Court Opinion

ID: 3541621
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:53:06.064073+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:45:36.796946
License: Public Domain

It is held in numerous modern cases that the rule ofstrictissimi juris, usually available to those who become sureties without compensation, is relaxed when applied to a compensated surety. (Lassetter v. Becker, 26 Ariz. 224,224 P. 810; Southwestern Portland Cement Co. v. Williams
(N.M.), 251 P. 380; Hunstock v. Royal Securities Corp.,51 Cal. App. 769, 197 P. 963; Royal Indemnity Co. v. NorthernGranite  Stone Co., 100 Ohio, 373, 12 A.L.R. 378, 126 N.E. 405;Duke v. National Surety Co., 130 Wash. 276, 227 P. 2;School District v. Massachusetts Bonding  Ins. Co.,92 Kan. 53, Ann. Cas. 1916B, 238, 142 P. 1077), and that such a company must show that its rights have been injuriously affected before it can defeat its contract of suretyship on the ground of alteration. (Stearns on Suretyship, *Page 233 
3d ed., p. 415; Wasco County v. New England Equitable Ins.Co., 88 Or. 465, Ann. Cas. 1918E, 656, L.R.A. 1918D, 732, 172 P. 126; Fitzgerald v. Neal, 113 Or. 103, 231 P. 645;Montpelier v. National Surety Co., 97 Vt. 111, 33 A.L.R. 489,122 A. 484; Walker Realty Co. v. American Surety Co.,60 Utah, 435, 211 P. 998; Murray City v. Banks, 62 Utah, 296,219 P. 246.)
Our statutes, practically the same as those of California, are not so broad as the "injury" rule, but even under our Code, compensated sureties are not released by any but material changes. (First Congregational Church v. Lowery, 175 Cal. 124,165 P. 440; Roberts v. Security Trust  Savings Bank,196 Cal. 575, 238 P. 673; see, also, Pocatello v. Fargo,41 Idaho, 432, 242 P. 297.)
It is the cause of action, and not the complaint, which determines the obligation of a compensated surety, and mere changes of form, or changes of detail, not going to the substance, will not operate to release such surety; and the surety must be taken to have contemplated the possibility of amendment, when entering into a contract of suretyship. (Turner
v. Fidelity  Deposit Company of Maryland, 187 Cal. 76,200 P. 959; Frost v. Witter, 132 Cal. 421, 84 Am. St. Rep. 53,64 P. 705.)
"Generally a surety is not released by amendments to the pleadings, although they change the form of action, or increase the damages claimed. The liability of sureties is not affected by immaterial variations in the proceedings not increasing their liability." (32 Cyc. 190, 191; Stearns on Suretyship, 3d ed., p. 363.)
A more specific statement appears in 6 C.J., p. 347: "Sureties on a forthcoming bond or bond conditioned to pay the judgment, are not discharged by proper amendment of the attachment affidavit, or of the declaration or writ, the identity of the action not being changed." And see case and note in 42 L.R.A. (n.s.) 484. *Page 234 
The supreme court of Kansas makes an interesting observation as to the attitude the parties must be presumed to take when entering into such a contract of suretyship: "Parties to actions, as well as sureties on attachment bonds, understand that amendments may be made to the pleadings, that new parties may be brought in, that the original action may be consolidated with another action, and new issues raised between parties who were not originally concerned in the litigation, where the bond was given; but the surety, unless his liability be increased by reason of the amendment, has no cause to complain." (Gregory v.United States F.  G. Co., 105 Kan. 648, 185 P. 35, 1041.)
The amendments made in the complaint in the main action went only to the form and not the substance, would not have constituted a variance, were entirely immaterial and did not affect the surety prejudicially nor make his position worse or different. An amendment giving in specific terms what formerly was alleged only generally is entirely proper. (Henry v.Phillips, 163 Cal. 135, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 39, 124 P. 837;Emerson v. Western Automobile Indemnity Assn., 112 Kan. 426,211 P. 622.) Mere increase in the amount of damages is not such an amendment as will operate to release a surety. (Townsend Nat.Bank v. Jones, 151 Mass. 454, 24 N.E. 593; Turner v.Fidelity  Deposit Co., 187 Cal. 76, 200 P. 959; annotation in 42 L.R.A. (n.s.) 484, 485.)
