194 Iowa 904 | Iowa | 1922

EvaNS, J.

I. The guaranty sued on was as follows:

“Cedar Rapids, Iowa, March 4, 1914.

“For value received, I hereby guarantee the payment of a note dated at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, March 4, ■ 1914, for $2,500 due 15 days after date, payable to the Central State Bank or order, at its banking house at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, with interest payable quarterly at the rate of sis per cent per annum,, after date until paid, the said note being signed by Mátt J. Miles, at maturity or any time thereafter, with attorneys’ fees if suit be instituted hereon waiving demand, notice of nonpayment and protest. The above note is further secured by a bill of sale signed by Matt J. .Miles to Ed. Zbanek on all brick now located at the plant in the Cedar Rapids Brick Company of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

“M. Ford.”

The defendant admitted of record on the trial that he executed and delivered to the plaintiff the foregoing guaranty. The issue of general denial is, therefore, out of the case. There was no evidence of fraud or deceit' on the part of the plaintiff, and that issue may be ignored. The real complaint of the defendant is directed to the alleged fact that the plaintiff, through neglect, failed to realize upon the security which it held, in the form of a bill of sale purporting to cover 600,000 brick.

Some dispute is presented in the record as 'to whether the bill of sale was given by Miles for the purpose of protecting the *906plaintiff bank, or whether it was given for the purpose of protecting the guarantor. The position of the plaintiff is that it relied solely upon the guaranty of the defendant Ford, and that the execution of the bill of sale by Miles was intended for the protection of the guarantor, Ford; whereas the contention of the defendant Ford is that the bill of sale was made, not for his benefit, but for that of the bank. In our judgment, the attempted distinction is a fruitless one. If the bill of sale had any value, it necessarily operated to the protection of both parties. It extended its protection primarily to the plaintiff and secondarily to the defendant. Coneededly, the bill of sale was given as security only. It was the equivalent of a chattel mortgage. The plaintiff never had actual possession* of the property described therein. The position of the defendant is that the plaintiff should have enforced the security, and applied the proceeds upon the debt. Its complaint is that the plaintiff failed to record the bill of sale, and thereby lost the security, in that the brick therein described were all sold and delivered to other parties, and thereby wholly dissipated. Special emphasis is laid upon the failure of the plaintiff to record the bill of sale. It will be readily seen that the pivotal question in the case is: What was the'legal duty of the plaintiff to the guarantor in relation to such security? Was it bound affirmatively to enforce the same? Did its mere passive omission to enforce the same operate as a release of the guarantor in whole or in part ? There was some evidence that Miles requested the plaintiff not to record the bill of sale, and that the plaintiff acquiesced in such request. Such fact is urged as a ground of release of the guarantor. Miles was the mayor of the city, and was a candidate for re-election, at the time of this transaction. Ford was a paving contractor. It was deemed inadvisable by both of them that their names should appear on the same instrument. This is the plaintiff’s purported explanation of the somewhat unusual form and method of the security.

It is the general rule of law that a note holder owes no affirmative duty of diligence to a guarantor of payment, as distinguished from a guarantor of the collection. On the other hand, the note holder may not affirmatively relinquish securities which have come into his hands or control. It is sometimes a *907difficult question, in a given case, to determine whether the conduct of the note holder should be deemed passive omission or active relinquishment. We inquire first whether the failure to record the mortgage operated to release the guarantor. A kindred question is: Was the guarantor prejudiced by the failure to record? Under the facts of this case, the answer to the second question answers both. The note was executed on March 4th, and became due on March 19th. “ The mortgaged brick was a part of the stock of a going concern. What little evidence there is on the question of sales is to the effect that they were made in the regular course of the retail business, and made to trade customers. In such a case, consent to the usual and ordinary sales at retail is implied until the mortgage is enforced and the going concern is stopped in its trade under the power conferred thereby. Nothing of this kind was done, nor does it appear that anything of this kind was contemplated by any of the parties, — at least, prior to the maturity of the note. Ordinary trade customers, therefore, purchasing at retail in good faith, were not affected by the mortgage. This would be true whether the mortgage were recorded or unrecorded. The mortgage is upon the corpus of the stock, and attaches to its changed form in the ordinary course of trade. No other rule would permit a going concern to mortgage its stock of goods at all, without ceasing to do business. Inasmuch as there is no evidence herein of any dissipation of the stock prior to the due date of the note, in any manner except -as here indicated, the guarantor suffered no prejudice by the mere failure to record the bill of sale prior to March 19th.

