33 Ga. App. 126 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1924
Suit on a promissory note was brought by Armour Fertilizer Works against T. B. Kenney and the administratrix of the estate of J. C. Hudspeth. On demurrer the administratrix was dismissed as a party defendant, and the case proceeded against Kenney alone. He admitted a prima facie case and assumed the burden. The note sued on was signed, “ J. B. Kenney,” and “Est. J. C. Hudspeth, by J. 0. Bridges, executor,” and was given for fertilizer. In his answer Kenney alleged, in substance, that he was the tenant of Martha J. Hudspeth, who had a life estate in the land he rented; that she bought the fertilizer and sold
The defendant introduced evidence showing that no guano was shipped to him; that it was shipped to the Hudspeth estate, and
Kenney filed a motion for a new trial (because of his failure to recover on his cross-action), which was overruled; to which ruling he excepted.
The 4th ground (1st special ground) of the motion for a new trial alleges that the court erred in charging the jury that if they believed “that in consideration of the depositing of such security with it, the plaintiff agreed to keep such cotton insured against loss by fire; that it failed to carry out this agreement; that such cotton was wholty or partially destroyed while in the custody o(: the plaintiff, resulting in loss to the maker of the note sued on, Mrs. Hudspeth; that the risk of the surety, Kenney, was increased to the extent of such loss, that he would be relieved of liability as a surety upon such note to the extent of the loss occasioned by the loss of such cotton. If you should find this to be true, under the evidence, then it would be your duty to find in favor of the defendant Kenney the amount of such loss, as you ascertain it to be from the evidence produced to you.” This charge was error, because the increasing of the surety’s risk released him from all liability on the note, under the pleadings and the evidence. It might be contended that it was harmless error, since the jury did release him from all liability on the note. It is true the jury by their verdict released the defendant from liability on the note, but they failed to find in favor of the defendant on his cross-action, and it is not certain what evidence they took into consideration in arriving at this verdict.
The statute is perfectly plain-on this subject. Section 3544 of the Civil Code (1910) provides that “Any act of the creditor, either before or after judgment against the principal, which injures the surety, or increases his rislc} or exposes him to greater liability, will discharge him.” (Italics ours.) The use of the disjunctive “or” shows that injury to the surety or loss is not the only thing which will discharge the surety. It may be loss, or increase of risk, or exposure to greater liability. Any one of these three, according to the words of the statute, will discharge the surety; and there was evidence that the surety’s risk was increased and lie was exposed to greater liability by the plaintiff. Section 3540 of the Civil Code provides that “The contract of suretyship is one of strict laAV, and his liability will not be extended by implication or interpretation.” Kenney is in the position of an accommodation indorser. No consideration flowed direct to him. His only consideration was that extended to his principal. It is for this reason that our law throws unusual protection around a surety. As stated by Judge Lumpkin in the case of Bethune v. Dozier, 10 Ga. 235, “In this State . . everything has been done which the ingenuity of the legislature could devise to protect sureties.” The court says also in that opinion that “no principle of law is better settled at this day than that the undertaking of the surety being one strict i juris, he can not, either at law or in equity, be bound farther or otherwise than he is by the very terms of his contract” (italics ours); and “he is either bound in toto or not at all.” And in discussing the opinion in a case there cited the court said that the judge “very properly adds that it places in a strong point of view the inflexibility of purpose with which the rule that no chmge shall be made in the terms or mode of performance of a contract, without consent of the surety, is adhered to by the courts.” (Italics ours.) Part of the terms and mode of performance in the instant case was that the collateral cotton should be kept insured by the plaintiff. The opinion in Bethune v. Dozier, supra, quotes approvingly from