To "show a right on the part of the plaintiff," is the date material? Here we have a parol contract under which plaintiff performed certain mining work, either nine months after the contract was made or twenty-one months thereafter. What difference does the time make? It has been held that the precise time of entering into a contract is immaterial, and declared that the material part is the injury; therefore, that variance between pleading and proof as to date was of no effect. (St. Louis, A. T. Ry. Co. v. Evans, 78 Tex. 369, 14 S.W. 798; Morehouse v.Texas Trunk Ry. Co., 4 Willson Civ. Cas. Ct. App. (Tex.) 267, 17 S.W. 1086; Kerr v. Blair, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 406,105 S.W. 548; Singer v. *Page 235 Hutchinson, 183 Ill. 606, 75 Am. St. Rep. 133, 137, 56 N.E. 388; Barger v. Brown, 161 Iowa, 656, 143 N.W. 496.)
While the legislature intended that our attachment statutes, being remedial, should be liberally and beneficially expounded with exactment of substantial compliance (Cope v. UpperMissouri Min.  P. Co., 1 Mont. 53; Wall v. Brookman,72 Mont. 228, 232 P. 774; Gilna v. Barker, 78 Mont. 343,254 P. 169), it did not intend that the time-honored rights of sureties should be subordinated to the interest of attaching creditors. The rights of a surety have been expressly preserved by statute, and in this state the statute controls. (Dodd v.Vucovich, 38 Mont. 188, 99 P. 296.) The statute, moreover, makes no differentiation between compensated and uncompensated sureties. Even those states which hold that the rule ofstrictissimi juris does not apply to a compensated surety further hold that a bond of a compensated surety is not to be so construed as to extend liability beyond the terms of the contract. (Pacific County v. Illinois Surety Co., 234 Fed. 97; Curnow v. Goodman, 244 Mass. 265, 138 N.E. 379; notes, 12 A.L.R. 382 et seq.)
The respondent takes the position that the amendments were material. This is not a case for the singling out of each separate item and brushing it aside, but it is one which demands a consideration of the transformed items taken in the entirety and as a conglomerate whole, and when so viewed, it is submitted, they entirely change the character of the original cause of action. (See Michelin Tire Co. v. Bentel, 184 Cal. 315,193 P. 770; Cassidy  McFadden v. Saline County Bank, 7 Ind. Ter. 543, 104 S.W. 829; Curnow v. Goodman, 244 Mass. 265,138 N.E. 379; Quillen v. Arnold, 12 Nev. 234; Petri v. Manny,99 Wash. 601, 1 A.L.R. 1595, 170 P. 127.) *Page 236 
The object of this suit was to recover judgment against defendants upon an undertaking given by the defendant Fidelity 
Deposit Company of Maryland to obtain the release from attachment of certain property levied upon at the instance of the plaintiff in an action commenced by him against David S. Barker, Tekla S. Barker, Violet Barker and John Glover, as statutory trustees of the Big Seven Mining Company, which had been dissolved by expiration of its charter. Said last-mentioned cause was No. 17,262 in the records of the district court, and for brevity will hereafter be referred to by that number only.
The complaint in the instant case alleges that cause No. 17,262 was commenced on June 9, 1923, by the filing of the complaint; that writs of attachment were duly issued therein; that under said writs levy on property of the defendants therein was made by proper officers; that on August 23, 1923, an order was made by the court for the release of the attached property upon filing, by defendants therein, of an undertaking in the sum of $800, to be signed by some reliable surety company, to the effect that if the plaintiff recovered judgment in the action, the defendants therein would, on demand, redeliver the attached property, so released, to the proper officer, to be applied to the payment of the judgment, or, in default thereof, the defendants or the sureties on the undertaking would, on demand, pay to the plaintiff the full value of the property released; that on August 24 the defendant Fidelity  Deposit Company of Maryland, hereafter referred to as the surety company, executed an undertaking in accordance with the terms of said order, which was duly delivered, approved and filed, and thereupon the property was released from attachment and delivered to the defendants in said action; that the total value of the property so released was in excess of the sum of $800; that on April 24, 1926, the plaintiff recovered judgment in said action *Page 237 
against the defendants therein for the sum of $1,597.16; that no part of said judgment has been paid, although its payment has been demanded; that redelivery of the property which was attached has also been demanded and refused. The prayer is for judgment against the defendants for $800, with interest and costs.
The defendant surety company filed a separate answer to this complaint, in which it admitted the commencement of action No. 17,262; that "pretended" writs of attachment were issued therein under which the sheriffs of Lewis and Clark and Cascade counties pretended and assumed to levy upon property of the defendants; that the order for release of the property from attachment was made and that this defendant furnished the undertaking required by said order; that said undertaking was delivered, filed and approved and thereupon the property levied upon under the writs of attachment was released and delivered to the defendants in said action; that the value of the property was $800, and that judgment was recovered in said action No. 17,262, all as alleged in the complaint.
This answer also set forth two separate defenses. The court sustained a demurrer to the first one, and we are not called upon now to give it any consideration.
