2 Barb. 51 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
If it could now be considered as an open question I should feel inclined to hold, with Mr. Justice Bronson in his dissenting opinion in the case of Manrow v. Durham, (3 Hill, 584,) that the guaranty in this case was void by the statute of frauds, for the want of a consideration expressed. Before the decision of that case it had been held that where the guaranty was endorsed at the time the note was made, and constituted a part of the same transaction, both instruments should be taken together, and the same consideration which would uphold the one, would also support the other. But it had not, I think, been previously decided, that a guaranty endorsed upon a note after the making of the note, as a distinct and independent agreement, could be supported without a new consideration expressed in the instrument itself. In the case referred to, however, it was expressly held that, so far as it respects the form of the guaranty, it is immaterial whether it was endorsed at the time of making the note, and as a part of the same transaction, or whether it was made at a subsequent time and as a distinct agreement, independent of, and collateral to, the original undertaking. The only difference, it is said, is that when "the guaranty and the note are contemporaneous, the note may be resorted to for the purpose of sustaining the
Although the grounds upon which the majority of the court rest their decision, in the case already referred to, do not seem entirely satisfactory to my mind, yet so long as that case is to be regarded as authority, it must be taken as the settled law of this state, that where a guaranty of payment is endorsed upon a promissory note as a distinct and independent agreement, having no connexion with the making of the note, the validity of the guaranty may be sustained by proof of the actual consideration upon which it was made. I am unable in any respect to distinguish the case before the court from that of Manrow v. Durham. Indeed the plaintiff seems to have shaped his proof in view of the decision of the court in that case. The objection, therefore, that the guaranty was void by the statute of frauds, for the want of a consideration expressed upon the face of it, cannot be sustained.
Nor was the defendant entitled to a nonsuit on the ground that demand of payment, and notice, had not been proved. The legal effect which the decisions of our courts have given to a guaranty like that under consideration, is that it is an absolute promise to pay the note, if the maker fails to do so, when it becomes due. (Prosser v. Luqueer, 4 Hill, 420.) In the case referred to, although it was held that Prosser, who had signed a guaranty endorsed upon a promissory note, was liable to be sued with the makers, as an endorser, under the statute authorizing a joint suit against the several parties to a note or bill of exchange, yet Chancellor Walworth, in delivering the opinion of the court for the correction of errors in that case,uses the following language : “ I also think that Prosser, the guarantor, could have been sued upon this guaranty by the bearer of the note as upon an absolute promise to pay the amount to the bearer when it became due ; constituting the guarantor, in effect, the maker of a promissory note payable to bearer, for the sum, and at the time, specified in the note upon which this guaranty was written.” If this be so, it follows that the defendant cannot avail himself of the want of demand and notice,
One other question, presented by the bill of exceptions, re-mains to be considered. The defendant, on the trial, offered to show that for several .years after the note in question became due, the maker1 of the nóte remained solvent, and that when the suit was commencd he was insolvent. Whether or not the circuit j udge was right in excluding this evidence must depend upon the construction to be given to the instrument upon which the suit is brought. If the instrument is to be regarded as a guaranty, then it seems to be settled, both upon principle and authority, that the liability of the defendant is only conditional. The legal effect of his contract is that he will pay the amount of the note, upon its dishonor, if within a reasonable time payment is demanded of the maker and notice given him of its dishonor: and the question of reasonable time is ordinarily determined by the fact whether, by the omission to present the note to the maker for payment and to give notice of his failure to pay, the guarantor has sustained any loss or injury. If he has, he is exonerated: if he has not, he remains liable, whatever the delay. On the other hand, if the instrument signed by the defendant is to be regarded as ¿mountings in substance and legal effect, to a promissory note, then the undertaking is original and absolute. In the one case, the evidence offered by the defendant would have been relevant and proper; for if the defendant was a guarantor of the note, the neglect of the plaintiff to demand payment of the maker, and t'o give notice of the non-payment to the defendant until the maker, who was solvent when the note became due and for several years afterwards, became insolvent, would have discharged the liability of ike defendant. In the other case, the obligation being absolute, to pay the note when it became due, no neglect of the plaintiff to demand payment of the maker, or to give notice of non-payment—in other words, no delay of the plaintiff to collect the note of the maker, whatever injury may have
What, then, is the construction to be given to the defendant’s contract 1 The terms used by him in expressing that contract are, “ I guarantee the payment of the within note.” The fair import of this language would seem to be that he intended to limit his liability to that of a guarantor only. In the absence of adjudged cases bearing upon the question, I should not feel at liberty to put an interpretation upon these words, which should have the effect to make the defendant absolutely liable as a maker. The very term “ guaranty” seems to imply a conditional liability, and that the guarantor intended merely to warrant the solvency of the maker. But such an interpretation has been given to the term by a series of decisions in this state, which, whatever I may think of the soundness of the reasons upon which they are founded, I do not feel at liberty to disregard. In Prosser v. Luqueer, already referred to, it was held that a defendant who had signed an instrument upon the back of the note in the following words: “ For value received I guarantee the payment of the within note,” was bound as a joint and several maker, in the same manner as if he had signed the note as a surety. In Hough v. Gray, (19 Wend. 202,) the court held that a party who endorsed on a promissory note a guaranty in these words: “ This may certify that I guarantee the payment of (he within note,” made himself a joint and several promissor with the admitted maker. (See also Miller v. Gaston, 2 Hill, 188; Ketchell v. Burns, 24 Wend. 456; Allen v. Rightmere, 20 John. 365; Leggett v. Raymond, 6 Hill, 639.) It seems to me, as it did to Mr. Justice Bronsqn in the case last cited, that the contract, in all these cases, was nothing but a guaranty, and that to give any other-effect to tl>e term guaranty,” is, in fact, doing violence to the expressed intention of the parties, and making for them a contract different in effect from that which the terms they have employed to express their contract fairly import. But, as was said by Justice Cowen in Herrick v. Borst, (4 Hill, 656,) “ I do
Motion denied.