Court Opinion

ID: 8190498
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:13:25.564532+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:34.876396
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed January 9, 1912:
Marshall, J.
The judgment must be affirmed. Not because it is grounded upon altogether legitimate logic; but because it is right.
Compulsory contribution between cosureties does not rest in mere equity though, true, such is the origin of the law. The individual chancellor cannot, as an original proposition, do in each case what he may think will fit the facts from the standpoint of justice in the abstract. He cannot merely seize upon his ideal in the moral sense and vitalize it by a decree. *555That ‘would make contribution depend on arbitration in tbe habiliments of judicial administration. Contribution is dependable upon pretty definitely established legal rules, applicable to situations -which may vary greatly as regards facts, but fall into pretty well defined general classes. The facts, dependable upon concession or evidence, or both, being found, the class and result are governed by the law. The court is to apply the law' as it is given, no't make it for the found situation. True, originally, there was a mere doctrine of contribution. True, like a great body of our law, it originated in judicial administration, unguided by written law or any rule, or anything but the chancellor’s sense of justice and conception of means to effectuate it.
Doubtless, “sense of right developed sense of duty.” Continuing the logic; sense of duty developed sense of moral obligation ; sense of moral obligation, intensified by contemplation of the mischiefs incident to its violation, developed sense of necessity for compulsory responsibility; the latter developed sense of need' for remedial justice. At that point of growth progress waited for its crowning effort. There was no written law to meet the case; none was offered. Then the boundless source of instrumentalities for coping with human transgressions, with its ready means, or power of invention thereof, for reparation of every wrong above mere moral infractions best dealt with by one’s own conscience and sensibility to the rewards and punishments afforded by social environment ; a source as limitless and fruitful as man’s capacity to wrong his fellow men; that one in which has originated more of the beneficial regulations of human conduct found in the scientific ethics of the law, than in all the legislatures of a century, — equity, vitalized by its human conscience, furnished the needed remedy, recognizing the primary right, duty, and obligation with an environment of correlative rights, duties, and obligations, in all an entirety with mutually dependable elements fixing limitations and conditions.
*556The thought was that joint sureties, nothing appearing to the contrary, must naturally expect to share the burdens assumed, on a basis of equality and, as equality means equity, it was competent to enforce it in chancery. In such enforcement there was necessity for consistency, recognizing the universal rule that he only has enforceable equity who does equity. This latter was important, since it was seen that the ground of equity upon the one side raised the duty upon the other to share equally any advantages obtained, directly or indirectly, from the principals, as regards immunity from, or indemnity for, risk, and to use other advantages, such as actual control of the source for discharge of the principal obligation, with reasonable care and for mutual benefit.
So from the very nature of the matter the whole subject of contribution was at first and for a long time dealt with solely in equity, taking, however, more and more, with the lapse of time, the form of a definite judicial code, appropriate to a proper standard, in moral conception, of business ethics. Those rules, being well established and, universally applied with quite as much certainty as legal rules, strictly so called, or rules dependable upon written law, came to be regarded as automatically written into every contract of guaranty, nothing appearing efficiently to the contrary, and enforceable at law as well as in equity.
Now the logic of the enforceability of contribution, at law as well as in equity, is that there is a real right of contribution growing out of the relations of the parties, not a mere privilege to be extended or not in judicial discretion. The right may be contracted away or lost by violation of some correlative right, but it is not within the province of the court, as an original matter, to give it or to take it away. The right, inchoate, has its inception at the time of signing the guaranty. It sleepeth, so to speak, till aroused into life, by compulsory payment by one of more than his share of the loss. Upon others refusing to make good, there is a violated right creat*557ing a cause of action of legal or equitable cognizance, or both. That cause of action is def endable against by a violated right, in case of there being any; having regard to the equitable duties of the parties to each other as established in the law, and in contemplation of which they are presumed to have agreed in joining in the guaranty. The idea is not that any •express contract exists between cosureties upon which an action will lie, but that there is a contract implied, growing out •of the relations of the parties, — a contract which is contemporaneous with the signing of the guaranty, not which springs up by overpayment by a surety. The latte* merely fixes the right in .accordance with the implied contractual obligation made, at the start, that the solvent resident guarantors will share equally any loss resulting from the suretyship.
