These actions were tried at the same time. In each action the Rational Surety Company seeks *303to recover one-third of the loss sustained by it as surety upon the official bond of one Samuel K. Ellenbogen, a marshal of the city of New York. On March 17, 1904, a bond, in the penal sum of $2,0 00, wherein the defendants were sureties, conditioned for the faithful performance by the said Ellenbogen of the duties of his office, was filed in the office of the city clerk. On June 25, 1905, a bond, similar in terms and obligations, was filed by the plaintiff in the office of the city clerk. Thereafter, plaintiff as such surety was compelled to make restitution to the amount of $508.74 for defalcations of the said marshal. It is plaintiff’s claim that each of the defendants should contribute one-third of such loss. The justice in each case gave judgment for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals. The defendants allege that, in April, 1905, they notified Ellenbogen to obtain new sureties to take their place; that plaintiff agreed, for a good consideration, to procure a cancellation of the bond on which defendants were sureties and to give its own as a substitute therefor; that defendants received no consideration from Ellenbogen for becoming sureties on Ellenbogen’s bond, and that, by an agreement between them and Ellenbogen, their bond of March 17, 1904, was to be enforced only until Ellenbogen should procure another bend with a different surety. As the justice found for the defendants, we shall accept their version as correct upon disputed questions of fact where supported by any credible evidence. The bond of defendants was on file, uncanceled, and apparently in full force and effect at the time of the defalcation and there is nothing to indicate, on the official record, that the bond of the plaintiff was filed as a substitute therefor. At the time of Ellenbogen’s misdeeds, the plaintiff and defendants occupied identical positions with reference to any person aggrieved by the official misconduct of the said marshal. There was a common creditor, i. e., the person or persons aggrieved; a common debtor, i. e., Ellenbogen; a common debt, i. e., the defalcations, and written undertakings by the plaintiff and defendants to pay that debt. The fact that the sureties assumed their liability by different instruments and at different dates does not affect the situation, as the general rule *304is that, in cases where successive bonds are given for the faithful discharge of a trust, all the bonds given during the continuance of the trust are cumulative; and the sureties on each bond stand in the relation of cosureties to the sureties on all the other bonds. Pickens v. Miller, 83 N. C. 543; Bergen v. Stewart, 28 How. 6; Kitter v. Thompson, 76 Ky. 287. As the bonds were to indemnify the public against defalcations of Ellenbogen, no understanding between defendants and Ellenbogen could limit defendants’ liability to the public under the bond; nor does any want of consideration to defendants from Ellenbogen affect defendants’ liability under the bond so far' as the public are concerned. It is an accepted principle that cosureties of the same obligation, even though ignorant of the existence of each other, who occupy the same position in respect to the principal and are without equities as between themselves, giving an advantage to one over the other, are entitled to contribution from each other. The plaintiff and defendants, under the circumstances "shown to exist in the case at bar, must-be held to be cosureties for a common principal, one of which sureties, i. e., -plaintiff, paid the whole of a debt for which they are all bound; and the question to be determined is whether any equities are shown to exist in favor of the defendants as against plaintiff to prevent the application of the doctrine of contribution. The law. required but one b nd to be filed by the marshal. Ellenbogen swears that he promised defendants to get another bond in place of theirs so as to discharge them from their obligations thereunder and that, thereafter, he applied to the plaintiff for a bond. “ Q. Before you got the bond, what conversation did you have with the gentleman from their office ? ” Plaintiff’s counsel : “ I object to the words ‘ gentleman from their office.’ ” The Court: “ Oh, well; with a person soliciting the bond or to whom he gave the order for the bond.” Plaintiff’s counsel: “I object to any conversation with any person unless it is shown that such person was authorized to bind plaintiff.” Objection overruled. Exception. “A. I told the gentleman I was anxious to get a new bond, as I promised my previous sureties to release them, and I would consider it a favor if *305they would give me a bond.” “ Q. Did he state what the premium would be ? ” “A. He told me it would cost me fifteen dollars.” “ Q. Was it on payment of that amount to the company that you got your bond ? ” “A. Tes.” This is practically all the evidence tending to show that plaintiff agreed that its bond should be merely a substitute for that of defendants, and consenting to the cancellation of the latter. Had defendants shown, as they allege, that Ellenbogen communicated to plaintiff his oromise and desire to release defendants from their obligation and to substitute plaintiff’s bond in place of that of defendants, and that plaintiff, in consideration of the premium, agreed to procure a cancellation of the defendants’ bond and give its own bend in place thereof, and that the subsequent filing of said bond was intended by plaintiff as a substitute for the bond of defendants, the plaintiff would have no equitable claim for contribution from defendants, and the judgments in favor of defendants could be sustained. The evidence, however, is too indefinite to connect any authorized representative of plaintiff with a consent to the substitution of plaintiff’s bond for that of defendants, and for a cancellation of the latter. We are of opinion that a new trial should be granted.
Seabury and Platzek, JJ., concur.
Judgments reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.