Court Opinion

ID: 8633747
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:41:46.657701+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:51.630943
License: Public Domain

MARSHALL, Circuit Justice.
The counsel for the plaintiffs, Lidderdale and Hanberry, have filed several exceptions to this report, the most important and difficult of which, respects a sum alleged by the administrator de bonis non of John Robinson, to be due to Peter Lyons, the surviving administrator of John Robinson, whose executor the said James Lyons is. The commissioner has stated this claim in different ways.
The counsel for the plaintiffs objects to this account altogether, because he alleges: (1) That it is not supported by vouchers. (2) That Peter Lyons is responsible for his co-administrator, Edmund Pendleton, they having given a joint bond, and Edmund Pendle-ton appearing to be largely indebted to Robinson's estate. (3) That balances are stated to be due from George Brooke and others, the agents of the administrators for which the said Peter Lyons is responsible.
1.The commissioner states that this account, from 1766 to 17S4, inclusive, was collected from the books of Peter Lyons, and from 1799 to the date of the report, is supported by vouchers, and this court must presume that his statement is correct, unless the contrary is shown. The account from the year 17S4, to January, 1799, is taken from a report made by Commissioner Hay, in pursuance of an order of the high court of chancery, in which-were plaintiffs, and the administrators of John Robinson, deceased, were defendants. This part of the account does not show the particular items, but the annual amount of receipts and disbursements. Commissioner Hay’s report was made in the year 1799. while the administrators were alive, but does not appear ever to have been acted on by the court. If the transactions were recent, vouchers to sustain the account would of course be required. But in a case of such long standing, where the parties are all dead, strict proof is not to be looked for. It is the less to be expected in this case, as it is known that the office of Peter Lyons was consumed by fire, and that very many of his papers were destroyed with it. In such a state of things, the court is much inclined to the opinion that the books of the administrator, if they appear to have been fairly kept, and the account of Commissioner Hay, founded on those books, ought to be received as prima facie evidence, subject to be disproved, as far as either party may disprove them, or to such exception as either party may make, or be able to sustain. If this course be not pursued, and the books and account be discarded, it would be necessary to remodel the account on such vouchers as either party may be able to adduce. The result of such an account could not be as satisfactory, and probably would not approach the truth as nearly as that which is now before the court.
2. The responsibility of Peter Lyons for his co-administrator must be admitted, but the amount due from that co-administrator cannot be assumed, unless his representative were before the court. It is the duty of the administrator de bonis non of John Robinson, to bring him to an account before that forum which can take cognizance of the case, and he is chargeable with great neglect of duty in this respect, as Edmund Pendleton has been dead twenty years. The court will not, for the present, decide positively on this subject, but must resume the consideration of it, should this unjustifiable delay be continued.
3. The surviving administrator ought to have brought the agents of the administrators to a settlement of their accounts, and this duty, on the death of Peter Lyons, devolved on the administrator de bonis non, who is also executor of the surviving administrator. It appears to me to be reasonable that the whole balances due from these agents should be chargeable to him, unless he can free himself from the charge of gross negligence for having failed to call them to a settlement. The debt due to Peter Lyons, whatever may be its amount, is admitted to be a debt of the first dignity. It is next to be inquired how the remaining creditors rank.
There being many judgments rendered, to be discharged when assets shall come to the hands of the administrators, the first question was, whether these judgments should rank according to their date, and should take rank of other debts on which no judgment had been rendered, or should retain the same rank which would belong to the particular instruments on which they were rendered. This court is of opinion that they retain their original rank, because every *505creditor is supposed to be entitled to a judgment "when assets, and it is not reasonable that such a judgment should disturb the order in which debts are payable by law, or should have any other effect than to establish the amount, and to give priority to other debts of equal dignity on which either no judgment, or a subsequent judgment, may have been rendered.