Said this court in Hardell v. Carroll, 90 Wis. 350, 63 N. W. 275, quoting from a standard author:
“The right of contribution is an equity which springs up at the time two or more persons assume as to each other the relation of cosureties for a common principal, and ripens into a cause of action when one of the sureties pays more than his proportion of the debt for which all were liable.”
While it is an equity the right to the eqriity is legal as well ■as equitable, because the parties are presumed to have agreed that the right shall exist, and so legal as well as equitable remedies are available to redress its violation. Mason v. Pierron, 63 Wis. 239, 23 N. W. 119; Bushnell v. Bushnell, 77 Wis. 435, 46 N. W. 442; Faurot v. Gates, 86 Wis. 569, 57 N. W. 294; Boutin v. Etsell, 110 Wis. 276, 85 N. W. 964; Fanning v. Murphy, 126 Wis. 538, 548, 105 N. W. 1056.
“The liability of a surety to contribute to one who has paid more than his share of the common debt, is one that is mow recognized and enforced both at law and in equity.”
“The time was that the paying surety in an action could only recover from his cosurety an aliquot part of the whole •debt; regard being had to the number of sureties, and without xegard to the insolvency or nonresidence of any of them. The *558considerations before mentioned induced a modification of tbis rule, so that it may be said to be established law in this-state, as well as others, that, when one surety has paid the whole debt, he may compel contribution from such of his co-sureties as are solvent and within the state.” Boutin v. Etsell, supra.
“In contemplation of law, the act” of payment by a surety,, the ^principal having defaulted, “is characterized by a request from the cosurety, if there be such, to the one acting in the-matter to pay the debt, and a promise on the part of the former,” implied from the obligation assumed to have been entered into at the start, “to contribute his proper proportion.. Thus a cosurety is liable to contribute to the one making the-payment, both upon the ground of equitable and legal obligation.” Fanning v. Murphy, supra.
As before indicated, the right of contribution may be-parted with to cosureties by contract, or lost to the extent that prejudicial breach of duty to the cosureties would otherwise-proximately cause loss to them, and may be forfeited in some-other ways definitely -established in the law.
Consistent with the principle that each surety, impliedly,, by joining in the guaranty, contracts not to take any special advantage, growing out of means of immunity from, or indemnity for, loss, secured from the principal during the existence of the contract of guaranty, and to reasonably conserve for the common protection property of such principal under his control, forming a legitimate means of such protection, it has been held as follows: Where a surety bought, in the principal claim at a discount he can only claim contribution as to the amount paid. Tarr v. Ravenscroft, 12 Gratt. 642; Derosset v. Bradley, 63 N. C. 17. A surety who pays in depreciated currency can only have contribution on the basis-of its value, such currency not being a legal tender. Edmonds v. Sheahan, 47 Tex. 443. A surety who receives security from his principal, although the latter intends it specially for the individual benefit, is required to apply the same-for the benefit of all. Fuller v. Hapgood, 39 Vt. 617, 620. *559A cashier of a bank in which a principal obligor is a depositor who is an associate surety for a liability of such principal, having received a cheek from such principal on his account in the bank to discharge such obligation, which he negligently for some days omits to efficiently use by transmitting the money as requested, and in the meantime the bank fails, causing the principal debtor to make default, — is, by reason of breach of duty to his cosureties to use his special knowledge of the situation and instrumentalities placed in his hands to protect all, liable, as between them, for the entire loss. Crisfield v. Murdock, 127 N. Y. 315, 21 N. E. 1046. A cosurety who receives indemnity must share it with his associates and, if having full indemnity he releases it, he forfeits the right of contribution. Sherman v. Foster, 158 N. Y. 581, 594, 53 N. E. 504. If a cosurety takes a chattel mortgage to indemnify himself and voluntarily discharges it without consent of his associates, they may efficiently plead such discharge as a legal defense to a claim against them for contribution. Ramsey v. Lewis, 30 Barb. 403. If a surety procures, or negligently allows, forced sales of the principal debtor’s property and buys it in at a manifestly inadequate price, he is chargeable with the full fair value as regards his right of contribution. Sanders v. Weelburg, 107 Ind. 266, 1 N. E. 573. If. a cosurety obtains from the principal a mortgage upon chattels,- in form to secure himself against loss by reason of becoming a party to the surety contract, he thereby becomes a trustee of such security for the benefit of all the sureties, and if he loses the advantage by negligence, he commits a wrong to his associates, remediable by forcing an accounting ás to the security, charging such loss to him, or by way of defense to his claim for contribution. Steele v. Mealing, 24 Ala. 285; Taylor v. Morrison, 26 Ala. 128; Caryton v. Johnson, 21 Ala. 503; Paulin v. Kaighn, 29 N. J. Law, 480.