While the defendant in this case did allege that the plaintiff’s failure to insure the cotton as per agreement resulted in actual loss, he did not base his discharge from liability upon this loss, but based it strictly on the plaintiff’s increasing his risk by failure to insure the cotton as per agreement. The allegations of the answer in tin's regard are that "by reason of said breach by the plaintiff of its covenant to keep said cotton fully insured, the risk of this defendant as surety on the note sued on was materially increased, and he was thereby, as a matter of law, thenceforth discharged and released from all liability to the plaintiff on said note.” This brings the case squarely under the decision-in Cloud v. Scarborough, 3 Ga. App. 7 (59 S. E. 202), the second headnote of which is as follows: “It is only when the discharge of a surety is claimed upon the ground that the act of the creditor has injured him that proof of loss on the part of the surety is required (and in some siich cases it might not be necessary). Proof of a loss by the surety is not required where his discharge is dependent upon an act of the creditor which has increased his risk, nor where it is claimed that the act of the creditor has operated to discharge the surety by exposing him to greater liability.” (Italics ours.) In discussing the three things laid down in code section 3544 that would release the surety, the court said (p. 9) : “It need not be shown that the act of the creditor, relied upon as a discharge, not only injured the surety, but also increased his risk and exposed him to greater liability. On the contrary, the acts which may effect the discharge of the surety are divided into three distinct classes, not necessarily related to or affecting each other; and proof of any act coming within either class—either an act which injures the surety or an act of the creditor which increases his risk, or an act which exposes the surety to a greater liability—will discharge the surety. It is only when the act complained of falls in the first class—when it is claimed that the surety has been injured—that proof of loss is necessary. Loss or proof of loss is not essential, to discharge a surety, either
In the case of Toomer v. Dickerson, 37 Ga. 428, the security claimed a discharge because of the creditor’s failure to record a mortgage. “It was insisted in the argument of this case that the security had suffered no injury from the failure of the creditor to record the mortgage. IJpon that point the record is silent.” And the court said (p. 440) : “We know nothing upon that point fin the case, except what the record discloses. The record discloses the fact that in consequence of the failure to record the mortgage, as required by law, the risk of the security was increased, and that he has been exposed to greater liability; at least such is necessarily the legal effect from the facts proved in the record.” On page 439 it is said: “The language of the code is cAny act of the creditor,’ which may as well be an act of omission as any other act, whereby the risk of the security is increased, or exposes him to greater liability.” This is peculiarly applicable to the case under consideration, because it was the plaintiff’s “act of omission,” in failing to insure the cotton as per his agreement, that released the surety on his note. In Atlanta National Bank v. Douglass, 51 Ga. 206, where the creditor failed to record a mortgage and cancelled it and took another, it was held that “the security is discharged, notwith
In the case of White v. Ault, 19 Ga. 553, White was security, and the Supreme Court said that “if time of payment was given by Ault to Stafford, beyond that specified in the notes, without the consent of White, either express or implied, so that Ault himself could not coerce payment within that period, nor be compelled to do so by White the security, nor the security himself do so by paying up the debt and getting the control, . . the surety is absolutely discharged.” In the case of Harrington v. Findley, 89 Ga. 385 (15 S. E. 483), the Supreme Court, referring to a usurious note, said the sureties could take advantage of the usury as a ground of discharge, and that “their discharge does not depend upon actual loss, but upon the risk of loss to which they were exposed by reason of the concealed usury in the contract of lending of which the note was the result.” These and numerous other decisions are in harmonj'- with our statute law relative to sureties; for example: section 3540 of the Civil Code, making the strictijuris rule apply; section 3542, providing that the release of one surety discharges a cosurety because it- increases his risk; section 3543, providing that a novation without consent of the surety discharges him; and section 3544, providing that any act of the creditor which increases the surety's risk will discharge him.
To distinguish some apparently, but not in fact, conflicting deci
The defendant being released from ‘liability on the note because of his risk being increased by the failure of the creditor to keep the cotton insured as per agreement, he had a legal right to‘prosecute his claim for the value of his cotton held as collateral by the plain
Under the above ruling and the evidence in this case, the court erred as alleged in special grounds 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 10. The error complained of in ground 9 is harmless, in view of the verdict rendered. The judge erred also as set out in ground 11. The defendant surety admitted a prima facie case, assumed the burden of proof, and introduced his evidence; and the plaintiff introduced no counter evidence. “The party on whom the burden of proof rests has the right to open and conclude the cause before the jury.” Mason v. Croom, 24 Ga. 211 (2).
Judgment reversed.