In the second separate defense it is alleged that the original complaint in action No. 17,262 stood as filed therein at the time of the execution of the undertaking by this defendant; that after the execution of said undertaking, and without the defendant's knowledge or consent, an amended complaint was filed by the plaintiff in said action No. 17,262, which introduced into said action four new causes in lieu of those set forth in the original complaint as the same stood at the time of the execution of the undertaking, each of which causes of action differed materially from the cause or causes of action set forth in the original complaint, and were predicated upon alleged contracts materially different from the contract set forth in the original complaint, and that said *Page 238 
amended complaint materially changed the obligation, if any, of the answering defendant upon said undertaking. Copies of the original and amended complaints in said cause No. 17,262 are attached to and made a part of this separate defense. It is then alleged that upon the issues raised by the amended complaint, the answer thereto and the reply to the answer in said cause No. 17,262, such proceedings were had that a judgment was rendered therein in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants therein, for the amount set forth in the plaintiff's complaint herein, which judgment was duly entered and docketed by the clerk of said court, and it is asserted that by reason of these facts this answering defendant has been wholly exonerated and discharged from its liability to the plaintiff on the undertaking in suit, if any such liability ever existed.
To the second separate defense the plaintiff filed a reply in which all of the fact allegations thereof are admitted, the only denials being the conclusions that the amended complaint introduced four new causes of action in lieu of, and materially different from, those set forth in the original complaint which were predicated upon contracts materially different from those set forth in the original complaint, and materially changed the obligation upon the undertaking for the release of the attachments.
Thereafter the defendant surety company moved the court for judgment on the pleadings upon its second separate affirmative defense, on the ground that the fact allegations therein which are admitted by plaintiff's reply thereto constitute a complete defense to the plaintiff's cause of action. This motion was based "upon this notice and upon plaintiff's complaint, said defendant's separate answer and plaintiff's reply." Upon the argument of the motion it was agreed by counsel that the judgment of the court thereon should be upon the merits of the action. Thereafter the motion was sustained by the court and judgment entered dismissing the *Page 239 
complaint as to the defendant surety company. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.
The amended complaint in cause No. 17,262 stated four separate causes of action, the fourth of which was abandoned at the trial and the verdict of the jury upon each of the other three causes was in favor of the plaintiff; that upon the second cause of action was for the sum of $624.33. So far as the appeal in the instant case is concerned, the plaintiff has abandoned all claim to a right of recovery from the defendant surety company of the amounts set out in the first and third causes of action in his amended complaint in cause No. 17,262, and we are therefore concerned with the second cause of action alone, and it will be referred to as the amended complaint.
Section 8197, Revised Codes of 1921, says: "A surety company cannot be held beyond the express terms of his contract"; and section 8301, Id., provides: "A surety is exonerated (1) in like manner with a guarantor." By the provisions of section 8188, Id., "a guarantor is exonerated, except so far as he may be indemnified by the principal, if by any act of the creditor, without the consent of the guarantor, the original obligation of the principal is altered in any respect, or the remedies or rights of the creditor against the principal, in respect thereto, in anywise impaired or suspended."
It is not contended, and the pleadings do not show, that the defendant surety company was in any respect indemnified for any liability which it might incur upon the undertaking suit.
The surety on an undertaking given by the defendant to secure[1, 2]  the release of property from levy under a writ of attachment enters into the obligation with reference to the cause as it then stands; and if the plaintiff, without the consent of the surety, subsequently changes his pleading so as to state another and different cause of action, it is such a change as to work a release of the surety. This rule *Page 240 
is supported by the authorities generally, and from them we cite the following: Michelen Tire Co. v. Bentel, 184 Cal. 315,193 P. 770; Cassidy  McFadden v. Saline County Bank, 7 Ind. Ter. 543, 104 S.W. 829; Curnow v. Goodman, 244 Mass. 265,138 N.E. 379; Quillen v. Arnold, 12 Nev. 234; Petri v. Manny,99 Wash. 601, 1 A.L.R. 1595, 170 P. 127; Waples on Attachment, secs. 774, 775; Shinn on Attachment, sec. 306, p. 596.
One of the reasons for the rule has been said to be that the surety may have been satisfied that plaintiff could not prevail upon the cause of action set forth in the complaint as it stood when he executed the undertaking to release the attached property, and for that reason may have been willing to afford the defendant relief by signing as his surety though he would not have been willing to do so if another and different cause of action had been stated in the complaint.
It is obvious that our inquiry requires a detailed examination of the original and amended complaints in cause No. 17,262 for the purpose of determining whether the latter states a cause of action different from that contained in the former.
