43 N.Y.S. 957 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
This action was brought to reform and recover upon certain guaranties signed by George G. Decker and his copartner, in the firm name of Decker & More, and' by the McKinley & Heliker Investment Company. The defendant George G. Decker alone answered the complaint, It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff’s intestate, Maurice J. Smith, bought of George G. Decker and' his copartner certain promissory notes, made by different parties, but all of the same general character and description.
One of them was purchased on the 24th day of May, 1887. It was made by one Henderson, of McPherson, Kansas, for the sum of $1,000, was dated the 1st day of May, 1887, was 'payable five years after date at the Girard Mat-ional Bank in Philadelphia, with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semiannually. Accompanying such note was a mortgage or trust deed to secure its payment, which mortgage- was made by Henderson to-one Heliker as trustee, upon certain lots of land in Rice county, in the State of Kansas. At the time of the transaction between the-plaintiffs’ intestate and Deckér & More, and as a part of the same-' transaction, an instrument in writing was delivered by the latter to-the former, which instrument recited the sale of the note secured by the trust deed, and then provided as follows :
“ That in consideration of said sale the undersigned guarantee-the collection in full of said note, with seven per cent interest on same, upon the following conditions: First. In case of a default in*417 the payment of said note or interest due on same, or a failure to comply with the requirements named in the trust deed securing said note, the holder of said note shall, at the request of the undersigned, at once forward said note and trust deed for collection. Second. Said trust deed shall be foreclosed in the usual course provided by law, and the land sold. In case there is no bid sufficient to cover the debt and costs, the land described in the trust deed may, at the option of the undersigned, be bid in, in the name of the holder of this note. Third. In case the land is so purchased, the undersigned hereby bind themselves to take full charge of said land, and sell same within two years after the above-described note matures; and in case said land does not sell for a sufficient amount to pay the debt in full, to make good and pay any deficiency.
“ THE MoKINLEY & HELIKER INVESTMENT CO.,
“ W. B. McKinley, Sedy.
“ DECKER & MORE.”
Interest was paid on the note up to a certain time by Decker & More, they having received the money for that purpose from the McKinley Company, but when the note matured it was not paid. It was presented sometime after maturity at the Girard National Bank, and payment was demanded, but there were no funds there with which to make payment, and none had ever been deposited with that bank for that purpose. Decker & More never made any request to the plaintiffs, as holders of the note and mortgages, to forward the same for collection, nor have they given any directions with reference to the enforcement of the security collateral to the note. It further appears that the lands covered by the mortgage were sold in September, 1893, by the constituted authorities in the State of Kansas, for unpaid taxes, and that the lands were conveyed to the purchaser at the tax sale.
Another of the notes was bought by the plaintiffs’ intestate about the 12th or 15th of August, 1887. It was made by Elijah D. Harding and Mary M. Harding, of McPherson, Kansas, for the sum of $500, dated May 1, 1887, and with reference to this note substantially a similar state of facts is disclosed. Decker & More sold the note, in connection with which a mortgage or trust deed was given as collateral, and a guaranty of the same
On the 27th of April, 1888, the plaintiffs’ intestate bought another note of Decker & More, which note was made by Daniel C. Iiorney, of McPherson, Kansas, for the sum of $!S00, dated April 1,1888, payable in five years, at the same place and in the same way as the other two notes. This note was also accompanied by a mortgage or trust deed made in the same way as the-others, and in connection with the transaction Decker &. More delivered to the plaintiffs’ intestate a ■ guaranty in the same form, containing the same condition's as that in connection with the Henderson note, and a further stipulation as to . interest before maturity hereafter to be referred to. The same state of facts was substantially disclosed with reference to.the history of that note and guaranty. The land covered by the Horney mortgage was also sold for taxes, and conveyed to a purchaser, and the same state of facts appear with reference to the refusal of Decker & More to.take any steps to enforce the guaranty.
