103 N.Y.S. 233 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1907
This action was tried at the Seneca Trial Term before the court without a jury, and has since been submitted upon briefs of counsel.
The plaintiff seeks by this action to hold defendant liable as the only solvent surety upon a bond given by the Waterloo Organ Company to the plaintiff on the 31st day of January, 1901, for the amount of fifteen mortgage bonds of the Waterloo Organ Company of the denomination of $500 each, being part of an issue of eighty bonds made December 1, 1894, the fifteen bonds in question having been acquired by the plaintiff in the month of July, 1901.
The principal defense is that, in the month of January, 1902, a new indemnity bond was made by the Waterloo Organ Company to the plaintiff, on which the defendant was also a surety, in the same form and to the same effect as the bond in suit, which, by its terms, was made to secure all
It appears that the Waterloo Organ Company became insolvent and was adjudged a bankrupt about July, 1902, and at that time the plaintiff held its notes and obligations under discount to the amount of about $60,000, in addition to the mortgage bonds involved in this case. Subsequently, and in July, 1904, but before the mortgage bonds involved in the, present case became due, the plaintiff brought an action against this defendant upon the last indemnity bond, given by the organ company in January, 1902, and alleged as a ground of recovery a large number of promissory notes made or indorsed by the organ company and discounted by the plaintiff for its account between January and July, 1902. The action came to trial in March, 1905, and the plaintiff, as a basis for recovery, proved the making of the indemnity bond in January, 1902, and the discount by it thereafter of a large number of promissory notes for the organ company, a schedule of which was annexed to the complaint, amounting in all for principal to $14,991.71, and for accrued interest to $2,174.25, making in all $17,165.96; and for this amount the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. No judgment was entered upon this verdict because of the defendant’s request that none should be entered, and, within a few days, the defendant paid the plaintiff the amount of the verdict with costs of the suit, and the plaintiff delivered to the defendant the promissory notes which had been proved at the trial as a basis for recovery.
This recovery and payment defendant now pleads as a bar to a recovery here.
It will be seen that the question presented is: Was the indemnity bond of January, 1902, a substitute for the bond of the previous year, or did the latter remain in force ? This depends, I think, upon the intent of the parties. There is nothing in the form of the bond of 1902 which necessarily indicates an intention that it should supersede or be a sub
From the circumstance that these bonds were made practically once a year over a period of seven years and that each bond was made in form to cover all existing liability of the organ company to the bank, as well as indebtedness to accrue for the year to come, and that each contained the same limit of liability to $15,000 and interest, the defendant contends that each bond was a renewal of its predecessor; that a novation took place and each bond became a substitute for the preceding one which remained no longer in force. The course of business in respect to the giving of these annual bonds over so many years is quite strongly suggestive of a probability that they were intended to be renewals rather than
This question arose in respect to a bond and contract executed by the First Hational Bank of Buffalo upon its designation by the Canal Board to receive the deposit of canal tolls in the years 1880 and 1881. This designation was made annually and a new contract and bond made for each of these years. The bond given in 1880, which ran to the People of the State, was conditioned that the bank should do and per
The State having collected from Barnes, the surety on the bond of 1881, he brought an action for contribution against Cushing as surety on the bond of 1880 in respect to the amount on deposit in the bank at the close of the year 1880. In this ease the question was directly presented as to whether the bond of 1881 superseded the bond of 1880, and the learned Appellate Division in the First Department held that it did. Barnes v. Cushing, 43 App. Div. 158.
The case came before the Court of Appeals (Barnes v. Cushing, 168 N. Y. 542) and the question was there discussed at length by able counsel as to whether from the form of the bond and the nature of the transaction an intent was not shown that the new bond of 1881 should supersede and take the place of the previous bond of 1880, upon which Cushing was surety, and that learned court held, in an opinion by Bartlett, J., that such an intent would not be inferred or presumed in the absence of other evidence to support it.
I deem this decision controlling in the present case. The ■ appointment of the First National Bank of Buffalo to receive the canal deposits was- an annual appointment for "a fixed term, requiring a new contract and bond each year. There was much reason for-a surety upon one of these bonds to assume that his liability would end wi-th the year upon a new appointment and a new bond being given The new bond covered in express terms the very liability for which Cushing was subsequently held, namely, for the moneys on deposit in bank at the close of the year 1880. If, under these circumstances, no intent can be found from the transaction itself that the new bond should supersede the old one, much less can such an intent be found in the present case as a fact from the form of the bonds and the nature of the transaction alone.
' Defendant also contends that a demand upon him is necessary before an action can be maintained upon this guaranty bond. This question was raised in the first instance by demurrer to the complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in that it failed to allege any such demand. This demurrer came to argument at Special Term and was overruled, whereupon the defendant answered. It is urged that the decision overruling the demurrer should be reconsidered here, for the reason that the learned judge misapprehended the precise grounds of the defendant’s demurrer', as shown by his written opinion, in which he discusses only the question of the necessity of a demand upon the organ company, while it was the want of a demand upon the defendant himself which is complained of. It does not follow that the defendant’s point was not considered at the Special Term because nothing is said about it in the opinion. It was necessarily involved and so decided; but, whether controlling here or not, I think the point is not well taken. The bond contains an •absolute guaranty of “ prompt payment at maturity of each and all notes * * * and other obligations in writing of every name and kind made * * * by said Waterloo Organ Company.” If a guaranty of payment had been indorsed upon the mortgage bonds in suit and signed by the
It follows that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment for the amount of the principal of the mortgage bonds, with unpaid interest and costs.
Judgment for plaintiff.