51 Ga. App. 264 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
Brilliant Coal Company brought an action against “J. A. Gandy, as principal, and J. 1. Gandy, as surety,”
It appears from an exhibit to the petition that said three cars of coal were shipped to J. A. Gandy on November 5, 1932, December 8, 1932, and February 8, 1933, respectively. At the bottom of the exhibit' these words appear: “Account guaranteed by J. I. Gandy, Cairo, Ga.” The other exhibit is as follows:
“Cairo, Ga., August 22, 1932.
“Brilliant Coal Company, Birmingham, Ala.
“Dear Sirs: The undersigned, J. I. Gandy, of Cairo, Ga., guarantees pajment for anjq or all, coal purchased by' his son, J. A. Gandy, from the Brilliant Coal Company, of Birmingham, Ala. J. I. Gandy.”
The exception here is to the judgment sustaining the defendants’ demurrer and dismissing the petition; and, as correctly stated by counsel for plaintiff in error, “the material question raised by said demurrers is whether or not the action against the defendant J. I. Gandy, as surety, is one of guaranty or suretyship.” -
In differentiating contracts of suretyship from contracts of guaranty, Justice Cobb, speaking for the court in the case of Manry v. Waxelbaum, 108 Ga. 14, 17 (33 S. E. 701), said: “One difference is pointed out by our code. It says-that a contract of suretyship ‘ differs from a guaranty in this, that the consideration of the latter is a benefit flowing to the guarantor.’ -Civil -Code [of 1895], § 2966. . . In brief, we understand the difference to be this: A surety binds himself to perform if the principal does not, without regard to his ability to do so. His contract is equally absolute with that of his principal. They may be sued in the same
A valuable test for determining whether a contract is one of guaranty or suretyship is the meaning of the words employed therein. In the case of Geiser Mfg. Co. v. Jones, 90 Ga. 307 (17 S. E. 81), the following agreement indorsed on certain notes was held to constitute a contract of guaranty: “For a consideration not herein named, we guarantee the payment of this claim to the Geiser Manufacturing Co.” In reaching a conclusion about the matter, Chief Justice Bleckley, speaking for the court, said: “In the present case, strangers to the paper entered into an express engagement with the payee at the time the notes were executed . . to guarantee payment. Why should it not be held that the parties, one and all, contemplated the class of contract which the words they employed, naturally and fairly construed, import, to wit a contract of guaranty ?” In construing the contract in Elheridge v. Rawleigh, supra, as one of guaranty, the court emphasized the fact that it “was repeatedly referred to as one of guaranty.”
We think it clearly appears from cases cited that, in cases like the one at bar, the existence' or non-existence of an exjmessed consideration in the contract is not a determining factor. In the instant case the contract under consideration antedates the account sued on by several months. 'The statement of account in the instant case, which must have been made by the plaintiff or its counsel, concludes with these words: “Account guaranteed by J. I. Gandy.” In the letter signed by J. I. Gandy, he “guarantees” payment. Is it not significant that the only two writings appearing in the pleadings—the one prepared by the plaintiff, and the
Judgment affirmed.