Each purported to state a cause of action for the recovery of an amount alleged to be due to plaintiff on account of a royalty or share of ores mined and extracted by him from property belonging to the Big Seven Mining Company, in the Neihart Mining district in Cascade county, under a lease entered into by him with the defendants David L.S. Barker, Tekla S. Barker, Violet Barker and John Glover, as statutory trustees of said mining company.
A comparison of the contracts set out in the original and amended complaints can best be made by setting forth in parallel columns the substantive portions thereof showing the date, subject matter, term and royalty provided for, and also the demands, claims and grievances and the amounts claimed to be due to plaintiff thereon, as shown in said original and amended complaints, as follows: *Page 241
Original Complaint. Amended Complaint.
The Date.
January 18, 1921.                        February 10, 1922.
The Subject Matter.
   "Number Four Chute of Big `7'     "A certain portion of the Mine."                            property of defendant at the head of Snow Gulch, in the Neihart Mining District, near Neihart, in Cascade county, Montana, designated as in the lower tunnel on the main lead at a place about 2,000 feet distant from the entrance, including such ground on either side north and south and above the then top of number four chute as was tributary to or practical to work from number four chute, especially ground within 100 feet above the then top of said chute."
The Term.
   "Until the plaintiff had          "Said lease to terminate when and after received under said lease the     plaintiff should have received as his sum of $5,000, not to exceed      share of the net proceeds or smelter however a period of ten           returns from certain ore known as `hard years."                           ore,' after deduction of rents or royalties aforesaid, the total sum of $5,000, the net proceeds or smelter returns from all so-called `soft ore' not to be counted towards this total sum of $5,000." *Page 242
The Royalty.
   "Sixty-five per cent of said      "On the following schedule from the net proceeds to be payable to the     proceeds or smelter returns on all ores plaintiff herein upon the sale    mined; 30% on ore running under 100 ounces of said ore, and returns from     of silver per ton; 35% on ore running such sale and payment thereof     over 100 ounces and under 200 ounces to the defendants."               of silver per ton; 40% on ore running over 200 ounces of silver per ton."
The Demands, Claims and Grievances.
   Nine tons of gross value of       (a) On or about November 23, 1922, $125 per ton mined in the months  delivered to defendants for shipment of November and December, 1922,   25 3/4 tons of ore for which defendants and shipped on or about April     received net returns of $2,387, the ore 15, 1923, the net proceeds of     running about 92 ounces of silver per ton, sale being $775.                  and entitling plaintiff to 70 per cent of such net returns.
                                     (b) Prior to January 15, 1923, mined a further 10 1/2 tons of ore, running about 180 ounces of silver per ton, and of a gross value of $200 per ton, for which the net proceeds were about $1,795, received by defendants on or about April 5, 1922, entitling plaintiff to an amount equivalent to 65% of such net returns, but on January 15th, 1923, was ejected from premises. *Page 243
The Amount Claimed.
$500 plus $77.50 penalty and      On lot (a) $1,664, less amount received interest from April 15, 1923.     viz.: $1,614, or a balance of $50.
                                     On lot (b) $1,167, or a total on lots (a) and (b) of $2,831, less $1,614, or a balance of $1,217.
From the foregoing summary it will be noted that the date of the contract mentioned in the amended complaint is one year and twenty-three days later than the contract mentioned in the original complaint. The subject matter in the original complaint is No. 4 chute of Big 7 Mine, while that in the amended complaint is certain ground near a chute designated as No. 4, but no mention is made of the mine in which this chute is located. The term of the lease in the original complaint does not take into account any deduction for soft ores as does the lease in the amended complaint. The contract in the original complaint provided a flat royalty of sixty-five per cent to the lessee, or thirty-five per cent to the lessor, while that in the amended complaint was based on a sliding scale based on the silver content of the ore mined, and ranging from thirty per cent to forty per cent to the lessor. It cannot be doubted that the royalty was a very material term of the lease. It not only served to identify the particular lease in question and distinguish it from all other leases, but the very basis of the action was to recover this royalty.
From the foregoing comparison it is obvious that the date, subject matter, term and royalty provisions of the contract made the basis of the cause of action stated in the amended complaint are wholly different from the ones set out in the original complaint, and that the two causes of action are entirely separate and distinct.
Applying the principle announced in the foregoing authorities to the above facts, there can be no doubt but that, by the *Page 244 
substitution in the amended complaint of a new cause of action for the one set out in the original complaint, the defendant surety company was released from liability on the undertaking given to release the attachments. The undertaking which it executed did not refer to or embrace the cause of action stated in the amended complaint, and it cannot be held liable on any account because of a judgment rendered thereon.
The court did not err in sustaining the motion for judgment on the pleadings as to the second separate defense set out in the answer. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES MATTEHEWS and GALEN concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY and MR. JUSTICE MYERS not sitting.
Rehearing denied December 21, 1928.