Bishop v. Currie-McGraw Co.

97 So. 886 | Miss. | 1923

Ethridge, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

Tbe appellee sued tbe appellant on a claim for one thousand five hundred forty-five dollars and nine cents, claimed to be due by virtue of a contract entered into between tbe appellant and one W. D. Turner, whereby the payment of money to the ‘ Currie-McGraw Company for goods sold to Turner was provided for. This contract, made an exhibit to the declaration, reads as follows:

“Tbe undersigned, for and in consideration of one dollar ($1) in band paid by W. D. Turner, now of Shaw, Miss., hereinafter called the purchaser, at bis present place of business, or elsewhere, to buy goods, wares, and merchandise on credit of Currie-McGraw Company, Memphis, Tenn., hereinafter called tbe vendor, hereby offer J. W. Bisbop, of Shaw, Miss., to guarantee the payment of and bind himself personally; bis heirs, executors, and administrators, to said vendor for tbe payment of all debts of every, kind, name, and nature, including interest at the rate and on tbe terms of said debts, which said purchaser is now owing or may hereafter owe to said vendor, whether now due or not due: Provided, however, that- the liability of the undersigned hereunder shall not be for a greater amount than thirty-five hundred ($3,500) dollars and interest at the rate of and on the terms of said debts.
“The. undersigned agrees that the debts,' the payment of which is hereby guaranteed, may, by note or otherwise, be changed in form, extended or renewed at the option of said vendor without notice to the undersigned and liability of the undersigned shall not be affected by such change, extension or renewal; that this guaranty shall be in full force and effect up to such date as the said vendor shall *524have received at its office in Memphis, Tenn., written notice from the undersigned to cease selling to the said purchaser on the strength of this guaranty that the said vendor may at its option extend credit to the said purchaser to any amount in excess of the limit of this guaranty without impairing our personal, joint, or several liability hereunder; 'and the personal, joint, or several liability of the undersigned shall be and is absolute and unconditional, and shall not be affected by the failure of any other person or persons to sign this guaranty; that the delivery hereof to the said purchaser shall constitute an unconditional delivery to the vendor; that, should said vendor commence suit against the said purchaser or against the undersigned on this guaranty to pay a reasonable attorney’s fee, the amount of the same is to be taxed against the undersigned as part of the cost in said action.
“The undersigned hereby waives notice from the said vendor or of the amount of the said purchaser’s indebtedness, default in payment, nr of the acceptance of this guaranty.
“In witness whereof, we have hereunto subscribed our names at Shaw, Miss:, on the 12th day of October, 1917.
“[Signed] J. W. Bishop.
“W. D. TURNER.
“Witness: J. C. Walker.”

The declaration also had an account attached as an exhibit showing the amount of the go'ods sold, etc., which account was sworn to by the plaintiff and denied by the defendant. The affidavit of denial stated the account was incorrect, and that he did not owe the same or any part thereof.

The appellee sold to Turner at various times good, wares, and merchandise under said contract. The last shipment of goods to Mr. Turner Avas made on May 29, 1918. The company then called on Mr. Bishop to pay the amount. He made a small payment thereon, and after considerable correspondence wrote the Currie-McGraw Company to *525send a representative to Shaw to settle the matter with Turner. This letter reads as folloAVS:

“November 16, 1918,
“Currie-McGraw Company, Memphis, Tenn. — Gentlemen: Yours of the llth inst. received. My delay in writing you was to give W. D. Turner opportunity to reduce in some measure the amount. He promised me he would send you a good-sized remittance, and I av anted as large reduction as possible. He seems again to have failed. Now, gentlemen, I ask that you send your representative down here and close some settlement Avith him, doing the best you can, and getting as much out of him as you can. When ypu have done that, you will have no need of an attorney to collect the remainder from me. You appreciate the fact that I do not Avant to have to pay out any more than I must on this account that will have no return to me. He has treated me as shabbily as he did you.
“Yours truly, ' [Signed] J. W. Bishop.”

Mr. Burkhardt, of the Burkhardt Adjustment Company, went to Shaiv at the instance of the Currie-McGraw Company and investigated Turner’s affairs, and -reported that Turner Avas solvent.- Mr. Bishop then wrote as follows to the Currie-McGraAV Company:

“Take notice that you are expected to proceed to the collection of securing your account against Will D. Turner, of ShaAv, Miss., payment guaranteed by the Avriter, as this party is at this time solvent, and the money can-be made by process of laAV against him, if prompt action is taken, but, if delay is made, he may become insolvent by sale of his goods, and I as indorser thereby damaged. Therefore you are notified to proceed on the collection of the account forthwith.
“Yours truly, [Signed] J. W. Bishop.” .