All such instances were ruled by settled results, in the law, for violations of recognized- duties, — not by the court’s mere *560conception, in any case, as an original matter, of wbat was just.
We are compelled, seemingly, to go elsewhere for illustrations of the principles above stated. Though there is an abundance of instances where they have been applied, there is dearth of such in the history of our own jurisprudence. Such principles axe so well entrenched, as of legal as well as equitable cognizance, that modem text-writers turn the matter off hy the mere statement that “the right to contribution may be destroyed by a subsequent contract of the parties, or by the fault of the party who causes the loss toward which he seeks contribution from his co-obligor.” 9 Cyc. 804.
Of particular significance here is the fact that both in law and equity, a cosurety is a qua.si-trustee for his associates of all special advantages he acquires from the principal debtor,— either in adversary proceedings or otherwise, — for the benefit of the bearers of the common burden, with all the duties incident to such relation. He cannot specially profit out of it. He is liable for loss proximately caused to his associates by failure to honestly and with reasonable care perform his legal duty to his associates, — to reasonably conserve his special advantages for the common benefit; this having regard to acts of omission as to facilities under his control, or commission respecting fraudulently or negligently dissipating the means of paying the principal debt, or indemnity for losses occasioned by failure to pay, — especially indemnity derived from the business regarding which the liability has its origin. The duty in this regard is as strictly legal, though based on equitable principles, as it is plainly moral.
The foregoing, somewhat lengthy discussion, is for the purpose of showing that, upon the facts appearing, vitalizing, in the absence of anything of a defensive character, the right of contribution, what is matter of defense is dependable upon definite legal principles though they may be founded in equitable considerations. The inquiry is, Was the right parted *561with by contract, or was it, in whole or in part, forfeited by breach 'of duty of some sort ? What breaches, in general, constitute a defense to the claim for contribution, are well defined in the law, — so well that the facts being found, whether they constitute a defense or not, is matter of law, not matter of discretion. The issues may be presented in a legal or equitable action. If the latter, the court finds the facts and applies thereto the established rules of law. In the former, the jury find the facts from the evidence, as in any other case, and the court applies thereto, • subsequently, the appropriate rules of law, or directs the jury how to find as a result of their determination of the controverted facts, according to whether the verdict is special dr general.
Turning to the answer of respondent to appellant’s claim for contribution, we find that the pleader grounded the defense on, first, a claim that when John C. Koch took over respondent’s stock it was expressly mutually agreed, as part of the transaction, that the former should hold and savekarmless the latter from all liability on the guaranty, and see to it that the obligee became a party thereto; second, the claim that, in the composition proceedings in bankruptcy of the corporation, the appellant, as personal representative'of John C. Koch, obtained a secret advantage, in that, after securing respondent’s consent to a compromise of the claim made on account of payment of the guaranteed debt, he exacted and obtained $6,500 for the worthless corporate stock, as a condition of joining in the composition. Thus no fraud or wrong, in that John C. Koch failed to reasonably, as regards respondent, conserve the assets of the corporation to protect the cosureties, was pleaded or, seemingly, thought of.
The evidence disclosed many facts giving rise, as We shall see, to a further defense which might have been pleaded at the start or insisted upon at the end. The circumstance that it was not so pleaded or insisted upon, or, perhaps, thought of at all, or if thought of to some extent, was not appreciated, *562makes no difference now. If the judgment he right, as indicated at the outset, — right on facts found, expressly or inferential!^ or both, or not found hut appearing clearly from the evidence, — it must he sustained. The real right of the matter is the end to he attained in our system of jurisprudence. That being clear and having been arrived at without substantial prejudice to the adverse party, justice is satisfied however irregularly or illogically the judicial footsteps may have moved in reaching that goal.
