50 Wis. 388 | Wis. | 1880
This case presents a question not free from difficulty. After an attentive consideration of it, we are disposed, not without hesitation, to adopt the view taken of it by the court below. The circuit court held that the three first dividends on the boom stock which was transferred to the defendant’s testator by Tyson, Sweet & Co. as collateral security, should be applied to the payment of the principal and interest of their note which became due July 1, 1874; that all the other payments should be applied, first, to the payment of the interest due at the respective dates of such payments upon the four notes of Tyson, Sweet & Co., and second, to the discharge of the principal of said notes in the order of their maturity. Ey this application of the payments, the first three notes would be discharged, and the court held- that -tter plaintiffs were entitled to have the bond and mortgage executed by their grantor, J. S. Mabbett, satisfied of record.
The mortgage was given to secure the payment of a bond dated November 1, 1873, the condition of which reads as fol
Now it is an admitted fact in the case, that enough money has been realized out of the securities or property turned out by Tyson, Sweet & Co. to Gunnison, to pay and discharge the first three notes. The question then arises, Did or did not that operate to discharge the bond and mortgage which an ordinary person would understand were given merely as collateral security for the payment of the first two notes? The -astute and learned counsel for the defendant insists that this did not satisfy the condition of the bond, hut that it may still be field to secure the payment of the fourth note. This position he attempts to maintain, as well from the words of the condition of the bond, as from the other considerations surround
It should surely be borne in mind that all parties probably ■knew what securities were given for the payment of the notes on the extension. Presumably, each party, in entering into his engagement, acted with reference to that knowledge. At all events, we must assume that it was well understood that Mabbett, in giving the bond and mortgage on his individual property, did not occupy the position of principal debtor, but that his liability in the matter was that of a surety merely.
On looking at the terms of the bond, the counsel says the words “ shall pay,” in their ordinary, usual sense, mean the voluntary rendering to another what is his due; that those words signify or imply, in the condition, the actual payment by Tyson, Sweet & Oo. of the first two notes in cash, or out of property which they had not turned, out as collateral security. And it is insisted that the bond could only be satisfied by such a payment. We are unable to agree with counsel in that construction of the instrument; for suppose enough had been realized out of the property turned out by Tyson, Sweet & Oo. to
It is said, however, that if the parties contemplated that the bond and mortgage should only secure the payment of the first two notes — -the collaterals being applied as above indicated,— then these sureties perform no office, as it was apparent to all that enough would be realized out of the first-mentioned securities to discharge the first two notes. This is so, and this consideration has presented the chief difficulty in the case.
It is not easy to give a satisfactory reason for the execution
But there is another principle which must not be lost sight of in the construction of the bond; that is, the familiar doctrine that the obligation 'of a surety is striotissimi juris, and that nothing is to be taken against him by inference or intendment. Smith v. Lockwood, 34 Wis., 72. A proper attention to this mile of law forbids that any forced interpretation be placed upon the language of the bond. It does not surely, in terms, profess to be a security for the entire debt, but only for a specific portion of it; and it would be wrong to extend its effect as against the surety beyond what the language fairly implies.
Thus far we have considered the case without reference to the doctrine of the application of payments, a question much discussed on the argument. But there are no facts shown as to the application of payments which were made by either party, which can change our decision as to the liability of the
I am unable to agree with my associates in affirming the judgment of the circuit court in this case. The facts as I understand them are these: The firm of J. S. Mab-bett & Co. were indorsers of four promissory notes of Tyson, Sweet & Co., each for the sum of $4,250, due in nine, twelve, twenty-one and twenty-four months from October 1, 1873, which notes were held and owned by the testator of the appellant. Previous to ' giving said notes, said firm were indebted to the said testator, as accommodation makers of notes for Tyson, Sweet & Co., in the same sum of $17,000. The firm desired that the testator should extend the time of payment of $17,000 by the said Tyson, Sweet & Co. to the time above specified; and the testator agreed to such extension, and took the four notes above mentioned, indorsed by the said firm, and also the following securities:
First. A mortgage from Tyson, Sweet & Co., conditioned for the payment of all the four notes, upon certain lands in Michigan, supposed at the time to be of great value. This mortgage was given not only to secure this debt of $17,000 of Tyson, Sweet & Co. to the testator, but also to secure other debts owing by said Tyson, Sweet & Co. to other persons. The amount of such other debts does not appear from the record.