Money due to the estate of a deceased person, committed by a court to the said John Robinson (1 Rev. Code 1819, p. 389, § 60), or on judgments against the said, intestate in his lifetime, are first in rank. Next, are protested bills of exchange, and then specialties. 3 Among these, judgments on bills of exchange first rank according to their date', and next, protested bills on which no judgments have been obtained, if the requisites of the law have been complied with. Next in order, are debts due on bills which have been paid by securities; on this subject, a question of difficulty has been made. John Smith and John Robinson, were co-sureties on bills of exchange and specialties to a very great amount, on which John Smith paid more than his proportion, and his representatives now claim contribution from the estate of John Robinson. This claim is admitted, but it is contended that it is to be considered merely as a debt on simple contract. The question submitted to the court is, whether a co-surety who has paid a debt, has a right to stand in the place of the creditor, and to be clothed with all the rights and privileges of the creditor, so far as his equity, extends, or can resort only to the implied contract which the law raises in such a case. This is a question which depends on the authority of decided cases; it has occurred most frequently in controversies between a surety and the principal debtor.
In the ease of Eppes v. Randolph, 4 a bond was executed by Randolph to Bevins, with Wayles as his surety. Randolph afterwards conveyed his estate to his sons, and the creditor obtained a decree against the executors of Wayles for the amount of the bond. A suit was brought by the executors of Wayles against the representatives and heirs of Randolph, alleging the insufficiency of the personal estate, and praying that the estates conveyed to the children might be subjected to the claims of creditors. Other creditors also filed their claims, and insisted that the •debt to the executors of Wayles had only the dignity of a simple contract. In delivering his opinion the chancellor said: “That if Wayles’s executors had taken an assignment to their trustees of Bevins’s bond, they would, in his name, have been entitled to the same relief that Bevins himself would, and that a court of equity would have enjoined the heir of Richard Randolph, deceased, from pleading payment by the sureties’ executors: that they ought to have the same remedy as if such assignment had been made.” In affirming this part of the chancellor’s decree, the president of the court of appeals said “that the appellees, executors of John Wayles, ought to stand in the place of John Bevins, and be considered as bond creditors, so far as may effect the distribution of remaining assets, but not so as to charge the executors with a devastavit on account of payments or judgments to simple contract creditors.”
In the case of Tinsley v. Anderson, 3 Call, 329, where the proceeds of the real estate of a living debtor were to be distributed according to the priority of the several liens upon it, the court said: “That all the creditors by judgments or decrees, ought to be paid out of the general fund, according to the priority of recovery, with this reservation, that when a prior creditor shall not have received his money of sureties, or sued out execution on his judgment within a year, he shall yield priority to subsequent judgments on which executions shall have been so issued, or the money received of sureties. In both instances of the money paid by sureties, as well as in all other instances, sureties ought to be placed in the situation of the creditors they shall have paid, or be bound to pay.” These two cases establish the principle incontrovertibly in Virginia, that the surety who has paid a debt stands, as respects his claim on the principal or his estate, to every purpose in the place of the creditor. The same principle is recognised in New York, as appears by 4 Johns. Ch. 123, 530.5 In Lawrence v. Cornell, 4 Johns. Ch. 545, it was enforced against a junior mortgagee. This principle is also recognis-ed in South Carolina, 4 Desaus. Eq. 44.6
The principle that a person who has paid money as surety, or on account of another, shall be substituted in the place of the creditor, seems to be familiar in England. In 3 P. Wms. 400, it is laid down by the chancellor, that an executor who has paid beyond the assets which have come to his hands, shall rank as the creditor whose debt he has paid; and in 1 Atk. 134,7 the chancellor says: “Indeed, where there is a principal and surety, and the surety pays off the debt, he is entitled to have an assignment of the security in order to enable him to obtain satisfaction for what he has paid over and above his own share.” The principle is also laid down in 2 Ves. Jr. 302,8 and 11 Ves. 22.9 *506Indeed it seems to be too well settled to be controverted, and we find it generally laid down as an acknowledged rule rather than decided in a contested case.