The court found, specifically, in appellant’s favor as to whether there was an express contract relieving respondent, as between the two parties to the transaction, from the burden of the guaranty, — found that no such contract was made. It is insisted, on the part of respondent, in support of the judgment that such finding is against the clear preponderance of the evidence. It is legitimate to make that claim. It is not so void of merit as to be unworthy of consideration.
The court seems to have reached the conclusion that the contract alleged to have been made never existed, from the evidence of what was said, expressly, between the two Kochs when the transaction in regard to the sale and purchase of the stock took place. There was hut one witness to that who testified upon the trial, — the son. of John 0. Koch. He was an interested witness, — interested, as he came to definitely understand, in having it held that there was no contract. Ilis evidence, from first to last, was somewhat contradictory. From one viewpoint, examined apart from corroborating circumstances, quite self-destructive. The trial court heard him give his testimony on one occasion and his effort, then, to square himself with what he had testified to on a former occasion, and came to the conclusion that his evidence in the whole was not sufficient to raise the burden of proof, which was on respondent, to establish the defense of contract surrender of the inchoate right of contribution.
We are somewhat constrained to the view that too little *563weight in favor of respondent was given to tbe evidence referred to, and too little weight to the significant circumstances corroborating the oral evidence directly tending to establish the defense of contract. However, in deference to the rule requiring findings of fact by a trial court to be sustained unless clearly wrong, giving due weight in their favor to the superior advantages of the trial jurisdiction for reaching a right conclusion, we pause before passing the point of condemnation. With what has been said we may well leave this branch of the case, especially, since the result reached on another branch renders going further unnecessary. Eeally, whether the finding has efficient support in the evidence might have been passed altogether, but it seemed due to counsel who very carefully briefed the matter as one of primary,' — of vital significance, — to discuss it at some length, omitting, however, reference to the evidence in detail; speaking thereof only in general character and effect, which omission would be supplied before going to the length of overruling the decision.
It seems that the findings were intended to strictly follow the claims of respondent as to a contract defense. Only an express contract was claimed. The learned trial court thought only of an express contract, expressly made, in the' technical sense. Only that seems to have been specially and plainly passed upon, as appears more clearly from the opinion filed by the trial judge than by the findings. It was not essential to the defense of express contract that it should be established to have been made by use of express language.
The findings are not altogether satisfactory on this branch of the case. If the judicial thought was either that respondent was confined to proving an express contract, in the technical sense, because only such would be efficient in any event, or because respondent elected by his pleading to stand on that, or through inadvertence or other reason he omitted to prove that a contract was otherwise made, as by an inference of fact from all the circumstances of the transaction, — that is wrong.
*564All tbe evidence there was bearing on the question being before the court without objection, if by reasonable inference, or circumstantially, a contract was established to the effect that John C. Koch would protect respondent from the guaranty, the latter should have been awarded the benefit of it. We are inclined to think that a contract was so, pretty plainly, established. If we were compelled, in reaching a final conclusion, to pass upon whether such matter was really intended to be affirmatively covered by the findings, and the result were in the negative, without much hesitancy, if any, it is thought, we should find that the reasonable implication from all that occurred in the purchase and sale of the stock, is that the minds of the parties contractually met to the effect that, as between respondent and John C., the latter should alone bear the burden of the guaranty. If the result were that it was intended to be covered negatively, the finding could not be sustained without difficulty, — not, at least, without going to the limit of according dignity to the decision of the trial court as to matters of fact. For the reason before given, in regard to the finding as to the express contract feature, in the restrictive sense, we need not pursue this further or go into details as to the evidence and circumstances uncontrovertibly established thereby, which point, quite as persuasively, to the existence of a contractual meeting of minds as would plain contractual words.