Second. The bond and mortgage of J. S. Mabbett for the sum of $9,000. The bond recites that the testator is the owner of the four notes mentioned, upon which J. S. Mabbett & Co. are indorsers; that the testator had granted to Tyson, Sweet & Co. an extension of such indebtedness for nine, twelve, twenty-one and twenty-four months from October 1, 1873; and that, to secure the debt so extended, Tyson, Sweet & Co. are to execute a mortgage upon lands in the state of Michigan;
Third. The testator, at the same date of receiving the mortgage of the Michigan lands, and the bond and mortgage of J. S. Mabbett, received from Tyson, Sweet & Oo., as security for the payment of said four notes of $4,250 each and the interest thereon, boom stock of the boom company of Manis-tee, Michigan, of the par value of $10,000; and for this stock the testator gave Tyson, Sweet & Oo. a receipt, which, after reciting that the stock is received as collateral security for the payment of the four promissory notes above mentioned, proceeds to state the conditions upon which such stock is to be held as security, as follows: “ And I hereby agree to and with said Tyson, Sweet & Oo. that, upon the payment of the first three of said notes, to surrender to them (Tyson, Sweet & Oo.) $5,000 of said stock, to wit, 50 shares thereof, and, upon payment of the last of said notes, will return to said Tyson, Sweet & Oo. the balance of said stock so as above transferred to me. And I do hereby agree to and with said Tyson, Swe-et & Go. that I will in no way part with said stock, nor in any way convey said stock to any one, hut will hold the same in my possession as collateral to the payment of said notes. And it is hereby stipulated and agreed, and the said stock is received by.me on the condition, that if, upon the maturity of the last of said notes, any of the said notes remain unpaid, I shall have the right to sell said stock at public sale/first giving said Tyson, Sweet & Oo., or their assigns, twenty days’ written notice of said sale, which notice shall he given personally to one of said firm, and the proceeds of said sale shall, after paying the expenses of such sale, be applied to the payment of such amount as may remain due me on said notes, and the
None of the notes were paid by Tyson, Sweet & Co., or by any one else, at maturity, but the testator or his executor have received the following sums from the securities above given: First. Dividends and proceeds of sale of boom stock as follows: 1874, September 11th, $500; 1875, January 5th, $500; 1876, January 5th, $1,075; 1876, July 19th, $500; 1877, April 11th, $700; 1877, December 26th, $300; 1878, March 25th, $3,500. Beeond. Erom the proceeds of the foreclosure of the mortgage of the Michigan lands, 1876, May 27th, $5,259.81. Third. Erom the sale of the boom stock, 1878, April 19th, $7,500. Fourth. For goods purchased by the testator from Tyson, Sweet & Co., due July 28th, 1874, $1,129.
There has been no application of the several sums above mentioned to the payment of any of the notes in particular, except as to the amount of the first three receipts for dividends on the stock. The first $500, it is alleged and not denied, was indorsed upon the note due nine months after date. Of the second sum of $500, $75 was indorsed upon the note due at twelve months, and $425 on the note due at twenty-four months. And as to the $1,075, it is alleged that the testator claimed that it should be applied so as to pay interest on all the notes to January 1, 1876, and the balance, if any, upon the note at nine months.
