Defendant Coughlan, one of three defendants against whom judgment was rendered, appeals from said judgment. The other defendants have not appealed.
Question Presented
Was the agreement between Hill and North materially altered, thus exonerating Coughlan?
Record
October 31, 1956, plaintiff, a wholesale lumber dealer in
The agreement was put in operation in the fall of 1956. In October or November 1957 defendant Coughlan resigned from North and became completely disassociated with the management or direction of its affairs. In April 1958 plaintiff decided that the method of handling the North account was too cumbersome. Mashek, plaintiff’s president, testified that he entered into an oral agreement with Cohen to change from assignment procedure to a simple open book account. Cohen agreed to pay for the lumber shipments within 30 days and agreed that the guaranty arrangements and chattel mortgage would be retained by plaintiff. Cohen denied making this arrangement, but did not protest when the payment procedure was changed. Defendant Coughlan had no knowledge of the new arrangement.
After April 1958 the account was frequently delinquent. From time to time plaintiff agreed to accept and accepted postdated checks, but no other express agreement extending time of payment of invoices was ever made. Cohen testified that the postdated checks were given as payment for invoices more than 30 days old. Mashek’s testimony, while vague, is to the same effect. Thus, when invoice payments were over
As of May 1,1959, North owed plaintiff $70,571.83. June 1, 1959, plaintiff brought this action to foreclose the chattel mortgage and to enforce the guaranties of payment by Cohen and Goughian. The court gave plaintiff judgment against North for $70,571.83 plus interest from May 1, 1959, and $2,500 attorneys’ fees, and ordered the chattel mortgage foreclosed. It further decreed that plaintiff should recover from Cohen and Goughian, jointly and severally, any deficiency not exceeding the $20,000 limit set in the agreement, that might result upon sale or foreclosure.
The trial court found as to the fact of the change of method of payment from that mentioned in the contract and found that plaintiff had accepted postdated checks. However, it further found that Hill and North at no time entered into an agreement different from that set forth in the contract. This determination, as will hereinafter appear, was based upon the court’s construction of the contract as not limiting the method of payment.
The Agreement Was Materially Altered
The obligation sued on, guaranteeing faithful performance, is in actuality a guaranty of payment (see
Somers
v.
United States F.
&
G. Co.
(1923)
Section 2819, Civil Code, provides: “A surety is exonerated, except so far as he may be indemnified by the principal, if by any act of the creditor, without the consent of the surety the original obligation of the principal is altered in any respect, or the remedies or rights of the creditor against the principal, in respect thereto, in any way impaired or suspended.”
Defendant contends he was exonerated (1) because the contract between plaintiff and North was altered in a material respect without his consent, and (2) because plaintiff extendéd North’s time of payment. An alteration in any material respect without consent of the surety exonerates the
Tested by the above rules it is clear that the contract was materially changed when the method of payment provided by the contract was changed from assignment of the invoices to plaintiff to that of an open account on plaintiff’s books. Mashek, plaintiff’s president, characterized the change, “We wanted to discontinue the account because it was too cumbersome, and then Cohen [North’s president] came up and we made
another deal.”
(Italics added.) While the term “invoice” is not a technical one and does not have a single settled meaning
(Peskin
v.
Squires
(1957)
The oral agreement having been executed, the surety was discharged. (Cf.
Watterson
v.
Owens River Canal Co.
(1914)
In view of our determination that the agreement was materially altered by the change of method of payment, it becomes unnecessary to determine whether the acceptance of postdated checks constituted such an extension of payment as to exonerate defendant Coughlan.
The judgment is reversed.
Sullivan, J., and Molinari, J., concurred.
Notes
As there was no testimony concerning the intention of the parties as to the meaning of the “a method of payment” clause, and as the construction of the contract is a question of law, this court is not bound by the trial court's construction. (See
Meyer
v.
State Board of Equalization
(1954)