What particular significance, in the legal conclusion, was given to the circumstance that appellant, as a condition of participation with the estate in the composition proceedings in bankruptcy, exacted and obtained for the estate $6,500 for the worthless corporate stock, does not appear. The court freed appellant from any imputation of fraudulent purpose in failing to disclose to respondent the secret advantage obtained, and exonerated him from having made any false or fraudulent representations to induce the former to consent to compromise regardless of the secret advantage. The learned *565court seems to bave thought that, if all the representations made by appellant to respondent were true, and the facts not disclosed were withheld without any real purpose of cheating respondent, and under such circumstances the latter gave his consent, he did it at his peril. In this, it does not clearly appear whether the court treated the two as persons who met and dealt in the attitude of, “at arm’s length,” in the business transaction, as in ordinary matters of contract, or not. The indications are in the affirmative. If that, were the judicial thought, and it entered efficiently into the final result, to that extent such result is wrong.
As indicated, the. relations between respondent and appellant in reference to the guaranty were those of trust and confidence. In the very nature of the case they could not meet or deal “at arm’s length” unless by mutual consent. They met as bearers of a common burden, conceding for the time that respondent was held under the guaranty, and entitled to share fully in each other’s confidence and advantage. It was not enough that appellant stated to respondent, truthfully, what he attempted to state and therefrom the latter formed his judgment to consent to the compromise. It was not enough, that in failing to disclose the secret advantage appellant had no thought of wronging respondent. He owed to him the duty of full disclosure. Failure to perform was a manifest breach of that duty, — a fraud in law, a remediable wrong, and, as such, a defense to the claim' for contribution to the extent that respondent was .damaged, 'and, in any event, to the extent of liability to account for the full amount of the secret exaction by applying it for joint, benefit upon the loss suffered under the guaranty, — this upon settled principles heretofore discussed and declared. ■
We have reached the end as regards matters of fact, seemingly passed upon by the trial court. The general conclusion was that “under all the circumstances in this case it would be inequitable to require the said Henry A. Koch, to contrib*566ute/’ etc. It does not appear to be grounded on any definite breach of duty specifically covered by the findings of fact. It does not seem to have been appreciated that a legitimate basis in contract, or some breach of duty, was necessary, — in other words, that the judgment denying the right of contribution needed something to rest upon beside the mere discretion of the court, unless it were- thought that the mere circumstance by itself that John C. Koch purchased respondent’s stock at full value rendered him as matter of law equitably liable to bear the whole burden of the guaranty, regardless of any contract or breach of duty. There is neither precedent nor principle for that.
John C. may have taken the stock believing it was worth all he gave and been mistaken, or in so believing counted, as an element of value, on the advantage to the corporation of the continued existence of the joint guaranty, or the property have been in fact worth all he supposed and, through misfortune or causes not attributable to any want of reasonable diligence on his part, the business have become worthless, or all the results happened leading to enforcement of the guaranty without breach of duty on his part to respondent. With no contract surrender of the right of contribution, nor any breach of duty which John 0. owed to his cosurety, found, there was no legitimate, basis for the conclusion, in the letter of the decision as to facts. The case was not one for judicial arbitration, but' for judicial disposition upon settled principles. Wherein did John 0. Koch wrong respondent? Wherein is there breach of duty of the former to the latter which, under the law, constitutes a defense to the claim for contribution? The findings of fact, as indicated, are silent as to that, so far as they speak specifically. Are they thus silent, speaking inferentially and circumstantially ? If not, and an inference of fact plainly arises, prima, facie, from the specific facts found, that John C. Koch breached his duty to respondent as cosurety, and thus the default *567happened which caused resort to the guaranty and loss to the sureties, — if he might and would, but for negligence or other inexcusable fault in performance of his duty to reasonably conserve the advantages he enjoyed as controller of the corporation’s business, to protect the guaranty and which but for such fault would have been protected, have prevented loss to the sureties, — that is a legal, moral, and equitable defense to the claim for contribution.
We repeat, the circumstance, if such be the fact, that the trial court, did not appreciate the foregoing and so made no finding with reference to it, does not militate against the efficiency thereof as a defense, if such fact plainly appear. It was the most significant matter in the case after passing the contract feature, and should have been dealt with as matter of fact, following the numerous circumstances found in much detail, and others shown conclusively by the evidence which might have been found, if mere matters of detail upon which the main fact was dependable, were to be covered.