The Currie-McGraiv Company did not file suit against Turner after receiving this notice, and Turner continued to do business and thereafter make payments to the ap-pellee, plaintiff, as follows: On January 7, 1919, three *526hundred and fifty dollars; January 7, 1919, one hundred and fifty dollars; February 3, 1919, one hundred dollars; April 23, 1919, one hundred dollars. In November, .1919, Turner filed a petition in bankruptcy. No suit was filed against Turner by the Currie-McGraw Company to collect the account. The suit filed against Bishop was returnable at the November, 1919, term of circuit court, almost two years after the giving of the notice by Bishop above set forth.

There are two contentions presented here, or at least the contentions may be reduced to two., or at most three: (1) Whether, the contract above set forth was a contract of suretyship, within the purview of section 3731, Code of 1906 (Hemingway’s Code, section 2907), and whether the defendant, Bishop, was discharged by the failure of the Currie-McGraw Company to sue the principal, Turnér, after the letter above set forth, dated December 6, 1918, directing the company to proceed , against Turner above set forth. (2) Whether there was any proof of the account, so far as Peter Stewart’s account, assumed by Turner and guaranteed by Bishop, was concerned.

Section 3731, Code of-1906 (Hemingway’s Code,, section 2907), reads as follows:

“Any person bWnd as surety or accommodation indorser for another, may, at any time after the debt has become due or liability been incurred, give notice in writing to the creditor to commence and prosecute legal proceedings against the principal debtor, if living and resident within this state, for the recovery of the debt; and if the creditor fail to commence legal proceedings by the next 'term of the court in which the same shall be instituted, to be held after the expiration of thirty days from the giving of the notice, and to prosecute the same to effect, the surety who shall have given the notice shall be discharged from liability. It shall not be lawful to plead or to give in evidence under this section a notice not in writing, and any *527act of tbe creditor shall not be a waiver of notice in writing as herein required.”

The appellant contends that the contract signed by Bishop and Turner is a contract coming within the purview of the above section; whereas, the appellee contends that the instrument is a guaranty, and that by reason of some of its provisions the appellant-is precluded-from making a demand under the statute, even though it might be held •generally to be a contract of suretyship rather than of guaranty. It is insisted that the provision in the contract :

“The undersigned agrees that the debts, the payment of which is hereby guaranteed, may, by note or otherwise, be changed in form, extended, or renewed, at the option of said vendor, without notice to the undersigned, and liability of the undersigned shall not be affected by such change, extension, or renewal; that this guaranty shall be in full force and effect up tó such date as the said vendor shall have received at its office in Memphis, Tenn., written notice from the undersigned to cease selling to the said purchaser on the strength of this guaranty,” etc.,— precludes notice under the statute. There is no question of the fact that Bishop is absolutely bound under this contract to pay the debt, or such as might thereafter be made up to the termination of the contract, by the giving of the notice, subject to the limitation of three thousand five hundred dollars until the notice to proceed to suit was given, if notice was in fact given.

In our view, the contract is one of suretyship, in that the said Bishop undertakes and binds himself to pay the debt absolutely and unconditionally, instead of guaranteeing the solvency or ability of Turner to pay. The provisions upon which the appellee relies to prevent a statute from coming into operation does not, in our opinion, have such effect. The provision is that a creditor may renew, extend, or change the form of the debt without notice to the surety or guarantor. If he had in fact continued to ex*528tend and renew the debt, and thereby prevent it from becoming due and payable, the statute would n.ot come into play, because it can only come into play when the debt is past due and unpaid. It being a past-due and unpaid debt at the time of the writing of the letter, this provision of the contract, giving the right of extension or renewal, is not effective to prevent the statute from coming into play. The creditor could have prevented the debt from becoming past due by renewal or extension at the time, but he did not do that. The debt was due, and the debt was unpaid, and therefore, at the time the letter was written, Bishop had the privilege under the statute of directing the creditor to proceed to suit. Did the letter above set out comply with the statute in making a demand for suit? It is insisted by the appellee that it is not sufficient; that it did not in terms direct the suit to be brought, but merely directed the company to proceed to a collection of the debt. ' 1