II. The only direct evidence in the record that any sales were made on or before March 19th was that of defendant’s witness Davidson, who entered the employ of the brick company on March 18th, and on that day loaded a car of brick comprising 24,000.-This ear was shipped on the following day to a customer. This witness testified also that at that time there were left in the yards from 400,000 to 500,000 brick. The defendant’s testimony also shows the value to be $7.00 a thousand. It appears, therefore, indisputably, from defendant’s own testimony, that there were in the yards on the date of the maturity of the note not less than 400,000 bricks. It was the duty of the defendant *908on that date to have paid the note. If he had done so, he would thereby have.become subrogated to. all the rights of the plaintiff in the security, and could have protected himself. In Hendryx v. Evans, 120 Iowa 310, much relied upon by appellant, we said:

“The surety upon the maturity of the debt ought to pay it, and if he neglect to do so, thereby putting himself in a position to protect his own interests, he is quite as much at fault as the creditor in failing to enforce the claim. ’ ’

The substantial dissipation of the brick, therefore, occurred after the maturity of the note, and while the guarantor was neglecting to pay it, and was himself neglecting whatever interest he had in the security. The broad rule of law involved herein is succinctly set forth in City of Maquoketa v. Willey, 35 Iowa 323, 328, as follows:

“Our first inquiry relates to the obligation and rights of the principal and security. The law does not require the principal to institute a suit against the debtor, or to pursue an action of indebtedness with diligence, and to call to his aid all the remedies provided by the law. If he has brought suit, he may stop short in its prosecution before judgment, or if he has recovered judgment, he may fail or refuse to sue out execution, and, indeed, if execution has been issued, he may cause its return without a levy. All this may be done even though judgment, execution, and levy would have resulted in the collection of the debt against the principal debtor; the security is not thereby discharged. The creditor, however, cannot relinquish any hold he has acquired upon the property of the debtor without resorting to the proper proceedings to make therefrom the debt. And this rule is alike applicable if the property has been voluntarily placed in the hands of the creditor, or he has acquired a lien thereon by proceedings at law. , This is unquestionably the rule of the authorities. They will be found collected and discussed in 3 Leading Cases in Equity (Hare & Wallace’s Notes, p. 552, Rus v. Berrington), and 2 Am. Leading Cases 260 (Hare & Wallace’s Notes to Pain v. Packard and King v. Baldwin). See upon this point Chambers v. Cochran & Brock, 18 Iowa 159. This rule is well founded upon the equitable doctrine that he who, by his willful act, causes a loss, ought to endure its conse*909quences, and not transfer its effects to an innocent party. .Tbe creditor, baying in bis bands property to secure tbe debt, voluntarily placed there by tbe principal debtor, would not be permitted to relinquish it or appropriate it to other purposes. By such an act the property would be lost, so far as tbe satisfaction of tbe debt is affected. Tbe case is not different if the property should come to tbe bands of tbe creditor by bis own act, as through tbe institution of legal proceedings. In either case, it is plain that equity and fair dealings toward tbe surety demand that he appropriate tbe property to tbe payment of tbe debt. ’ ’

What stands out clearly from tbe defendant’s own showing in this case is that, at and after tbe maturity of tbe note, and at tbe time and- after tbe defendant bad defaulted in performing his guaranty, he bad tbe ample protection of tbe bill of sale, unaffected by any previous failure of the plaintiff either to record' or to enforce; and that subsequent delay either to record or to enforce is chargeable to himself alone. This is sufficient of itself to sustain tbe or^er of the trial court in directing a verdict for tbe plaintiff.

III. Up to this point, we have disregarded one feature of tbe ease which has been somewhat discussed in tbe briefs. According to tbe contention of plaintiff, the brick mortgaged by Miles in bis bill of sale was tbe property of the Cedar Rapids Brick Company, a copartnership, consisting of himself and Cox. Tbe proceeds of tbe sales were deposited in another bank, and applied to the payment of partnership debts. If tbe truth of this contention and fact be conceded, then tbe bill of'sale was worthless from tbe beginning. Some testimony, however, was introduced by the defendant, tending to show that Miles was the owner of tbe brick. This consisted of tbe testimony of Miles himself, to this effect:

“I was tbe owner of tbe company, of tbe Cedar Rapids Brick Company. It was a trade name, and not incorporated.”

As against this, it appeared that Miles himself bad verified an answer for such company, wherein be alleged that tbe company was a partnership, consisting of himself and Cox. It appears without disputé also-that, prior to March 4, 1912, Miles and Cox and Shaw, their superintendent, had organized a cor*910poration, with themselves as the only stockholders, for the purpose of taking over the property of the Cedar Rapids Brick Company. They did take it over, on or about April 25, 1914, by a conveying instrument executed by Miles and Cox. It is the contention of the appellant that there was sufficient conflict in the evidence to take this question to the jury. In the light of the other features of the record which Ave have already set forth, the question is quite immaterial. Whichever way the fact were found, it could not change the result.

It is our unavoidable conclusion that the trial court properly directed a verdict for the plaintiff. Its judgment is, ac- ■ covdingly, — Affirmed.

-Stevens, C. J., Preston, Favidle, and De GRAFe, J-T., concur. WeaveR and ARTHUR, JJ., dissent.
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