107 N.Y.S. 515 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
Lead Opinion
Several men, of whom the defendant was one, were interested in the Yetman Transmitting Typewriter.Company which was in need of funds for the prosecution of its business, negotiations were had with the plaintiff for the furnishing of such necessary money. These negotiations resulted in a written agreement signed by the plaintiff, the typewriter company, and the individuals who were termed “ subscribers,” which, after reciting that the typewriter company desired to secure a loan not exceeding $80,000 to be used as working capital, and to hypothecate all of its capital stock, amounting to $500,000, par value, as collateral therefor, and that the plaintiff proposed to make such loan for the period of one year, with the privilege ’of renewal for an additional period of six months, and that the subscribers proposed to underwrite and guarantee the payment of the balance unpaid in proportion to the sums set opposite their names, provides, in substance, that the typewriter company should make, execute and deliver to the plaintiff its negotiable promissory notes, and upon the delivery of the first of such notes all the collateral security should be deposited for such note and all subsequent ones; and beginning with the discount of the first note the typewriter company should deposit with the plaintiff twenty dollars in cash- for every machine sold by it, which deposit should form a sinking fund for the payment of interest on the notes and such part of the principal as it might become sufficient to pay, and that upon failure by the typewriter company to make such deposit the plaintiff might refuse to advance any more moneys and declare all notes then held by it due and payable, and on failure of the company to pay such notes the plaintiff might sell the collateral and apply the proceeds thereto ; and in case the notes were paid a portion of the collateral was to be retained by the plaintiff for its services, and a part delivered to the subscribers and the remainder to Charles E. Yetman. Each subscriber guaranteed to the plantiff the payment of such amount of the unpaid balance of the "notes as his subscription bore to the whole.
The provision that the typewriter company should give its negotiable promissory notes was that they should be as provided in paragraph 3 of the agreement, which reads as follows:
“ III. As required and called for by the Typewriter Company,*650 the Trust Company (plaintiff) agrees to lend the Typewriter Company upon its promissory notes, payable to its own order and endorsed by'it, such sums of money as the said Typewriter Company may require for working capital and other corporate purposes, not exceeding in the aggregate the sum of Eighty Thousand Dollars. ($80,000.) Said notes shall bear interest at the rate of six per cent per annum, payable every three months, or so near thereto as possible, and all the notes shall mature within one year from the date of the first note. The Typewriter Company shall have the privilege to renew such amounts as may remain, unpaid at the end of said year for an additional period of six months.”.
On the second day after the execution of the agreement the typewriter company presented the collateral and the plaintiff loaned to it $10,000. Instead of taking the note of the typewriter company payable to its own order and indorsed by it, the plaintiff took a general collateral note, payable to' itself (Guardian Trust Company), filled in'as to date, time of'payment, amount -and rate of inter-j est, upon the usual printed blank, which printed portion pledged' the collateral for payment of the note and any other indebtedness of the typewriter company, and .provided that in case the collateral should depreciate a payment should forthwith be made, or additional security furnished in default of which the note should forthwith become due. The blank in the printed note left for. the description of the collateral was filled in as follows : “ 5,000 shares Yetman Typewriter Company stock, subject to agreement between Yetman Transmitting Typewriter Co., Guardian Trust Co. and several subscribers dated- Oct. 31,1904.”
Advancements were made from time to time and similar notes taken until the plaintiff had advanced to the typewriter company the full $80,000. The plaintiff also loaned the typewriter company $23,000, in addition for $10,000 of which the same collateral was pledged without reference, however, to the agreement of October 31, 1904. The typewriter company paid only a small portion of the $80,000 and defendant’s proportion of the unpaid balance was $9,828.27,
This action is brought' to recover such latter sum, and the trial before the referee resulted in a dismissal of the complaint upon the 'merits, and from such judgment the plaintiff appeals. Counsel for
In our opinion the contract of October thirty-first is too specific as to the form and character of the note to be taken to permit us. to relieve the plaintiff from its unfortunate oversight in not taking the note which the defendant and his associates guaranteed the payment of.
The agreement appears to have been very carefully drawn and each provision is separately numbered. The first subdivision provides that the typewriter company shall give its negotiable promissory notes and specifically refers to the third subdivision which specifies their form. It was notes of the prescribed character and form which the defendant and his associates guaranteed. Their guaranty was not a general one to pay the indebtedness of the typewriter company incurred with plaintiff in any form to the extent of $80,000. Bor did they guarantee the payment of a note which should contain in the body of it all of the agreement which they entered into, as would be the case if the words “ subject to agreement ” were read into the note and the printed part of the one taken eliminated.
While the contract of a guarantor should be fairly construed according to the reasonable rules for the interpretation of contracts, 'when the subject of the contract is finally ascertained, he has the
There is some difference of opinion in this court as to whether the words “ subject to agreement ” relate to the terms of payment of the note as well as to the collateral pledged.' But assuming that they relate to the terms of payment, then the effect is to read the contract into the note, and when we do that we do not have a note such as the defendant guaranteed the: payment of. Such a note would be subject to construction and possible dispute. The defendant contracted as to one not open to construction, the precise form of which he specified.
It is difficult tq see how the defendant was injured. All of the notes fell due on the same day, and on default all would become past due paper. It is possible that the defendant and his associates if they learned that the typewriter company was not paying in the twenty dollars on the sale of each machine, might have gone to the plaintiff and asked it to declare the notes due for that reason, and paid them, and thus have become entitled to possession of the notes with the collateral. Itiis true that the notes would have then been past due paper, but they would not have so appeared upon their face. Being payable, tó the typewriter company they would not have required the plaintiff’s indorsement or transfer by it, as did the notes given.