On this vital branch of the case we do not overlook the distinction between the relations of partners and stockholders to each other, and associates in each capacity and the common property. We need not do more than make this- passing reference to matters discussed in that respect in the briefs of counsel. They are not considered material because of the conclusion which seems inevitable.
At the time' respondent and John 0. had their stock deal, the two were, as clearly shown by the statement, virtually, though not directly, the owners of substantially all the corporate property. They controlled it as absolutely as if they had owned every dollar of outstanding stock, which they did in practical effect, — that is either as sole or trustee owners, th,e latter status only covering ten shares. They -could have suspended operations, paid off the indebtedness, and surrendered their corporate charter at any time. Prima, facie, they could have done so, paid all ordinary and stock liabilities, *568and Rad somewhere around $37,500 left over; indicating possession of assets of the value of $150,000 or more. That snch value was real is evident from the fact that respondent sold his stock on that as a cash basis. The exact amount of gross assets does not appear even by aid of a full statement of indebtedness. That all ordinary indebtedness was taken into consideration and with that provided for $87,500 was found left over, and so formed the basis of the stock trade, is evident from the findings and undisputed evidence. After the trade the whole corporate property, to all intents and purposes, became the individual property of John O. It was primarily liable for payment of the • corporate indebtedness, including that covered by the guaranty. So his interest was subject to the paramount right of creditors. He was liable to the corporation and through it for the benefit of its creditors, for common care and honesty in administering the property. Thus such property so controlled was the primary source for protecting the guaranty. It was as virtually under his power as if he had possessed a chattel mortgage on it, as was the circumstance in several of the cases heretofore cited. In that situation he owed the duty, as we have seen, to his co-surety of a guusi-trustee of his advantageous position. If he dishonestly or negligently rendered the primary source for discharging the guaranteed debts insufficient therefor, he breached his duty to his cotrustee and incurred the legal, equitable, and moral liability to lose his inchoate right of contribution. There is no rule better established in the law of suretyship than that, the cosurety whose wrongful conduct causes default, rendering resort to the guaranty necessary, and producing loss to the sureties, cannot have contribution, so far as loss was thus produced.
How did John O. Koch perform his duty, mentioned, to respondent ? The fact, if it be a fact as the court found, that the latter did not protect himself at the time of the stock trade by an express definite contract as regards the guaranty, only emphasizes the trustee status of John O. to conserve his ' *569advantageous position for the bearers of the common burden, and shows that respondent relied wholly npon performance of that duty.
Eor nearly a year after the stock transaction aforesaid, John C. was sole master of the corporate situation. Then he transferred about two fifths of the stock to his sons, thus continuing in virtual control and the corporation exclusively his family affair, — evidently a convenient instrumentality for holding and investing the family property, and probably acquired for that purpose. That is the natural inference from the persistency with which John 0. urged respondent to leave the corporate business solely to him.- He continued to control the policy of the corporation till he died. On the face of things,- — no explanation whatever having been offered by evidence, — with more than twice property enough at the start to pay all liabilities, ordinary and stock as well, — he so handled the situation as to cause the default and loss. He did that in the brief period of less than three years. At the end of that time there was nothing left of the prosperous corporation with stock worth seventy-five per cent, above par, of less than two years before, but a mere wreck to be wound up a short time later in bankruptcy, where a loss of property equal to some three times the face value of the capital stock, developed. Where did all that property go to in the brief space of time? How could it have been so dissipated without a most flagrant breach by John 0. of duty to his cosurety and to the corporation as its managing officer? With no explanation of such strange shrinkage of assets, — and there is none in the record, — John C. Koch, deceased, stands, by necessary inference, convicted of such breach. With such a showing the burden was upon appellant to,make a full explanation, exonerating deceased from the apparent dereliction. The status was very much like that of a trustee, when called upon to account, charged with trust property, unquestionably traced into his hands.