[NOTE. Further decisions in reference to the interests of James Lyons and Hanberry’s executors in the Robinson estate were rendered by a decree (not reported) of this court at the December term, 1828. The claims of the representatives of Capel and Osgood Hanberry having been established by the court as a debt of lowest dignity and the receivers of the estate having transferred, without authority, securities belonging to the estate, to their attorney, the legatees of Peter Lyons objected to this transfer, and obtained an injunction (case not reported) restraining the attorney from paying over the money to his clients. The latter thereupon moved to dissolve the injunction. The motion was overruled. Case No. 5,759.]
But it has been supposed that, though this rule must be admitted as applicable to cases between a surety and his principal, it will not apply between co-sureties. I can perceive no reason for this distinction. The principle which the cases decide is this: 'Where a person has paid money for which others were responsible, the equitable claim which such payment gives him on those who were so responsible, shall be clothed with the legal garb with which the contract he has discharged was invested, and he shall be substituted, to every equitable intent and purpose, in the place of the creditor whose claim he has discharged. This principle of substitution is completely established in the books, and being established, it must apply to all persons who are parties to the security, so far as is equitable. The cases suppose the surety to stand in the place of the creditor, as completely as if the instrument had been transferred to him, or to a trustee for his use. Under this supposition, he would be at full liberty to proceed against every person bound by the instrument. Equity would undoubtedly restrain him from obtaining more from any individual than the just proportion of that individual; but to that extent, his claim upon his co-surety is precisely as valid as upon his principal. In reason, I can draw no distinction between the cases, and none, I think, has been drawn by the courts. In Parsons v. Briddock, 2 Vern. 608, the sureties who had paid a bond debt, on which a judgment was obtained against Dr. Briddock, were substituted in the place of the creditor, as against the bail- to the action in which the judgment against Briddock had been rendered, and the bail was compelled to' pay them the money they had paid to the creditor. In this case, the principle- of substitution was applied against a surety.
The liability of co-sureties, and the dignity of a debt in a case where a judgment had been discharged by a co-surety, who was entitled to contribution, was decided, on great deliberation, after very solemn argument, in the case of Burrows v. Carnes’ Adm’rs, 1 Desaus. Eq. 409.
I was originally strongly inclined to the opinion that, in a ease where a party could sue at law, and would be, in a court of law, a simple contract creditor only, he would retain the same rank in a court of equity also, and would not be substituted in the place of the original creditor. But I am satisfied, on examining the subject, that the decisions are otherwise, and I must acquiesce in those decisions. The representatives of John Smith, then, will rank according to the dignity of the claims on which they have paid more than their equal proportion. All other sureties will, in like manner, be substituted for the creditor whose debt they have discharged, and will rank as he would have ranked were he before the court
NOTE. The court, consisting of Marshall, Circuit Justice, and Tucker. District Judge, being divided in the opinion upon the question whether the claim of John Smith to contribution was entitled to be substituted to the same rank and dignity with the debt which he had paid, as to the excess over and above a moiety thereof, certified that question to the supreme court for its decision. The supreme court unanimously sustained the opinion of the chief justice. See 12 Wheat. [55 U. S.] 594 ; 6 Cond. Rep. Sup. Ct. U. S. 656.

 But by the act of March 29, 1831, which took effect the 1st of June thereafter, it is declared “that in the administration of the personal assets of decedents’ estates, debts due by specialty and promissory notes, or other writings signed by the decedent, or some other person, by him or her thereunto lawfully authorized, shall be regarded and taken to be of equal dignity.” Sess. Acts 1830-31, p. 102, c. 33.

 2 Call, 103 (Tate’s Ed.).

 Hayes v. Ward and Scribner v. Hickok.

 Tankersley v. Anderson.

 Ex parte Crisp.

 Ex parte Mills.

 Wright v. Morley.