114 N.E. 349 | NY | 1916
The defendants' intestate, at his special instance and request, in 1906 procured from the plaintiff a loan to the Mine Hill Quarry Company of which he was a stockholder, upon its promissory notes in various amounts aggregating $10,000, and also at his special instance and request, a loan to one Eckerson upon the promissory notes of said Eckerson, indorsed by said company, in various amounts aggregating $10,000, and he gave to the plaintiff a contract in writing reciting said loans, the material part of which contract is as follows: "Now, therefore, I hereby covenant and agree with said bank to guarantee, and I do hereby guarantee the full, prompt, and ultimate payment of all of said notes, aggregating twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) and of any and all renewals thereof or of either of them when the same shall become due and payable, until all of said loans and notes and any and all renewals thereof are fully paid and discharged."
The notes were renewed from time to time until August 9, 1913, when the defendants' intestate, the guarantor, died. At that time there remained unpaid of said loans one note of the Mine Hill Quarry Company of $10,000, and one of said Eckerson indorsed by said company of $6,500. Both were payable at the plaintiff's bank and were there duly presented for payment when they respectively became due, but there was no money at the bank to pay them or either of them. This action was then commenced. The only question involved herein is whether under the agreement the plaintiff was required to make diligent effort to collect the notes of said Eckerson and said company before insisting upon payment thereof from the defendants.
If the agreement was an unconditional guaranty of *315
payment then the plaintiff's right of action on the guaranty was complete when the makers of the notes failed to pay according to the terms thereof. (Brown v. Curtis,
The meaning of the guaranty depends upon the intention of the parties. (Hamilton v. Van Rensselaer,
The intention of the parties to the agreement under consideration to make an absolute and unconditional guaranty would be entirely clear were it not for the use of the word "ultimate." While every word of an agreement should be presumed to have been used with some purpose, the meaning of each word must be determined and its effect considered in connection with the other words of the agreement. The words "full, prompt * * * payment" have a very important part in the phrase "full, prompt and ultimate payment." In construing the phrase it is important to remember that the guaranty was not alone for the specific notes mentioned in the agreement, but for "any and all renewals thereof or either of them when the same shall become due and payable until all of said loans and notes and any and all renewals thereof are fully paid and discharged." The use of the words "full and prompt * * * payment" would be inapt if all that the parties intended was a guarantee of collection.
Upon examination of all the words in the agreement it would seem to have been the intention of the parties in the use of the word "ultimate" to make sure of including the notes finally given in renewal and that the word "ultimate" was not used to limit the guaranty to loans unpaid after diligent effort to collect them had been made.
We are of the opinion that the word "ultimate" was used to cover notes ultimately given in whole or in part in renewal of the notes given at the time of the guaranty and thus to clearly continue the obligation of guaranty so long as the loans were extended. Although the guaranty *316 was made in New York state, it relates to loans by a Connecticut bank to a corporation and an individual each doing business in the state of Connecticut and upon notes made and payable in that state.
The case of National Exchange Bank v. Gay (
The court in that case held that "To guarantee `full and prompt' payment would meet the case of a note, on usual bank time, actually to be paid in full at maturity. To guarantee in addition to `full and prompt' payment, the `ultimate' payment can have no other meaning than that the obligor should continue beyond to the end of all substitutions, renewals and extensions."
In the case of Hernandez v. Stilwell (7 Daly, 360) there was a guaranty of "the ultimate payment of the sum named herein together with interest and all lawful charges or so much thereof as shall be due and owing," and in Walker v. Forbes
(
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, HOGAN, CARDOZO and POUND, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.