Where the surety upon an administration bond was sued, and
judgment recovered against him in Mississippi, and a court in
Tennessee where the principals upon the bond resided decided that
but a small amount was due by the administrators upon their
account, and that the judgment against the surety had been obtained
in defiance of an injunction issued by the Tennessee court, and
also by fraudulent representations made to the surety, and it was
admitted that the decree in Tennessee was supported by the proofs,
the surety was entitled to relief by the court in Mississippi, and
the creditor must be perpetually enjoined from proceeding upon his
judgment.
This was a bill filed by Robert H. Cage, in his lifetime, to
stay execution on a forthcoming bond under the circumstances stated
in the opinion of the Court.
The circuit court granted a temporary injunction in the outset
of the case, but upon the final decree adjudged that the injunction
be dissolved, and that Cassidy be permitted to sue out executions
at law upon the judgments of the court, then restrained by
injunction.
From this decree the complainant appealed to this Court.
Page 64 U. S. 113
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
R. H. Cage, the testator of the appellants, filed his bill in
the circuit court, to be relieved from a judgment rendered there in
favor of the appellee, A. A. Cassidy, in November, 1852.
The pleadings and proofs contained in the record disclose that
the testator, in 1841, became surety to the Probate Court of
Madison County, Mississippi, for William Douglass and William Hall,
on their bond as administrators of the estate of Henry L. Douglass
deceased. In 1848, their letters of administration were revoked and
Cassidy, the husband of Mary Douglass the widow of Henry L.
Douglass and the guardian of Henrietta Douglass their only child,
was appointed administrator
de bonis non.
In 1849, the probate court cited the administrators to
account,
Page 64 U. S. 114
and upon their nonappearance rendered a decree against them for
$6,822.87, and subsequently ordered that payment should be made to
Cassidy and wife and Henrietta Douglass -- one moiety to each,
being their legal share, and in default of payment authorized a
suit on the administration bond. In 1850, suits were instituted on
the bond against Cage, the surety, in the circuit court, by Cassidy
and Henrietta Douglass; but no suit was commenced against the
principals, who resided in Tennessee. Judgments were rendered in
1851 against Cage for the amount of the decree, and these were
settled by his giving a note to Cassidy for their amount, payable
one year after date, and by paying the costs.
During the year 1851, Cage visited Tennessee with a view to have
a settlement between Douglass and Hall, his principals, and
Cassidy, and to obtain an indemnity from those who had induced him
to sign their bond. His negotiations were unproductive, and he
filed a bill in the Court of Chancery in Sumner County, Tennessee,
to which Cassidy and wife, Henrietta Douglass and Douglass and Hall
and others were made parties.
In this bill he stated his relation as surety, and his legal
claim to be exonerated from his obligation, and from his impending
danger of loss. He insisted that his creditors, the distributees,
and his principals, the administrators, should adjust their
accounts, and that the balance should be settled. He charged that
he had not made defense against the judgments in Mississippi,
because the defendant, Cassidy, had assured him that he was not to
be vexed or injured, and the suit was simply to serve as an
instrument to bring his absent principles to a fair settlement. He
charges that the account stated in the probate court was erroneous,
within the knowledge of Cassidy, who had procured it, and that the
balance was subject to credits that he knew to be just. He obtained
an injunction against Cassidy, requiring him not to transfer his
note or to commence any suit upon it pending the injunction.
The several defendants answered the bill; and in 1854 the cause
came on for a hearing upon pleadings, proofs, orders, and a report
upon the administration accounts.
Page 64 U. S. 115
Before this time the administrators had obtained a writ of error
upon the judgment rendered in probate court, and in January, 1853,
this judgment was annulled by the Court of Errors and Appeals of
Mississippi.
The defendant, Cassidy, in 1852, notwithstanding the injunction
in Tennessee, commenced a suit upon the note of the surety, Cage,
in the circuit court, and in November, 1852, recovered a judgment
for the full amount, and sued out execution for its collection.
Thereupon Cage filed the bill for injunction and relief with which
the proceedings in the cause before this Court were commenced.
In this bill he charges that the account as stated in the
probate court is unjust. That Cassidy was aware of the injustice of
the charges when they were made. That he had quieted the mind of
the plaintiff, by assurances that he meditated no harm to him, but
merely expected to bring the administrators to a fair settlement by
that course, and only expected to hold the claim against him for
that purpose. He specifies the errors in the account, and the
efforts he had made to bring the parties to a settlement, and the
pendency of his suit in Tennessee. Cassidy answered the bill,
taking issue upon some of the material averments.
Thus the cause stood when the Court of Chancery in Sumner
County, Tennessee, rendered its final decree in 1854. The court
declared that the settlement in the probate court, the judgments in
the circuit court on the bond, and the execution of the promissory
note by Cage in liquidation were superinduced by the promises and
assurances of Cassidy to Cage, that he was not to be held
personally, but they were to be used to bring the principals to a
fair accounting. That Cassidy knew that the statement of the
account in the probate court was erroneous, and unjust to the
administrators, and that the recovery of the judgment on the note
of Cage was a breach of the injunction, and a fraud upon him.
The court finds that instead of a debt of $6,822.87, as reported
against the administrators in 1849, there was only due the sum of
$850.37. It charges against this sum the costs paid by Cage in the
litigation to which he has been subjected,
Page 64 U. S. 116
and required the remainder to be paid into court; and thereupon
entered a decree against Cassidy, enjoining him from proceeding
further upon the judgment in the circuit court on the note.
This decree was presented to the circuit court in Mississippi in
suitable pleadings, and was considered by that court under a
stipulation of the solicitors of the respective parties to this
effect:
"It is admitted that proof before the Chancery Court of
Tennessee was sufficient to establish the state of accounts of Hall
and Douglass as administrators of H. L. Douglass in Mississippi and
Tennessee, as decreed by the chancellor in the Tennessee case,
filed in this cause as an exhibit. This agreement is made, in order
to dispense with obtaining a copy of the proof before the chancery
court of Tennessee, or retaking the depositions of the witnesses.
In other words, all that is intended to be admitted hereby, and
that is admitted, that the decree of said chancery court was
supported by the proof."
Upon the hearing in the circuit court, that court determined
that the injunction which had been granted in the preliminary stage
of this cause was improvidently allowed, and that the bill must be
dismissed. From this decree this appeal is taken.
The natural limit of the obligation of a surety is to be found
in the obligation of the principal; and when that is extinguished,
the surety is in general liberated. In some codes, the obligation
of a surety cannot extend beyond or exist under conditions more
onerous than that of his principal. The obligation of the
administrators, Douglass and Hall, has been ascertained by the
decree of the Court of Chancery in Tennessee, upon proof, conceded
to be sufficient, and has been fully discharged by its order.
Notwithstanding this, the appellee Cassidy seeks to enforce a
judgment for nearly ten times the amount of the debt found to be
due in that decree, and now discharged. It is apparent that the
effort is unconscionable, and can only be allowed under the
influence of some inflexible and imperious rule of the court, that
deprives the appellants of any title to its interposition. But the
Court
Page 64 U. S. 117
of Chancery of Tennessee, upon sufficient proof, has declared
that the surety had been "lulled into security" by the delusive
promises of his creditor, and that he has been the victim of
artifice and circumvention; that the judgment against him was
obtained in contempt of the injunction of the court, and that the
assertion of any right under it would be fraudulent. This decree
remains in full force and effect.
These circumstances furnish additional motives for the
intervention of the equitable powers of the court for the relief of
the appellants.
It is the opinion of this Court that the decree of the
circuit court is erroneous, and must be reversed. The cause is
remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter a decree
perpetuating the injunction.