Ferrall v. Bradford

Hawkins, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

. For the better understanding of the case at bar, the second plea of the defendants, Bradford’s, is set forth at length. “ And for further plea, the defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, by their attorneys, J. & L. Branch, crave oyer of the said writing obligatory, and it is read to them, &c.; they also crave oyer of the condition of the said writing obligatory, and it is also read to them, in these words : ‘ The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the aforesaid Lewis Hale, Michael Ferrell and Thomas M. Crowell, are bound as bail for the said R. H. Crowell, for his appearance at the next Superior Court, to be holden in the county of Halifax, in the State of North Carolina, in a certain suit, wherein •the heirs of William Crowell, deceased, are plaintiffs, and the said Crowell is defendant. Now, if the said R. H. Crowell shall appear at the said court, to be held in October next, and surrender himself in discharge of his bail, or if he shall pay the amount which may ibe recovered against him, then this obligation shall be null and void.’

Witness our hands and seals, this 11th May, 1841.

R. H. CROWELL, [seal.]

EDWARD BRADFORD, [shah.]

RICHARD H. BRADFORD, [seal.]”

*513“ Which being read and heard, the said defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, say — they became bound to the said plaintiffs, by the writing obligatory in the declaration mentioned, jointly with the defendant, Richard H. Crowell, and not severally; and that the said plaintiffs, notwithstanding the said writing obligatory was the joint obligation of the said Richard H. Crowell, and the said Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, heretofore, to wit": at the Spring Term of the Superior Court of the Middle District of Florida, sitting for the county of Leon, in the year eighteen hundred and forty-three, impleaded the defendant, Richard H. Crowell, one of the joint obligors of said writing obligatory, severally, in a certain action of debt, for detaining and not paying the very same identical debt, and for and in respect of the very same identical causes of action in the said declaration mentioned, and that such proceedings were thereupon had in the said court in that plea ; that afterwards, to wit: on the twenty-filth day of April, Anno Domini, eighteen hundred and forty-three, the said plaintiffs, by the consideration and judgment of the said court, recovered in. the said plea against the said Richard H. Crowell, the sum of thirteen hundred dollars, and one hundred and ninety-four dollars and seventy cents, and their costs about their said suit in that behalf expended; whereof the said Richard H. Crowell was convicted, as by the records and proceedings thereof still remaining in the said Court more fully and at large appears ; which said judgment still remains in full force and effect, not in the least reversed or made void. And this the said defendants, Edward Bradford and Richard H. Bradford, are ready to verify ; wherefore they pray judgment, if the said plaintiffs ought to have or maintain their aforesaid action thereof against them, &c.”

To this plea, the following amended replication was filed : “ And the said plaintiffs, Lewis Hale, Michael Ferrall and Thomas M. Crowell, by their attorneys, as to the said plea of the said defendants, Richard H. Bradford and Edward Bradford, by them secondly above pleaded, say — that they, the said plaintiffs, by reason of any thing by the said defendants in that plea alleged, ought not to be barred from having and maintaining their aforesaid action thereof against them, th„e said defendants, because, they say, that, at the time of the taking of the said judgment, in said plea mentioned, against Richard H. Crowell alone, Joseph B. Brown, the attorney of record, who conducted, prosecuted and managed the suit in which said judgment *514was taken for plaintiffs, was imposed upon, circumvented and his judgment not fairly .exercised, and said attorney was induced to dismiss the proceedings as to the said defendants, Richard H. Bradford and Edward Bradford, and to take a judgment against Richard H. Crowell alone in said plea mentioned, in consequence of the false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, Richard H. Bradford, one of the said defendants, and this they, the said plaintiffs, are ready to verify; wherefore they pray judgment and their damages, •by reason of the non-payment of their debt, to be adjudged to them, &c. &c.”

By the defendants, a demurrer was put in to this replication, and was sustained by the Court.

The plaintiffs in error have assigned the following causes of error :

1. The Court below erred in sustaining the plea of former recovery, pleaded in the second plea of the defendants.

2. The Court erred in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiffs’ replication to said plea of former recovery.