It is futile to argue that John C. did not own the property *570or possess it as security. Though, he did not, in the technical sense, he did in all substantial sense, and his duty to his co-surety is plain. The breach of it is plain. The legal liability of forfeiture of the right of contribution is quite as plain. Facts in that regard should have been expressly, as they are inferentially, embodied in the findings, followed by a declaration as a legal result, and equitable as well, that the claimed right of contribution was illegitimate. If appellant here had brought suit at law against respondent for contribution, the facts indicated could have been pleaded as a perfect defense. If upon the trial they had appeared as plainly as now, it would have been the duty of the court to have granted a nonsuit or direction of a verdict of no cause of action, especially if requested. Had some, but not a full satisfactory explanation been made of the apparent breach, it would have been the duty of the court to have sent the case to the jury for a verdict in accordance with their finding as to the facts, regarding whether John O'. Koch negligently or otherwise dissipated the property of the corporation, or permitted it, while it was under his control, and so brought about the loss upon the guaranty.
The foregoing seems so plain, the wonder is that appellant could have expected to recover on the obligation of contribution once existing, without making the suggested explanation. We must presume that this phase of the case, very plain as it seems to be and likewise its fatal character as indicated, did not occur to appellant or his counsel. They went down to the trial on the first, and second occasions and persisted here, upon the theory that the only matter of clear efficient defense pleaded was the express contract, and that the case would stand or fall on that. They were warranted in so thinking, as regards any disclosure of attitude by their adversary, or that of the court, so far as the result is grounded on any specific finding of fact clearly warranting it.
A question is raised by an appeal from the judgment taken *571by a guardian ad litem who appeared for two minors having some interest in the litigation. Such guardian participated in the trial in county court. In taking the appeal to the circuit court he was not treated as an adverse party by service on him of the notice thereof. Upon the matter being brought to the attention of the appellate court, and after expiration of the ordinary time for serving notice where that is necessary, 'that court, in effect, permitted the guardian to waive all irregularities in that regard, and the guardian consented to do so to the extent his duty would permit. The record by petition and order was made accordingly, and pursuant thereto the guardian participated in the second trial.
The whole case was removed to the circuit court on the seasonable service of notice of appeal upon the personal representative of deceased. He stood for all interests. The guardian did not appear in the county court contest as matter of right. There is no rule of court or statute or unwritten law affording such right. It was proper for such court to recognize the interests of the minors in the special way it was done, but that did not give their special representative any control of the litigation. He was not a party in interest as in Tyson v. Tyson, 94 Wis. 225, 68 N. W. 1015. However, being recognized to specially conserve the somewhat remote interests of minors, the ordinary duties of the position, as suggested in Tyson v. Tyson, supra, applied.
This was not a case where a guardian was essential to jurisdiction. The only necessary party adverse to the claimant was the personal representative. All interested in the estate, in the collective sense, really the estate itself, vitalized by such representative, was the only adverse party to the claimant in the matter of the hearing on claims, and upon him notice of the appeal from county court, as required by sec. 4033, Stats. (1898), was duly served.
The guardian ad litem was permitted to appear after the nature of amicus curice, — recognized as such by reason of *572the remote interest of the minors. A person having such a status is not an adverse party within the meaning of the statute, who is entitled to recognition as such in appeal proceedings. 2 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 159.
However, we quite agree with counsel for respondent, that it was competent for the guardian, by permission of the court, to waive any irregularity there might have been in failing to recognize him as a party in the appeal proceedings. Such irregularities are waivable either expressly or by conduct. Kasson v. Estate of Brocker, 47 Wis. 79, 1 N. W. 418. The jurisdictional feature of the appeal statute, as regards county court matters, is in sec. 4031, Stats. (1898), which provides that any person aggrieved by a decision of the county court “may appeal therefrom to the circuit court’... by filing a notice thereof with said county court within sixty days from the date of the act appealed from, . . . together with such undertaking as is required” by sec. 4032. Thus the prime essential, as said in Charmley v. Charmley, 125 Wis. 297, 301, 103 N. W. 1106, is the filing of the notice of appeal within the time required. Compliance even with the requirement as to filing the bond has reference to perfecting the appeal which may be done somewhat irregularly and yet be sufficient. Perkins v. Shadbolt, 44 Wis. 574.
So from any viewpoint, the judgment rendered below and affirmed here, is binding on all parties interested in the estate, including the minors represented by the guardian ad litem.
By the Gowrt. — The judgment is affirmed on both appeals.
A motion.for a rehearing was denied March 12, 1912.