41 Iowa 518 | Iowa | 1875
The plaintiff is a national banking corporation doing business in the city of Dubuque. The defendants were partners in a private exchange and deposit bank at Cedar Rapids. Gibbs & Coates were in the produce and commission business in Dubuque, and H. S. Stibbs (not a member of the defendants’ firm) was engaged in a like business in Cedar Rapids, and was in the habit of making purchases of eggs and butter from Gibbs & Coates and paying therefor upon their sight drafts, but being desirous of obtain
“Exchange and Deposit Bank of Carpenter, Stibbs & Co., Cedar Rapids, Iowa, August 9, 1869.
Messrs. Gibbs & Coates, Dubuque,
Gents: — H. S. Stibbs is good for his contracts, and we guarantee his acceptances in your favor.
Yours truly,
Carpenter, Stibbs & Co.”
Gibbs & Coates delivered this guaranty to the plaintiff, who thereupon regularly cashed drafts drawn upon H. S. Stibbs by Gibbs & Coates in the course of business between them. These drafts were, at the request of H. S. Stibbs, made payable at the banking house of the defendants at Cedar Rapids, where they were regularly sent for collection indorsed by plaintiff. Drafts previously drawn by Gibbs & Coates upon H. S. Stibbs had generally been sent to other banks in the same city for collection.
On the 5th of November, 1869, Gibbs & Coates made a draft on H. S.. Stibbs in favor of Gen. W. Hyde Clark, plain- ' tiff’s cashier, payable at 15 days for $3,024, at defendants’ bank, and on the next day a like draft for $1,516.74. These drafts were cashed by plaintiff, accepted by H. S. Stibbs, indorsed and forwarded to defendants (as other former drafts had been) for collection. Not being paid, they were duly protested.
This action is brought upon the written guaranty to recover
Generally, by the common law, a guaranty is not negotiable or in any manner transferable, so as to enable the assignee to maintain an action thereon. It can be sued on only by the .party with whom the contract is made. See cases cited in note a, 2 Parsons on Contracts, 5th ed., p. 3. But, under our statutes, this and every other kind of contract is assignable. •Code, sections 2082 to 2087,'inclusive. Even in a case where .by the terms of the instrument, its assignment is prohibited, it may be assigned, and the assignee may sue thereon in his own name; but the same defenses may be made against the .assignee as could have been made in an action by. the assignor. Code, section 2086. That all instruments are assignable under our statutes has been held by this court in -numerous cases.. See The State v. Butterworth, 2 Iowa, 158;
In Vermont a guaranty is held to be negotiable. Partridge v. Davis, 20 Vt., 499.
In New York it is held that a guaranty containing in itself all tbe elements of negotiability is then negotiable. Ketchell v. Burns, 24 Wend., 456.
The guaranty being, under our law, assignable, the plaintiff may sue thereon precisely as could the assignor thereof.
III. The court charged the jury, in substance, that although the guaranty is directed to Gibbs & Coates, yet if they should find that the guaranty was demanded by the plaintiff as a condition precedent to advancing money to Gibbs & Coates on their time drafts on IT. S. Stibbs, and that this was known to the defendants at the time they made the guaranty, then upon the delivery thereof to the plaintiff it became a completed contract, and no notice was necessary to be given by the plaintiff to the defendants that it was advancing money on the faith of the guaranty, but if, when the guaranty was made, the defendants did not know, or were not advised that it was required by the plaintiff, but merely gave the guaranty to H. S. Stibbs on his application, without notice that the bank demanded it, then the defendants are not liable on the guaranty, unless the plaintiff gave them reasonable notice that they were advancing money on the faith of the guaranty; and the notice would not be sufficient if given after the maturity of these drafts and after the failure of H. S. Stibbs, the acceptor.
The first objection urged to this instruction is an alleged want of evidence on which to base it. It is claimed in the argument that there is no evidence to show that Carpenter, Stibbs & Co. had any knowledge of any demand of the plaintiff for the guaranty as a condition precedent to making advances to Gibbs & Coates upon the acceptances of H. S. Stibbs, or that they had any notice that the guaranty was intended for the plaintiff, or that they had any notice that plaintiff had the guaranty or was making advances on the
It is next urged that the instruction is erroneous in that it failed to direct the jury that the defendant was entitled to reasonable notice of each draft cashed by plaintiff' on the faith of the guaranty.
IY. The court gave the following instructions:
■ If it was within the scope of a banking business to give such guaranty, no understanding between the parties to limit their liability can affect the plaintiff in this case.
' In considering the question as to whether the giving of a guaranty under the circumstances proved in this case was within the scope of the banking business, you are not to consider alone what was done by the firm, or a private understanding between them as to what should be done; the true inquiry is, was this guaranty within the scope .of the business which they held themselves out to the public as transacting. If you find from the evidence that the guaranty was within the scope of their ■ business, your verdict should be for the plaintiff; unless you find that the defendants are not liable by reason of the other defenses as hereinafter explained. If you find that the act was not within the scope of the business, Carpenter, Weare and Reason B. Stibbs are not liable thereon; unless you find from the evidence that they authorized it or ratified it after it was done; this ratification, however, to be binding should be distinctly made, and made upon a full knowledge of the facts with reference to the execution of the guaranty.”
Appellants’ counsel insist that this instruction was erroneous for several reasons, among which is,-that there was no
• The majority of the court hold this instruction correct, and that there is evidence on which to base it. In these conclusions I am unable to concur, and will proceed to state my views in reference thereto.
It is a well settled rule of law that each partner is the general agent of the partnership of which he is a member, and that as to third persons, the partnership will be bound by the contracts of a single partner which are within thé scope, of the partnership business. See cases cited in notes to § § 102, 126, Story on Agency; Western Stage Co. v. Walker, 2 Iowa, 504, and cases cited; Boardman et al. v. Adams et al., 5 Id., 224.
. There are certain contracts and transactions which are well known and universally acknowledged operations in the ordinary course of the business of certain kinds of partnerships, and the law presumes that each partner has the power to bind the firm in such operations. Id. But this presumption does not extend to cases of guaranty. If one partner gives a guaranty in the name of the firm, it is not to be presumed or treated as of course binding on the partnership. It must be shown to he justified, either by the usages of the particular business or by the known habits of the particular partnership, or by the express or implied aj>probation of all the members of the partnership in the given case. See cases cited in notes to section 127, Story on Agency.
In this case the written guaranty was made by H. B. Stibbs, one of the members of the firm of Carpenter, Stibbs & Co., who were doing a banking business in the city of Cedar Rapids. The law will not presume that he was authorized to bind the partnership by this act, but some proof must be made that it was authorized.
There is absolutely no competent evidence that the making of the guaranty by H. B. Stibbs was' justified or authorized
These opinions establish .no fact from which the jury are warranted in finding that the giving of the guaranty was authorized by the usages of a general banking business or by the habits of the business as carried on by defendants. They throw no light upon the ultimate fact to be established. That the making of the guaranty was within the scope of the partnership business cannot be established by the opinions of experts to the effect that it was. The ultimate fact is to be found from evidence of the usage or custom of the business in this respect .or from the known habits of dealing by the defendants. The law says it will not presume that the giving of such an instrument is within the scope of the business, but if evidence be produced, either that it is usual or customary in that kind of business, or that such has been the known habit of the defendants in dealing with others, then the act will be held to be within the scope of the business and binding on all the partners. There being an entire absence of any such evidence, it was, in my opinion, error to instruct upon the question, and the jury were not authorized to find thereon.
It is my opinion that upon this point the judgment should be reversed, but the majority hold that it must be
Affirmed.