86 N.Y. 484 | NY | 1881
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *486 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *489 The plaintiff was defeated at the circuit, and its complaint dismissed. No reasons therefor were stated at the trial, and we must see whether the defendant presents good reason therefor in his points in this court.
The point that the guaranty was void under the statute of frauds, as not expressing a consideration, is not good. (Church
v. Brown,
The point is good, that the liability created by the guaranty was that of a business firm and was joint, and that notice of the dissolution of the copartnership, on or about the 5th August, 1872, determined the right of the bank to loan to Woodruff more money on the faith of that liability, or to make further renewal of existing obligations. The copartnership being dissolved, there could no more be created a joint liability against the persons who were the former partners; nor, ordinarily, could a several liability arise where a joint one was attempted and failed. But this point alone, or with the one above held good, is not enough to sustain the dismissal of the complaint.
As we view the case, we need not pass upon the full scope of the point that the City National Bank cannot hold the defendant upon the obligation to the City Bank. The point, in *491
its extent, rests upon the proposition, that the plaintiff is a different corporation from the State City Bank; that they are distinct parties, and that the obligation of a surety to one party may not be availed of by another party. That the proposition applies to the change made by the City Bank from State to Federal jurisdiction is not so easy of concession or refutation as it may seem at first sight. This much, however, is certain, that whatever sum the State City Bank had a right to have of the defendant at the time when it took on an organization under the Federal law, the right to have that sum of him passed to the National City Bank. That new organization was made in 1865. The testimony shows that there remained unpaid as late as 3d July, 1876, a considerable part of the first indebtedness of Woodruff. So much of that indebtedness had never been extinguished. New notes had been given in renewal. These were but continuations of the original credit. They did not pay the original debt. (Jagger Iron Co. v. Walker,
The bar of the statute of limitations is set up in the answer. It is doubtful, in view of the points made in this court, whether it was meant by it to present the question whether the statute did not begin to run from the date of the guaranty, or at least from the date of the first loan to Woodruff based upon it, or from the time of the reorganization of the City Bank, or from the time of notice to the City Bank or to the plaintiff of the dissolution of the firm of Phelps Kingman. Conceding, for this time, that the statute was a bar to an action against Kingman, it is not plain that it is to this one against Phelps. The lapse of the time fixed by the statute raises a presumption which may be met by proof of the continuance or renewal of the obligation. An acknowledgment of continuance or new promise, in writing, by the debtor, furnishes that proof. (Old Code, § 110; new Code, § 395.) Though one copartner or joint debtor may not always bind his co-contractor in that way, yet he will, though the co-contractor is not held thereby, be held himself. (Van Keuren v.Parmelee,
The point is not good that there was no notice to the defendant of the acceptance of the guaranty. The jury could have *493
well inferred, from the letters and negotiations of the parties, that the guarantors had early notice of the acceptance of it. The letters show conclusively that Phelps did have notice thereof, though at a late period, and that he then treated it as binding. Kingman went to the banking-house and looked at it But more than that, this is a kind of guaranty, the acceptance of which need not be notified to the maker. It is an absolute guaranty. (SeeWhitney v. Groot, 24 Wend. 82; Smith v. Dann, 6 Hill, 543; Clark v. Burdett, 2 Hall, 217; Douglass v. Howland,
24 Wend. 35; Union Bank v. Coster's Ex'rs,
The case then is this: The defendant and his copartner in business gave to the City Bank a valid and binding continuing guaranty for the payment of moneys loaned to Woodruff; upon the strength of that guaranty the City Bank made loans to Woodruff, which, upon the strength of the guaranty, were renewed from time to time, in whole or in part, and have not yet been fully paid; at the time when the City Bank gave up its organization under the State law, there was an amount unpaid of those loans, which it had a right then to collect of Woodruff or of the defendant, so far as any point yet presented to us avails to the contrary; that right passed as an asset of the City Bank to the plaintiff, and when possessed of by it was enforceable by it against Woodruff or the defendant; that right has been kept alive by repeated renewals and extensions of the time of payment, which were made with the assent, if not at the request, of the defendant; though it be conceded that the copartner of the defendant has been released by operation of law, and though the liability of the defendant was at first joint, his individual action toward the plaintiff has continued that liability, or created a new one against him alone, on the same principle on which one of several copartners or joint debtors may keep alive or renew a joint liability, so far as to affect himself, though those at first bound with him have been relieved by the running of the statute of limitations. We see no reason why the plaintiff should not recover of the defendant *494 so much of the indebtedness of Woodruff to the City Bank as was incurred before that bank reorganized into The City National Bank, and as remained unpaid at that time.
It follows that it was error to dismiss the complaint, and the judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered etc.
All concur.
Judgment reversed