3. The Court erred in not giving judgment for plaintiffs on the defendants’ demurrer to plaintiffs’ replication to said plea of former recovery.

4. The Court erred in deciding the defendants’ plea of former recovery against the said Richard H. Crowell a bar to plaintiffs’ action.

Two questions raised by the pleadings and by this assignment of errors, present themselves for the consideration of the Court.

First. Where there is a joint obligation given by three persons, and judgment is taken only against one, whether that judgment can be pleaded in bar to a subsequent suit upon the same cause of action, by the other parties to the instrument 1

Second. If this plea of judgment recovered is a good bar to the subsequent suit, the next enquiry is, how far its effect can be counteracted and avoided by the false and fraudulent representations of the party setting up this bar; and owing to which, judgment in the original suit was taken against Richard H. Crowell alone, without joining the Bradfords, his co-defendants ?

We will discuss them in their order; and as to the first point, we are clearly of opinion, that a judgment, without satisfaction, recovered against one of two or more joint debtors, is a bar to an action *515against the others. We are aware that there have been conflicting decisions upon this question', but we must decide it upon what we deem principle, and upon the authority of decisions entitled to the greatest respect, not only for the reasoning contained in them, but for their having been made by judges of the highest character and reputation.

If parties enter into a joint obligation, it is certainly to be understood they are to be sued jointly, and not severally. It is part of their bargain, and they have a right to insist upon its fulfilment. In the words of C. J. Spencer, “ Each debtor is bound for the whole, until the debt is paid ; but as regards the remedy to coerce payment, there is a material and settled distinction. If they have undertaken severally to pay, separate suits may .be brought against each; but when their undertaking is joint, unless they waive the advantage, by not interposing a plea in abatement, they must be sued jointly, if in full life, and neither has been discharged, by operation of a bankrupt or insolvent law, or is not liable on the ground of infancy.”— Robertson v. Smith et al., 18 John. R., 477.

The principle we have laid down is to be found in all the text books. In Chitty on PL, 48, we find that, where there are several parties, if the contract be joint, they must all be made defendants.” So in Comyn Dig., tit. action, K. 4, “ a recovery against one obligor and execution, will be a bar in debt against the other.” It is true, that in the same work, tit. as above, L. 9, it is said: “ So a recovery and execution against one, where the thing demanded is certain, is no bar in another action, against another, upon the same foundation — as if two be bound by a bond, a recovery and execution against one, is no bar to an action upon the same bond against the other obligors.” Baron Parke, in a case to be cited hereafter, remarked, in relation to this last clause in Comyn, “ that it is merely a repetition of the old cases relating to joint and several bonds,” and such seems to have been the opinion of C. J. Spencer.

We are aware, that in stating our conclusion, we may be said to have impugned a decision of the highest legal tribunal in our country, the Supreme Court of the United States, and that decision, too, pronounced by Chief Justice Marshall. Shehee v. Mandeville, 6 Cranch, 263. Delicate must be the task at all times of criticizing an opinion emanating from such a source — bold, perhaps, the tribunal that may differ from its conclusions ; and we are free to admit, *516that in that case the rigid technicalities of the law were made to succumb and give way to equity and justice. There certainly seems something exceedingly unjust in one partner, receiving the profits of a partnership for a long period of time, and upon the concern becoming unsuccessful, concealing his interest, and leaving a third person to bear the loss ; besides, if he were a secret partner, how could the creditor learn whom to sue ? But ita lex scripta est. The case at bar stands upon a different footing; the suit was upon a bond — in which, of course, all the names of the obligors were clearly and distinctly set forth.

The decision, however, in Shehee v. Mandeville, has been directly overruled in this country, and in England. In Ward v. Johnson, et al., 13 Mass., 148, it was quoted by the plaintiffs, and its doctrine denied by the Court, Justice Wilde holding: “ This being a joint action, to support the declaration, a joint subsisting cause of action must be shown against both the defendants.” (There had been a previous judgment against one of the defendants, upon the same cause of action.) “We know of no principle of law,” he further says, “ which can authorize us to give separate judgments in an action on a joint contract.”

