144 Mo. App. 58 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This action is founded on a contract of guaranty. A jury was waived by the parties and the cause was submitted to the court. No findings of fact or declarations of law were asked by either party or given by the court. Judgment was rendered for defendant and plaintiff appealed.
■ Plaintiff, a manufacturer of agricultural implements at Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, entered into a written contract with J. S. Crouch, a retail dealer at Carrollton, Missouri, by the terms of which plaintiff agreed to sell and deliver to Crouch a carload of agricultural implements. The contract was signed at Kansas City, August 4, 1905, and plaintiff was represented in the transaction by James Weiser, its agent in charge of its branch office at Kansas City. Plaintiff’s name was signed to the instrument by Weiser as agent and, following the signatures of the parties appears the stipulation that the contract is “subject to the approval of the J. S. Rowell Manufacturing Company.” The contract is described in its caption as an “order to the J. S. Row-ell Manufacturing Company, Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, from J. S. Crouch, Carrollton, Missouri.” After this heading is the following “guaranty” signed by defendant : “In consideration of one dollar to me in hand paid by the J. S. Rowell Manufacturing Company, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I guarantee the fulfillment of the within agreement and the payment of any and all obligations that may .arise under the same on the part of J. S. Crouch.” Then follows an order from Crouch addressed to plaintiff for a list of agricultural implements. The contract contains a number of conditions and agreements, the recital of which would be superfluous in the view we take of the case. The goods were delivered by plaintiff and ac
We think defendant did not become guarantor of the performance by Crouch of the obligations imposed on him by his contract with plaintiff. The rule is well settled that “Where the transaction is admitted to amount only to an offer to guarantee, it is universally held that in order to charge the party making the offer, he must, within a reasonable time, be notified that his offer is accepted.” [1 Brandt on Suretyship & Guaranty (3 Ed.), sec. 205.] Continuing, the same author says in sec. 206: “A mere offer, not accepted, is not a contract; and a mere mental acceptance of a proposition not communicated to the party to be charged is not an acceptance at all in the eye of the law. It is important to the interests of the business community that everyone should know the extent of his liabilities, in order that he may take the proper measures to meet them.”
The rule is recognized and applied in the following cases: John Deere Plow Co. v. McCullough, 102 Mo. App. 461; Deering Harvester Co. v. Sulzer, 78 Mo. App. 674; Bank v. Goldstein, 86 Mo. App. 281; Taylor v. Shouse, 73 Mo. 361; Bank v. Shine, 48 Mo. 456; Sewing Machine Co. v. Richards, 115 U. S. 524.
Plaintiff invokes the rule that where one directly binds himself to be responsible for another’s contract already made, of which he has knowledge when he signs, no notice of the acceptance of the guaranty is necessary (1 Brandt on Suretyship, section 212); and directs our
The judgment is affirmed.