Simmons v. Camp

Warner, Chief Justice.

This case came on for trial in the court below upon an issue formed on an affidavit of illegality to an execution levied on the defendant’s property. On the trial of that *727issue the jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant made a motion for a new trial on the several grounds therein set forth, which was overruled and the defendant excepted. It appears from the record that on the 22d of January, 1862, Steadman, as the agent of the Gwinnett Manufacturing Company, executed the following draft: “ At sight pay to the order of William Maltbie two thousand five hundred dollars, for cash, at seven per cent,” which was addressed to N. P. Hotchkiss, treasurer, and accepted by him on the 22d January, 1862. This paper was iudorsed on the back thereof by N. P. Hotchkiss, Enoch Steadman, Merritt Camp, and James P. Simmons, in the order in which their names are here stated, but was not indorsed by Maltbie nor negotiated by him, behaving loaned the money to the company and required personal security therefor. Suit was instituted on said draft by the executors of Maltbie against the Gwinnett Manufacturing Company as principal, Hotchkiss, Steadman, Camp and Simmons, as indorsers. At the March term of the court, 1869, the defendants (except Hotchkiss, who had gone into bankruptcy) confessed judgment to the plaintiffs for the sum of $2,500.00, and judgment was entered thereon against the Gwinnett-Manufacturing Company as principal, and Stead-man, Camp and Simmons, in the order named, as indorsers, and execution issued thereon against the defendants in the order as specified in the judgment. Camp paid off they?. fa., principal and interest, after it had been levied on his land, and proved the same in bankruptcy against the estate of Steadman for the full amount thereof, but the register only allowed one-third of the amount $1,092.67. Camp then levied thefi.fa. on the property of Simmons to compel him to pay his pro rata share of the execution as his co-security, the Gwinnett Manufacturing Company being insolvent.

This is the second time this case has been before this court. When it was here at a former term and decided, but two of the judges presided, and at the request of the *728plaintiff in error he was allowed on the present argument, as a matter of favor but not as a matter of right, to review the decision made in this same case at the former term, which decision was, that Simmons, by his indorsement of the paper as set forth in the record, was liable thereon as surety, and was also liable to his co-surety to contribute his pro rata share towards the payment of the debt under the statutory laws of this state. After a careful review of the former decision of the court in this case in the light of the reviewing argument, this court is unanimously of the opinion that the former decision of the court was a correct and sound exposition of the law as applicable to the facts of the case, and do now reaffirm it.

2. The only remaining question in the case is, whether there was any special agreement between Simmons and Camp, his co-surety, at the time Simmons signed the paper, that he was only to be bouud as the last indorser so as to take it out of the general rule as to his legal liability as surety, and did the court properly submit that question to the jury in it< charge? The court charged in relation to this point in the case, “ that the jury, after considering all the facts and circumstances in evidence, will determine for themselves whether it is shown that, at the time of the signing or writing their names, there was an understanding and agreement known to Camp and assented to or acquiesced in by him by silence or expressly, that Simmons should be liable only as last indorser.” In view of the evidence in the record there was no error in the charge of the court, nor in refusing to charge as requested.

3. It is the unanimous judgment of this court, after a most laborious examination of this case, that the verdict was right under the evidence and the law applicable thereto, and could not well have been otherwise, inasmuch as the defendant was bound according- to the legal effect of his signature upon the paper as to the other parties thereto (in the absence of any special contract or agreement with them to the contrary at the time of signing it) whatever may *729have been his own private understanding of his own liability when he put his name on the paper. The private understanding of the defendant as to his liability when he signed the paper, cannot override, alter, or change the law as to the rights of the other parties to it without their agreement and consent, and especiallv as to a co-surety.

Let the judgment of the court below be affirmed.