In the case before cited, 18th Johnson, it was commented upon at large by C. J. Spencer, and received his decided disapprobation, and the principle contained in it was overruled by the Court. So, too, in Peters’ C. C. Reports, 301, Judge Washington says : “a judgment against one partner extinguishes the simple contract debt as completely as if one had given his bond for it.” This same principle is sustained in the Courts of Pennsylvania. 9th Sergeant & Rawle, 142 ; 1 Watts & Sergeant R., 339, and in the latter case, the decision of Shehee v. Mandeville, is not considered as authority, though with ah expression of regret by the Court that it had been overruled, as its justice might have supported it.”

Chancellor Kent, in Penney v. Martin, 4 Johnson Ch. Rep., 567, approves of the decision in the case of Willings & Francis v. Consequa, 1 Peter C. C. R., 301, before cited, and refused even in equity to enforce the rights of a creditor against a dormant partner. The decisions in Peters’ C. C. Reports, and that of Penney v. Martin, were made several years posterior to that of Shehee v. Mandeville.

The general principle as asserted by the Court, is fully sustained also by a solemn decision of the Court of Exchequer in England, *517King and another, v. Hoare, 13 Mee. & Welsby Repts., 495. The case of Shehee v. Mandeville was cited before that Court, but it was not deemed satisfactory, and was disregarded. In this case, there are some dicta of Baron Parke upon the subject of extinguishment, and sustaining the argument of counsel for the defendants. He remarks, that “ If there be a breach of contract or wrong done, or any other cause of action by one against another, and judgment be recovered in a court of record, the judgment is a bar to the original cause of action, because thereby it is reduced to a certainty, and the object of the suit attained, and it would be useless and vexatious to subject the defendant to another suit, for the purpose of obtaining the same result. Hence the legal maxim, transit in rem adjudicatam. The cause of action is changed into matter of record, which is of a higher nature, and the inferior remedy is merged in the higher. This appears to be equally true, where there is but one cause of action, whether it be against a single person or many.” With these remarks, we dismiss the first point in the case, and we come now to the second.

This involves a question of more difficulty, inasmuch as we can find no case precisely analagous, to assist us in coming to a conclusion. The facts succinctly are these: The plaintiffs in the Court below took judgment against only one of the joint obligors, and when that fact is pleaded by the defendants in bar, they reply that they did ■only do so, because their attorney was circumvented and induced to dismiss the proceedings as to the other defendants, in consequence of the fraudulent representations of one of the defendants.

It matters little as to the mode or manner in which fraud is effected. A court must look to the effect, and ask if the result is a consequence of the fraud. Here the defendants seek to avail themselves of a legal defence, arising from a state of facts which they themselves by their fraud have produced. They admit, virtually, by their demurrer, that the plaintiffs have been deprived of a legal right by their fraud, and they seek now, by their defence, to take advantage of their own wrong — a defence admitted to arise from their own fraudulent act. The question now is, will such a defence be available, tolerated, or allowed ? Law, reason, justice and morality, unite in a negative response.

Lord Coke says, that “ fraud and deceit by him who is trusted is most odious in law.” “ The common law doth so abhor fraud and *518covin, that all acts, as well judicial as others, and which of themselves are just and lawful, yet being mixt with fraud, are in judgment of law wrongful and unlawful.” 3 Reports, Fermer’s case.— Lord Mansfield, too, (Cowper 434,) remarks: The principles and rules of the common law, as now universally known and understood, are so strong against fraud in every shape, that the common law would have attained every end proposed by the statutes of 13th and 27th Elizabeth.”

Fraud will vitiate any, even the most solemn transactions, and an asserted title to property founded upon it is utterly null. 15 Peters’ S. C. R., 594. 2 Howard, 284. No doubt a record may be affected and even vitiated by fraud. White v. Hall, 12 Vesey, 324. Hampson v. Hampson, 3 Vesey & Bea., 42. But this principle of fraud is so generally admitted, it is useless to multiply authorities.

