5 Barb. 501 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1849
1. The objection that the defendants’ undertaking was within the statute of frauds is disposed of by the case of Johnson v. Gilbert, (4 Hill, 178.) The same case, by necessary implication, shows that the objection to the parol testimony, disclosing the character of the transaction, between the defendants and the plaintiff, is also untenable. A written promise, not in conflict with any law, may be upheld when there is a good consideration for it, although it does not appear in the writing itself. It may, in such cases, and this is one, be supported by parol evidence of a consideration, when such proof is consistent with the written instrument.
2. The legal effect of the defendants’ obligation is the same as if it had been written in the following form : “ We guaranty the collection of the within note by due course of law. (Cumpston v. McNair, 1 Wend. 457. Curtiss v. Smallman, 14 Id. 231.)
The obligation assumed by the plaintiff upon accepting this note and guaranty was, that in case the note was not paid at its maturity, he would, within a reasonable time, and with due diligence, institute against Troule legal proceedings for the collection of the note, and prosedute them, without delay, to consummation. This was a condition precedent to the liability of the defendants upon their guaranty, and imposed upon the plaintiff the duty of diligence not only in the manner of the prosecution, but also in its institution.
It was said on the argument, that diligence is a mixed ques
In Moakley v. Riggs, (19 John. 69,) the court held that the omission for seventeen months to prosecute the maker of a note, discharged the guarantors. The same question came up again in Kies v. Tifft, (1 Cowen, 98,) and was again decided the same way; the delay, however, in the latter case, being for a much shorter period.
It is said by the plaintiff’s counsel, that these cases are in conflict with the later one of Thomas v. Wood, (4 Cowen, 183.) The defendant in that case guaranteed the collection of a bond and mortgage given February 8, 1809, to secure the payment of $1200 with interest. The interest was to be paid
But it was not intimated even there, that an indefinite delay could be excused by any circumstances. The doctrine of the former cases is not questioned, but fully recognized. It is simply and truly said that they were not applicable to the case
In Backus v. Shipherd, the note was transferred and guaranteed after it matured. Four months after the transfer judgment was obtained against the maker. Some facts being controverted in that case, they, with the question of due diligence, were submitted to the jury, and their finding in favor of the plaintiff was sustained by the court. That the rule by which the question of due diligence is to be tried should be qualified and relaxed, in some degree, where the guaranty is made after the demand is due, need hardly be mentioned. But if this were otherwise, the case of Backus v. Shipherd would not sustain the decision of the referee in this case.
The question is not whether the defendants have been injured by the delay, but whether the plaintiff has performed his contract—the condition precedent to his right to call on them. A compliance on his part with the terms of the guaranty is indispensable. Parties may agree upon such terms as they please, as a condition of liability, and the courts cannot substitute other stipulations for them. None of the cases profess to do this; but where there has been delay the courts have, in
None of those circumstances which have been supposed to make a short postponement of the prosecution of the principal consistent with reasonable diligence, are found in the present case. Troule was twice at the plaintiff’s store in Buffalo after the note fell due; and the fact of his non-residence, so far from excusing the plaintiff from proceeding against him there, required him promptly to embrace these opportunities for complying with the conditions of the guaranty, and of protecting the interests of the defendant, which had been confided to him, and the duty of maintaining which he had assumed.
But if the omission to proceed against Troule there can be made consistent with the plaintiff’s obligation, how can he get over the subsequent delay of sixteen months? It is said he did not know that Troule had been in Buffalo. But we find him making no exertions to inform himself how this was. And even if such exertions had been made, a failure on his part to learn the facts as they really existed, would be a very ques^ tionable excuse for his negligence. His duty was a very plain one; that is, to place process for Troule in the hands of the sheriff, which would have protected him in any event, and probably in the present case have secured a much earlier judgment. There is, if possible, still less force in the suggestion that the plaintiff was not bound to proceed against the maker of the note because he had no property within reach of the process of the court. This is striking at the very contract itself, and asking us to make new stipulations between the parties. The only reason why a guarantor is ever liable on a contract like this, is that the principal debtor has not property within the reach of the process of the court to satisfy his obligation; and the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel, carried out, would dis pense with prosecution in every such instance, and substitute for it evidence of the maker’s insolvency. Here neither the residence, pecuniary ability, situation of their property, nor any other circumstances of the parties to this paper have changed
It was contended, on the argument, that if the defendants had not been prejudiced by the delay, it constituted no defence, and that the burden of showing that they were prejudiced lay on them. The point is partially involved and has been sufficiently examined in the consideration of those which have preceded it. It only remains briefly to advert to the authorities cited to sustain it. They are all, (with a single exception which is noticed below,) decisions upon the ordinary contract of suretiship, and are not applicable to contracts of guaranty. The distinction between them has been already sufficiently indicated in stating the character of the obligation under consideration. •
In Backus v. Shipherd, (11 Wend. 635,) Mr. Justice Nelson says, “ a proceeding to judgment and execution is at least prima facie a compliance with the contract. If beyond this there was negligence, and more than was done might reasonably have been done to collect th.e debt, and a loss ensues, it lies on the defendant to show the loss, and that it was occasioned by such negligence or omission.” These remarks, a reference to the case will show, as indeed the extract itself shows, were not intended to apply to a question of diligence in commencing a suit. That question had already been examined by the learned justice, and disposed of. What he here said referred to the exertions and diligence which the plaintiff was bound to use to secure the debt, after he had duly perfected a judgment. In that case the judgment against the principal debtor was re
Thus far the examination has proceeded upon the assumption that the plaintiff could comply with the conditions of the guaranty by prosecuting Troule ip this state. We think, however, ho was bound to proceed against him in Canada. White v. Case, (13 Wend. 543,) is cited as an authority the other way. In that case, when the note was made and when the contract of guaranty was entered into, the parties to both contracts resided in this state, and the maker left it about the time the note matured. It was held, under the circumstances of that case, that the plaintiff was not bound to follow the principal debtor to another state and sue him there. It is said there that the guaranty implied not only an obligation that the maker was able to pay, but .that he would be in a situation to be sued in the state where the contract was made. The plaintiff’s counsel understands the court as referring, ip these remarks, to the place where the contract of guaranty was made. We do not think this is what was intended; but that reference is had|to the contract of the party who is to be sued—the maker of the note. When he resides in one state and the guarantee in another, it would be a strange construction of a simple contract of guaranty to hold it to imply that the maker of the note should change his .place of residence and remove to that of the guarantee. That this was not meant, is shown by other remarks of the learned judge in the case referred to. “ The term collection,” he says, “ is alone equivocal, and should receive an interpretation in reference to the subject matter of the contract, and the situation or condition of the maker.” Such we deem a reasonable and correct rule of interpretation, to be .applied to the contract in this case. This note was dated in
Although we have found no reported, case presenting this precise question, still there are authorities which we think jjus- . tify the distinction we have made between this case and that of White v. Case. It has been held that in order to fix an. endorser of a promissory note not payable at a particular place, it was not necessary to demand it of the maker who, after it toas made and before it matured, removed from the state; but that a demand at his last place of residence in this state was
The motion to set aside the report of the referee must be granted; the costs to abide the event of the suit.