It will be seen that the amount collected for dividends, and on the sale of the boom stock, amounts to the sum of $14,075; the amount received for collections on the Michigan mortgage, $5,259; and $1,129 for goods sold to testator — in all amounting to the sum of $20,963. The notes, with interest at ten per cent, from their dates to the first of April, 1878, amount to the sum of $24,650; which would leave a balance unpaid of something over $3,687, as of the date of April, 1878. This is not intended as a statement of the amount actually due then, but is made for the purpose of showing that a consider
The only question to be determined is, whether the moneys collected shall be applied in payment of the notes in the order in which they became due, and thus leave the unpaid balance due upon the note to become due in twenty-four months after the date thereof, and so relieve the mortgaged property of J. S. Mabbett from the mortgage given to secure the payment of the first two notes, or whether they shall be so applied'as to leave the amount unpaid on the two notes to become first due, and thereby give the benefit of that security to the testator for the unpaid balance of the debt. There are two things appearing in the record which, in my opinion, have some bearing upon this question: First, when Tyson, Sweet & Co. put up the boom stock as collateral security, they proposed that $5,000 of the stock should be surrendered when the first note was paid. This proposition, it would seem, was rejected by Gunnison, and, as his receipt shows, he agreed to surrender the $5,000 of the stock only upon the payment of the first three of said notes, and stipulated that he should hold the other $5,000 until the last note was paid. Second, that J. S. Mabbett proposed to give his bond and mortgage for $9,000, as collateral security for the payment of the whole $17,000, and his bond and mortgage are so drawn as to be security for only the first two notes.
It will also be seen that only the sum of $1,000 was collected on any of the securities until after all the notes had become due and remained unpaid, and, in addition, Gunnison, the testator, had become indebted to Tyson, Sweet & Co., in the sum of $1,129 for property purchased of them previous to that time. The condition of the bond given by Jb S. Mabbett was broken on the first day of November, 1875. At that date neither the first nor second note had been paid, even if all tire money collected had been applied to the payment of these notes. If suit had then been commenced, there could have been no defense to the action; at all events, beyond the $2,129
It was urged with great ability and force by the learned counsel for the appellant, that the condition of the bond could only be fulfilled by an actual payment of the first two notes by Tyson, Sweet & Co., and that they could not be paid so as to fulfill the condition by any application of moneys received from the other collaterals. Still, I am of the opinion that if a court of equity would, as between Mabbett and Gunnison, compel the application of the other securities to the payment of the first two notes, and moneys sufficient to pay the same have come to the hands of Gunnison, then the bond must be declared satisfied. If the condition of the bond had been the payment of the four notes, there could be no dispute that all the money received from the other collaterals would be applied to the payment of the notes, and the bond be held good only for the balance remaining due, although the condition had been in the same form as at present. I think the case must turn upon the question of the application of the moneys received by Gunnison and his executor upon the other col-laterals.
I do not think Mabbett can have any better standing in equity as to the application of the moneys raised on the se
The receipt given by Gunnison for the boom stock very clearly shows that'he did not receive and hold it for the benefit of Mabbett, and to protect him against the payment of the first two notes; and the only way Mabbett can avail himself of the security of this boom stock in the payment of the first two notes, is by showing that the moneys received on one-lialf of such stock, together with the moneys received on the other collaterals, are sufficient to pay the first three notes. "When he shows that, he shows that the contingency has happened which is stipulated for in the receipt given by Gunnison for the stock, upon which one-half of the stock is to be surrendered to the pledgors. It does not seem to me that the rights of the parties are changed by the fact that the stock has been converted into money, and does not remain in the shape of stock in the hands of Gunnison, unless it be shown that he has applied the money, or consented to have it applied, differently from what was stipulated as to the stock itself. As he clearly had the right to retain all the stock until three of the notes were fully paid, and half until all four were paid, it must, I think, follow that he may apply the half of the money received for the stock to the payment of the fourth note, and
I think the circuit court erred in holding that the .Mabbett mortgage was paid, and that the same should be discharged of record; and the judgment should be reversed.
By the Court.— Judgment affirmed.