We do not deem it imperative, as contended for by counsel, that the plaintiffs should be driven into a court of equity for redress, if a fraud has been perpetrated. We consider the defence to the plea in this case, as set forth in the replication, a good one at law. Judge Story remarks : “ To remedy defects in common law proceedings, is the principal reason of interference — that a wrong is done for which there is no plain, adequate and complete remedy in the courts of common law.” 1 Story’s Equity, 53.

It is an admitted principle that a court of law has a concurrent jurisdiction with a court of chancery in cases of fraud. The princi-ciples as to fraud may be often more correctly applied in a court of equity than in courts of law. Chancery can compel discovery of facts which a court of law cannot. Fraud may frequently be presumed in equity by the chancellor, while at law, it is the province of the jury to find the facts and determine their character, under the instruction of the court. 8 Peters, 244. 12 Ibid., 11. 10 John R., 462. 4 Wash. C. C. R., 662.

The Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in speaking of this subject, hold this language : “ But when a court of law has regularly the fact of fraud admitted or proved, no good reason can be assigned why relief should not be obtained there, although not always in the same way in which it may be obtained in a court of equity.” Boynton v. Hubbard, 7 Mass. R., 112.

So in the case at bar, the fraud is admitted; then why should not the Court act upon it 1 A chancellor, too, might feel no little diffi*519dence in allowing an appeal to his jurisdiction, when a good defence existed at law, of which the party had not availed himself; and we all know that negligence in this respect meets with no favor in a court of equity.

At the first blush we thought we discovered some difficulty arising, from the fact that only one of the defendants is alleged to have been, guilty of the fraud, but it soon disappeared; for we find this principle broadly laid down — that interests gained by one person by the fraud of another cannot be held by them ; otherwise fraud would always place itself beyond the reach of the Court. 4 Iredel Eq. Rep., 219, citing Bridgman v. Green, 2 Vesey, 627. Huguenin v. Basely, 14 Vesey, 273.

Again, a plea which is bad in part is bad in toto. If, therefore, two defendants join in a plea which is sufficient for one but not for the other, the plea is bad as to both ; for the court cannot sever it and say that the. one is guilty and that the other is not, when they all put themselves upon the same terms. Chitty on Pl., 598 (7th Am. ed.) 1 Saunders’ R., 28, note 2. So an entire plea cannot be good in part and bad in another part, because such entire plea is not divisible. 1 Saun., 27. Stephens on Pl., 448. 1 T. R., 40. 3 T. R., 376. 3 Mass., 310. 7 Cranch., 159. 7 Cowen, 330.

In relation to the doctrine oftransit in rem adjudicatam, a maxim borrowed from the civil law, we are free to admit that it would have been available but for the fraud of those setting it up against the plaintiffs, inducing them to single out one of the joint obligors against whom to take judgment; and we are disposed to carry out the civil law doctrine of the restitutio ad integrum, so far as the defendants are concerned, by restoring the plaintiffs, as near as may be, to the same state in which they would have been but for the fraud of the defendants. Of course, we are not to be understood as intending to set aside the judgment against Crowell, in this collateral way. It would have been better, no doubt, for the plaintiffs to have had it reversed or vacated before the second suit was brought. Crowell was not served with process in the last suit, so that there cannot be two judgments against him. That a legal anomaly, two judgments on a joint cause of action, has, by the peculiar circumstances of the case been produced, must be admitted. But who occasioned it ? Who is to complain 1 Crowell will scarcely do so, and the defendants have no right to be querrulous, estopped as they are by their acts and *520their own conduct in the premises. If the plaintiffs in this case were to he turned out of Court, an anomaly far more to be regretted, involving the strongest principles of justice, would arise, viz : a deep, palpable wrong, without a corresponding remedy. We have argued this case, of course, as it stands upon the pleadings. Whether fraud actually was committed, or not, is a question easily solved by the creation of an issue of fact in the Court below, to which the parties are remitted.

With these views we are of opinion that the judgment of the Court below should be reversed. It is therefore ordered that it be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

Per curiam.