It is admitted that by the express terms of the Bankrupt Law of 1866, section 34, the discharge of the principal in an ordinary contract of suretyship does not discharge the surety.
The point really made in this case is, that the Act of Congress only applies to the contract of suretyship in the general sense of the word surety, as it is understood in the commercial world, and does not cover a case of suretyship of a *195special character, as, for instance, one in which it is expressly stipulated that the surety shall not be bound if the principal becomes a certificated bankrupt.
We are inclined to think this is a true view of the law; that it was not the intent of Congress to do anything more than to declare that the Act should not be construed so as to discharge sureties, and that this was done not so much to fix the law of the case, as by way of caution to prevent the Act from being construed to have an effect that, by its terms, it would not have. In other words, the contract of a surety, as it is understood in the commercial world, is always conditioned that the surety shall not be discharged by the bankruptcy of the principal: 1 Parsons on Con., 29; 1 Parsons on Bills, 249; Hilliard on Bankruptcy, 307; Ward vs. Johnson, 13 Mass., 152; 1 Atkins, 84; 2 Cowper, 525; 7 Bing., 508.
And section 33 and 34 of the Bankrupt Law of 1866, and the provisions of the Bankrupt Laws of 1841, and of 1800, are only in furtherance of and declaratory of what would have been true, had these sections not been put in the Acts. In my judgment, if such a contract of suretyship should exist, as was conditioned that the surety should be discharged, if the principal should be certified by a Bankruptcy Court, then this provision of the Act of Congress would not apply to the case; the surety would be entitled to the terms of his contract. His contract would be peculiar, and such a one as was not in contemplation of Congress in its passage of the Act. It is contended that this is just the nature of every contract of suretyship in this State; that section 2121 of the Eevised Code declares the contract of the surety extinct, if, from any cause, the contract of the principal is extinct. It is argued that, as this was the law at the date of this contract, it entered into the stipulations of the parties and became a part of the contract. But is this a fair construction of our Code?
It must be remembered, that the object of the codification was not to make laws, but to codify or declare those already *196inexistence: Act of 9th December, 1858. It is true, that in some instances the Code has changed the law, though these changes are less frequent than is supposed. But, in the main, it cannot be doubted that the Code is to be looked at as what it purports to be, a codification of\mr laws, as they existed at the time, and its provisions are not to be considered as changing the law, unless the intent to change be clear.
Especially is this true of the definitions of the Code. Generally these definitions are very exact, but it would be beyond the scope of the codification to undertake to give every qualification or exception which the wide field of the common law makes to the meaning of words or phrases, and the codifiers have not attempted it. The Constitution of 1865 adopts the Code and “ such parts of the Common and Statute Law of England and of the Statute Law of Georgia of force in 1860, as is not expressly superseded by, nor is inconsistent with the Code:” Con. 1865, Art. 5, Sec. 5. The Constitution of 1868, Article 9, Section 3, adopts it in pretty mucli the same language — using after the figures 1860, these words: “As are not superseded by said Code, though not embodied therein.”
The language used in section 2120 is almost exactly the language of the English text-books, in defining the obligation of a surety: Chitty on Contracts, 435; Pitman on Principal and Surety, 157.
But in other parts of these treatises, these general words are qualified by this general principle, that the discharge of the principal, which discharges a surety, must be a discharge by some act or neglect of the creditor, and a discharge by operation of law being, as it is, against the consent and beyond the power of the creditor, does not discharge the surety.
Mr. Theobold, in his treatise, adds the qualification immediately after the general definition, thus: “The obligation of the surety also, in general, becomes extinct by the extinction *197of the obligation of the principal debtor.” He then adds: “An exception to this rule takes place whenever the extinction of the obligation of the principal arises from causes such as bankruptcy and certificate, which originate with the law, and not in the voluntary acts of the creditor:" Theobold on Principal and Surety, sec. 114. See, also, Brown vs. Carr, 7 Bing., 508; Langdale vs. Parry, 2 Daniel and Ry., 337. So, too, section 2126 of the Code, and the whole of Article II., of the chapter devoted to principal and surety put the release of the surety upon the acts or neglect of the debtor.
We conclude, therefore, that the Codifiers, in their definition of the contract of suretyship in section 2121, when they used the words “ from any cause,” merely followed the general language of the books, and did not intend, in those words, to include a cause in which the law was the mover, and over which the creditor had no control, and which his acts had nothing to do with. To suppose that they intended otherwise, would be to assume they intended to change the law, and to change it, too, in a particular contrary to the general law of the commercial world, including that common law they were codifying. At the date of this codification, there was no Bankrupt Law of the United States, and no probability of one, and it would be imposing a duty of prescience on the codifiers to require of them, in their general definitions, to use language so precise as to cover not only the cases happening day by day around them, but such as might happen in any event.
Judgment reversed.