In our opinion this letter is a direction to proceed by process of law, and complies with the statute. It is difficult to see how any other construction can be placed upon it, tailing all of its provisions together. It is true that the letter says, “You are expected to proceed to the collection óf your account; but it continues, “This party is at this time solvent, and the money can be made by process of law against, him, if prompt action is taken,” .which clearly shows that the writer intended for the creditor to proceed to judgment and execution. It further proceeds:

“But, if delay is made, he may become insolvent by sale of his goods, and I as indorser thereby damaged. Therefore you are notified to proceed on the collection of the account forthwith.”

We think this letter is sufficient compliance with the statute to direct the creditor to proceed to judgment. This court, in the case of McConnon & Co. v. Richardson, 117 Miss. 345, 78 So. 292, held that the contract there involved, *529which is a great deal like this one in substance, was a contract of suretyship.

The general test of whether a person is a surety or a guarantor is determined by the test as to whether the person undertaking to pay binds himself to do so at all events, or absolutely, or whether he merely undertakes to bind himself for the payment, provided it cannot be made out of the principal. In 28 Corpus Juris, p. 890, it is said:

“In a broad sense, a contract of guaranty corresponds with that of suretyship, the distinction between them being merely technical, and a transaction which is called in some cases an absolute guaranty is denominated by other courts a contract of suretyship. A guaranty is like a suretyship, in the sense that it is an engagement to an-siver for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another, and for this reason the terms ‘surety’ and ‘guarantor’ or ‘guaranty,’ are often confounded and used interchangeably. The two subjects, hoAvever, have some important distinguishing features, which are not easy to define by any brief and comprehensive formula.

“While each is, as to the principal, collaterally liable, as to the creditor or obligee the surety is primarily and directly liable on his contract from the beginning; whereas, the liability of the guarantor is secondary, and is fixed only by the happening of the prescribed condition at a time after the contract itself is made. A surety is bound with the principal on the identical contract under Avhich the liability of the principal accrues; a guarantor becomes bound for the performance of a prior or collateral contract upon which the principal alone is obligated. The contract of the surety is made at the same time, and usually jointly, Avith that of his principal; while that of the guarantor is a contract separate and distinct from that of his principal. It may be made at the same time and upon the same consideration, but it usually is made later and upon a separate consideration. The contract of the surety is a direct original agreement with the obligee that the very *530thing contracted for shall be done; whereas, a guarantor enters into a cumulative collateral engagement, by which he agrees that his principal is able to and will perform a contract which he has made or is about to make, and that if he defaults the guarantor will, upon being notified thereof, paying the resulting damages. A surety is an insurer of the debt or obligation, while a guarantor is an insurer of the ability or solvency of the principal. A strict guarantor is entitled .to notice of his principal’s default, while a surety is held to know every default of his principal and is liable without such notice.”

The contract we have before us is skillfully drawn for the purpose of securing every advantage to the creditor, but when it is critically analyzed it is an unconditional contract, so far as the obligation to pay the debt is concerned. There is nothing in the case of McConnon v. Prine, 128 Miss. 192, 90 So. 730, inconsistent with these views.

In our opinion the appellant had the right under the statute to give the notice to institute proceedings, and the letter set out is sufficient for that purpose, and the failure of the creditor to proceed discharges the appellant from the obligation. The provision in the contract as to giving notice to quit selling is not applicable in the suit before us, because' the sales had been discontinued and demand was being made upon the appellant for the payment, or at least had been so made, and it was brought to the appellee’s notice that Turner was solvent, and that delay is pressing the matter to a judgment might result injuriously to the appellant. In fact, the delay and failure did result injuriously to him. In this view of the case it is unnecessary to consider the other questions.

Appellant, at the conclusion of the evidence, moved the court, to direct a verdict for the defendant, upon the ground, among others, that after the giving of the notice to proceed by law to the collection of the debt there had been several terms of the circuit court held having jurisdiction of the matter, and that no suit had been filed against W. *531D. Turner by virtue of section 3731, Code of 1906 (Hemingway’s- Code, section 2907), and that appellant had become discharged. This motion should have been sustained, and the judgment will be reversed, and judgment entered here for the appellant.

Reversed and rendered.

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