself as to the truth of the facts which are misrepresented." The same principle was applied in the subsequent cases of Saunders v. Hatterman,24 N.C. 32; Lytle v. Bird, *Page 153 48 N.C. 222, and Fields v. Rouse, ibid., 72. In the latter case (183) the alleged deceit consisted in the misrepresentation of the true amount of a bond taken by the clerk and master of the court of equity for the county of Wayne and then in his office in the town of Goldsboro. The transaction in which the fraudulent misrepresentation was charged to have been made occurred in that town, and the court said, among other things, that "by going a few steps, it was in the power of the plaintiff to have ascertained the true amount of the bond in principal and interest; in not doing so, he took upon himself the responsibility of the correctness of the defendant's representation; the means of ascertaining the fact were open to him equally with the defendant."
Our conclusion, then, is that the plaintiff is not entitled to the primary relief he prays against the widow and children of Kenneth West to recover back the money which he paid upon the mistaken supposition that he was one of the sureties to the bond given by the administrator of the estate of the said West.
With regard to the secondary equity sought by the plaintiff, which is that he may be subrogated to the rights of the widow and children of Kenneth West against the administrator and his sureties, or at least that he may be permitted to prosecute the claim in their names against such administrator and his sureties, our opinion is in his favor. At the time when the bill was filed in 1851, the claim of Mrs. West and her children was not barred, nor presumed to have been satisfied for the balance found to be due them on the settlement made between the plaintiff and Mr. Allen in 1843, which settlement was said to have been based upon and account current furnished by the administrator. See Davis v. Cotten,55 N.C. 430. The plaintiff having made the settlement and paid the money found to be due thereon under a mistake cannot be deemed an officious intermeddler, and is to be considered at least a purchaser for value of the equitable claim of the widow and next of kin of Kenneth West against the administrator and his sureties, and as such entitled in this Court to prosecute the claim for his own benefit against them in the names of such widow and next of kin. As the administrator and his sureties were made parties to this suit, we are not (184) aware of any good reason why the plaintiff may not here have the benefit of his secondary equity against them. A decree may be drawn in accordance with the principles herein declared.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Grantham v. Kennedy, 91 N.C. 157; McMinn v. Patton, 92 N.C. 375;Cedar Works v. Lumber Co., 168 N.C. 395; Bank v. Redwine, 171 N.C. 564. *Page 154