There is a material difference between the defendant’s contract' relating to the Harding note, and: the guaranties of the two other notes. It is alleged in the complaint in the second cause of action that the defendants Decker & More, at the time the plaintiffs’ intestate purchased the Harding note, agreed to give to him a written guaranty of J. B. and "W. B, McKinley of the Harding mortgage, and it is alleged that such guaranty was not given: It is sufficient to say upon that subject that the proof made by the plaintiffs is entirely insufficient to .-show that such 'guaranty was not furnished by Decker & More. It was only shown that such a guaranty could not be found among the intestate’s papers. Part of the relief demanded in the complaint was the reformation of the several contracts of guaranty by inserting in them certain matters which it is claimed were omitted by mistake. The court below permitted the contracts mentioned in the second cause of action to be corrected by inserting a proper descrip
The contracts of guaranty sued upon in this action are personal obligations of the firm of Decker & More. There is nothing either in the form of the contracts, or in the history of the transactions, so far as disclosed by the proofs, to authorize a finding that Decker & More in making the sale to the plaintiffs’ intestate of the promissory notes secured by the farm mortgages were acting in any other capacity than as dealers personally and directly with Mr. Smith. Although those guaranties are signed by the McKinley & Heliker Investment Company, they are also signed by Decker & More without any qualification or limitation, or anything that would indicate that they were agents for anybody. The guaranties were given upon full consideration, because they are part of and inseparably connected with the several transactions of the sales of the notes. But they, were not guaranties of payment of the ¡principal of either of the three notes or of the interest of two of them. They. were merely guaranties of collection, except as to interest on the Horney note. The distinction between guaranties of payment and guaranties of collection is stated with great clearness by Rapallo, J., in McMurray v. Noyes (72 N. Y. 524), as follows: “ The fundamental distinction between a guaranty of payment and one of collection is that in the first case the guarantor undertakes unconditionally that the debtor will pay, and the creditor may, upon default, proceed directly against the guarantor, without taking any steps to collect of the principal debtor, and the omission or neglect to proceed against him is not (except under special circumstances) any defense to the guarantor; while in the second case the undertaking is that if the demand cannot be collected by legal proceedings, the guarantor will pay, and consequently legal proceedings against the principal-debtor, and a failure to collect of him by those means are conditions precedent to the liability of the guarantor ; and to these the law, as established by numerous decisions, attaches the further condition that due diligence be exercised by the creditor in enforcing his legal . remedies against the debtor.” ' ‘ '
Omitting the matter of interest on the Horney note, there can be no doubt as to the nature of the guaranty attached to each of the
As we construe these contracts of guaranty and the conditions thereof, there was nothing in them which changed the legal situation of the parties, or which relieved the plaintiffs from the obligation of pursuing the remedies against the makers of the notes and against the land, or from endeavoring to realize their claims from the principal debtors before they could hold Decker & More liable upon the instruments. Nor is there anything disclosed in the proofs with reference to subsequent conditions or situations of the land covered by the mortgages, which would impose a liability on the guarantors or discharge the plaintiffs from the duty of pursuing in the first instance those liable as original debtors.
The Henderson note became due in May, 1892. No effort was made by the plaintiffs to enforce that note or the security collateral to it. The deed to the purchaser at the tax sale of the land covered by the Henderson mortgage was not made until September 20,1893. The Harding note became due in May, 1892. The deed to the purchaser at the tax sale of that property was not made until October, 1893. The Horney note became due in April, 1893. The deed to the purchaser at the tax sale of the property covered by the Horney mortgages was not made until February, 1896. Thus, in the case of each of these mortgages or trust deeds, the plaintiffs could have proceeded to enforce their remedies upon the securities and the guarantors would have had an opportunity to avail themselves of the second and third conditions contained in the contracts of guaranty, had the plaintiffs diligently pursued their rights and remediés. It cannot be said that a resort to the enforcement of the securities would have been ineffectual or a mere idle ceremony. It is a mere speculation so to consider. We cannot find in this case anything'to excuse the plaintiffs from the performance of the duty which was incumbent upon them. The undertaking of guarantors, such as Decker & More, has been held to be only one that the debt will be paid if the principal be prosecuted with reasonable diligence—and the guarantor is discharged from all liability by the want of such
It is claimed, however, that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover upon one of these guaranties for certain installments of interest, due and unpaid before the maturity of the note, and that claim is well founded. To the guaranty of the Horney note was annexed a fourth clause in these words, viz.: “ We further guarantee the pay-' ment of the interest as it matures on the principal sum of said loan until the said principal is paid.” That was- a promise enforcible at once on the interest becoming due and in default of payment of it by the maker. The allegations of the complaint in the third cause of action are broad enough to allow a recovery of unpaid interest on this note up to the date of its maturity. The evidence shows that it would amount to eighty-seven dollars and fifty cents, and for that sum judgment should have been given in plaintiffs’ favor.
The judgment must be modified by inserting therein a jiro vision that the compiaint.be dismissed as to all the causes of action set forth therein except as to so much of the third cause of action as relates to the claim for interest on the note therein referred to, which interest was not paid prior to the maturity of said note, and remained unpaid at the time of the trial, with costs of the action in the court below only.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Williams, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, with costs of the action-in the court below only.