Injury, however, is not the test of release of a surety, particularly when the contract of suretyship is specific.
If the notes stand in the form taken by the plaintiff without modification or elimination by the terms of the agreement, of course they do not conform to the contract of guaranty. They require for tranfer the indorsement of the plaintiff, and in express terms subject the collateral -to any indebtedness of the typewriter company beyond the $80,000 stipulated, and give the right to. demand additional security in case of depreciation, and to declare the same due in case it is not furnished.
We are impressed with the equitable character of the plaintiff’s claim,, for the defendant together with his .associates, obtained
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J., and Lambert, J., concurred; McLaughlin and' Laughlih, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I am unable to agree with the other members of the court that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed. I am of the opinion that ■ the written agreement signed by the plaintiff, the typewriter company and the subscribers should be read iuto the notes, and as I understand the opinion of Mr. Justice Houghton, he has reached the same conclusion. If this be done, then the words, “ subject to agreement,” etc. relate not only to the deposit of shares of stock, but to every provision of the notes. The written words in the notes referring to the agreement were entirely unpunctuated, and were in the only available space in' the printed form used, and it would be a forced and ungrammatical construction to hold that reference might be made to the agreement as regards the deposit of shares, but for no other purpose. If it be true, as the referee seemed to think, that the words “ subject to agreement,” etc., were susceptible of different meanings, then he was correct in admitting parol evidence to show the meaning in which the words were used. (Kitching v. Brown, 180 N. Y. 414; Evansville National Bank v. Kaufmann, 93 id. 273; Springsteen v. Samson, 32 id. 703 ; Solomon Tobacco Co. v. Cohen, 95 App. Div. 297.) The evidence thus admitted showed beyond question that the intention of the parties was to make every provision in the notes subject to the agreement, and that these words were inserted for that purpose. If the agreement be thus read into the notes for the purpose stated, then the question presented, by applying well-settled rules, is not difficult of solution. Where a printed form of contract is used, written words therein will prevail over the printed words, if there be provisions which are repugnant, irreconcilable or inconsistent. (Kratzenstein v. Western Assurance Co., 116 N. Y. 54; Clark v. Woodruff, 83 id.
If it be true that the agreement should be read into the notes and that rendered them non-negotiable, then but a single question remains as to whether the fact that the notes were made payable to the trust company instead of the typewriter company and indorsed by it, was such a variance as to discharge the guarantors. It is unquestionably true that the contract of a guarantor is 'strictissimi juris and that a variance is not to be tested by the effect .on the guarantor. It must, however,, be something more than form. It must go to the substance of the contract, either as to the guarantor or the jirincipal. A variance which does not alter the obligation of the principal, or increase the liability of the guarantor, will not discharge the latter. (Western New York Life Ins. Co. v. Clinton, 66 N. Y. 326 ; Kingsbury v. Westfall, 61 id. 356 ; American Copper Co. v. Lowther, 38 App. Div. 134; affd., 165 N. Y. 625 ; Standard Underground Cable Co. v. Stone, 35 App. Div. 62.)
In American Copper Co. v. Lowther (supra) the plaintiff agreed to advance $25,000 in cash to the Fairfield Copper Company, the latter giving a bond, payment of which was guaranteed by the defendants. One Wood had theretofore advanced $3,000 to the. copper company in anticipation of this loan. He was indebted to the plaintiff in an amount in excess of this sum, and with the consent of the copper company the plaintiff credited him with $3,000-on his debt to it as part of the $25,000 advanced. It was held that although the terms of the guaranty agreement and the recitals in the bond provided that the whole amount was to be advanced in cash, the guarantors Were not released. In disposing of the question the court said: “ If the Fairfield Company had received from
The variance in the 'case now before us as to form of the notes is equally inconsequential. Whether the typewriter company made its notes payable to its ow-n order, and indorsed them, or‘ whether it made them payable to the trust company, is not of the slightest importance, because its obligation and that of the guarantors were precisely the same. (Madison Square Bank v. Pierce, 137 N. Y. 444.) In legal effect, therefore, there was no modification of the agreement. The variance was in a mere • matter ■ of' form. It is true the notes, as made, would require the indorsement, of the trust company to transfer them, while if they had been made payable to the typewriter company and indorsed by it they could be given to the guarantors without further indorsement. But the objection that the trust company -under such circumstances might have refused to indorse them “ without recourse ” or otherwise, so as to transfer .title to the guarantors, is of. no weight whatever. If they had been in the other form the trust company might equally as; well have refused to give them up. The .obligation assumed by the; typewriter company is precisely the same in either ■ case, and' it is that obligation which the guarantors undertook to guarantee. As to that the contract has not been varied in the slightest degree. This being-so; the guarantors are liable. • Their liability has neither been increased nor diminished in any particular. They are in precisely, the same position they would have been 'if the notes had been payable to and indorsed by their, principal.
In conclusion, it is to be observed that whether the words- “ subject to agreement,” etc., relate, as I think they do,, to every provision of the notes, they certainly relate to the deposit of the shares of stock — as.to this we áre all agreed — which means that such shares were to be held in. accordance with the agreement and sub
The judgment appealed from should be reversed and a new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to appellant to abide event.
Laughlin, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed,, with costs.