Court Opinion

ID: 3894101
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:25:20.402532+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:38.049620
License: Public Domain

Preston, as one of the sureties of Craig, paid a judgment recovered against him, which, divided amongst four of the sureties, made the shares of each amount to $541.85. Robert Campbell paid that sum to Preston, so did Carson; and Arthur Campbell paid $350.50. Afterwards, Young, a fifth surety, paid $541.85. This payment by Young reduced the shares of each surety to $439.48, or thereabouts; leaving in the hands of Preston, to, be returned to Robert Campbell, $102.37, or thereabouts; and the remainder to be paid by A. Campbell $88.98, or thereabouts; which sum Robert and Arthur agreed should pass to the credit of Arthur, with Preston, Preston, however, being not privy or consenting to this agreement, and Robert gave a receipt to Arthur. *Page 21 
This bill was filed; and the question now is, whether such payment made by Arthur to Robert, without the consent of Preston, is binding upon him, so that Preston can not demand payment to be made to him by Arthur. The Court is of opinion that it is not a good payment. First, because made since the answer filed. Secondly, because Preston might have sold the chose in action for a valuable consideration to some other person, which would be valid in equity, and he has had no opportunity to state that in the pleadings. Thirdly, because he may have a demand of equal amount against Robert, which, by allowing such payment to be valid, he must now sue for, and may never obtain; as suppose insolvency, the act of limitations, or other obstacle, which, if they do not exist here, may in some case for which this will be a precedent. Therefore, the payment is not good in law, and there must be the same decree as if it had never been made.
Let the clerk ascertain how much is due to Preston upon the above principles, making exact calculations, and allowing Preston one-fifth of the $83 expended in going to Richmond, together with interest thereon, from the time of the completion of his journey, ending on his return to his home; and when both sums shall be ascertained and added together, let there be a decree for that sum for the complainant with costs.
NOTE. — Mr. Heiskell, in his Big., p. 361, abstracts this case, with a query, thus: "In Preston v. Campbell, it was held that one surety who had overpaid his proportion, could not transfer his right to one liable to contribution, and a decree was made ignoring such arrangement altogether." Mr. Meig's abstract, although nearer to the language of the report, is in substance the same. See Dig., sec. 1850. Both ignore the fact that the arrangement between the co-sureties was made after answer filed, which fact manifestly controls the Court in all the reasons assigned for its decision, though not repeated in the statement of the last reason. — ED.