This is an action upon a promissory note made by the defendant. The only defence is, that in another action upon a contract to procure the defendant’s mother’s indorsement to this note and to two others, the plaintiffs since the present suit was brought have recovered judgment against the defendant for damages assessed by agreement at a sum equal to the amount due on the three notes. If this judgment is not a bar, it is admitted that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover.
*388The two contracts were both in existence at the same time. They were distinct from each other in form, as appears from the statement of them. They were also distinct in substance. Supposing that the defendant could do no more to bind himself personally to pay the money to the plaintiffs than he did by making the note, still his promise to get the security of an indorser affected other things besides his personal payment or his personal obligation to pay. Its performance or breach affected the plaintiff’s power to discount the note before it was due, and the probability of their getting payment from another whom the defendant might be able to persuade to indorse, when he could not or would not induce her to pay if she had not indorsed. As the contracts were both in existence, and were different, and as they were both broken, it is plain that the plaintiffs have had two different causes of action, and there is no need to refer to the tests of difference which have been laid down in the books. Eastman v. Cooper, 15 Pick. 276, 286. Lechmere v. Fletcher, 1 Cr. & M. 623, 636. The question arises solety on the’ effect of the judgment.
What we mean when we say that a contract is legally binding is, that it imposes a liability to an action unless the promised event comes to pass, subject to whatever qualifications there may be to the absoluteness of the promise. Generally, if a man is content to make two legally binding contracts, he consents to accept the legal consequence of making two.instead of one, namely, liability to a judgment upon each unless he performs it. It would be anomalous if a judgment without satisfaction upon one cause of action were held to be a bar to a suit upon another and distinct cause of action. No doubt, two contracts may be such that performance of one of them, or satisfaction of a judgment upon one of them, would prevent a recovery upon the other, either altogether or for more than nominal damages. In this Commonwealth the decisions have gone somewhat further than elsewhere in treating satisfaction of one judgment as an absolute bar to another action. Gilmore v. Carr, 2 Mass. 171. Savage v. Stevens, 128 Mass. 254. But instances are too numerous and familiar to need extended mention, where the mere recovery of a judgment is held no bar to another action, although the satisfaction of it would be. Simonds *389v. Center, 6 Mass. 18. Porter v. Ingraham, 10 Mass. 88. Elliott v. Hayden, 104 Mass. 180. Byers v. Franklin Coal Co. 106 Mass. 131, 136. This principle is applied, not only to actions against different parties, such as the maker and indorser of a note, or joint tortfeasors, but to actions against the same individual when he has given different obligations in respect of what is in substance the same debt. Thus, judgment upon a note given by an obligor as collateral security for his bond is no bar to a subsequent action upon the bond. Lord v. Bigelow, 124 Mass. 185, 189. Drake v. Mitchell, 3 East, 251. Lechmere v. Fletcher, 1 Cr. & M. 623. Fairchild v. Holly, 10 Conn. 474. Davis v. Anable, 2 Hill, (N. Y.) 339; Burnheimer v. Hart, 27 Iowa, 19. See Greenfield v. Wilson, 13 Gray, 384; Moore v. Loring, 106 Mass. 455; Miller's River National Bank v. Jefferson, 138 Mass. 111; Stillwell v. Bertrand, 22 Ark. 379, Corn Exchange Ins. Co. v. Babcock (No. 2), 8 Abb. Pr. (N. S.) 256. United States v. Cushman, 2 Sumner, 426, 440.
The principie of the cases last cited is decisive of the one at bar. No distinction favorable to the defendant can be taken between an agreement made as itself collateral security, and an agreement to furnish collateral security. If there wei’e any difference, it would be in favor of the plaintiffs; for the collateral contracts recovered on in the cases cited were simply other contracts of the defendant to pay money, whereas the contract of this defendant was a contract to get a third person to indorse, as we have stated. It is true, that in most of the cases there were other parties defendant in the first or second suit. But that circumstance had nothing to do with the ground of the decisions, as indeed it could not have had by any technical rule. The ground was that stated by Lord Ellenborough in Drake v. Mitchell, and approved by this court in Lord v. Bigelow: “A judgment recovered in any form of action is still but a security for the original cause of action, until it be made productive in satisfaction to the party; and therefore till then it cannot operate to change any other collateral concurrent remedy which the party may have.” Parsons, C. J., states the law in the same way: “ A judgment in a suit, where the action is given as a remedy merely cumulative, is no bar, unless such judgment has been satisfied; for, although there may be two *390remedies, there can be but one satisfaction.” Storer v. Storer 6 Mass. 390, 393.
The technical effect of the judgment as a bar would be the same, whether the defendant in both suits, were the same, or other defendants were joined in any one of them. The rule as stated by the courts in all the cases applies with equal force, whichever may be the fact. If we were to depart from that rule, and to say that a man should have but one judgment, although he had different causes of action, when we thought he could get from a single judgment all the satisfaction he was likely to get, we should be legislating, instead of following the precedents, and legislating in very doubtful accord with the contracts of the parties.
Exceptions sustained.