1 Ohio Law Rep. 437 | Ohio | 1903
. The contract and 'bond relied upon and pleaded by plaintiff in 'error-were contemporaneously executed, were parts'of the same
The plaintiff in. error by accepting this contract, and 'as obligee in sai'd bond, impliedly undertook 'and agreed with. Henman Schultz the surety in said bond, that Hall should 'at no time have a total credit with it on the purchase of beer under said contract, exceeding two car loads at any one time, and that it would not ship said Hall '■a third can load of beer until the first car load received by him should have been paid for, and it would not ship him a fourth ear load until the second had been paid for, etc. The surety in said bond 'had the right to rely upon this implied undertaking on the part of the brewing company that 'it would extend credit -and would malee shipments to Hall only in accordance -with the stipulations and provisions of said contract. It is elementary that the obligation of a surety is not to be extended beyond what the terms of the contract of suretyship fairly import. The surety has the right to stand upon the very terms of ibis .contract, the exact letter of his bond, -and if he does not consent to any variance of it and a variation is made, such variation operates to annul his contract and to discharge him from lability, and if the obligee in a bond given to secure' the faithful performance of a contract, without right, does that which injures the surety or his rights, or fails to do that which the contract enjoins upon him as a dnty to do, and such omission operates to the prejudice and injury of the surety in the bond, the surety is thereby discharged (Brandt on Suretyship, Sec. 397). In this case the defendant in error, Angie Schultz, iu her original answer to plaintiff’s 'amended petition, averred among other things that Herman Schultz, as surety, was released from the obligations of the bond in suit by reason of tbe fact “that the said Henry T. Hall was not required to pay for the first ear load of beer, for which he was given credit, -nor did he pay for the first car load of beer when he ordered the third car load of beer; that the said Henry T. Hall was not required by the plaintiff to pay for the second car load of beer wben lie ordered the fourth car load of beer; that the plaintiff /Wholly disregarded its contract, with the said Henry T. Hall, and at >nio time required the said Henry T. Hall to pay for the beer as provided in the co/nitract; that the said Henry T. Hall ordered and received from plaintiff on credit three car loads of beer before he paid for 'any part of the beer bought and ordered under the contract.”
On the trial of this cause in the court of common pleas the court charged the jury in part as follows:
“The plaintiff brings this suit 'as upon a bond executed and delivered for the performance of a contract with said Henry T. Hall, and if you find by a preponderance of the testimony, that plaintiff, without the knowledge ¡and consent of said Herman Schultz, violated the contract with Hall, -atnd thereby increased the risk of said Schultz, then the said Schultz would be released from the obligations thereof, and your verdict wouild then be In favor of the defendant as administratrix. So that the main issue submitted to you by the pleadings and testimony is whether or not plaintiff and ■said Hall did change and modify and violate said contract as alleged by defendant, and if so, was it without the knowledge and*443 consent or acquiescence of said Schultz, and this puts the burden of proof upon said defendant, to prove -and establish it by a preponderance of the evidence, and you are the sale judges of the credibility of the several' witnesses 'and the credit to be given to them as to what they testified.”
This charge was excepted to by the defendant, Angie Schultz, and was found and held by. the circuit court to be erroneous, in so far as the jury was thereby instructed that tire burden of proof was on the defendant to show and prove that the violation of said contract by the brewing company was without the knowledge and consent of Schultz, the surety in said bond. As we ’have already seen when considering the demurrer, the contract in suit was conditioned and it provided that 'tire brewing company would not ship to Hall the third car load of beer until he had paid for the first and would not ship him the fourth until he had paid for the second, and a compliance with these covenants and provisions on the part of 'the brewing company was 'an essential prerequisite to its light of recovery against the surety on said bondj and any violation of these covenants and conditions by the brewing company which increased the risk or liability of Schultz under 'said contract -would discharge him as surety on said bond, ‘and the failure on the part of the brewing company — -obligee in said bond — to observe -and comply with these provisions was the matter alleged and relied upon by defendant in her answer, as and for her defense, in its amended petition the brewing company averred that it had complied with and performed all the terms 'and conditions of said contract on its part to be performed, but the effect of the matters specially pleaded in the answer of Angie Schultz was, as above stated, to deny and put in issue this averment of plaintiff’s amended petition, and upon the issue so tendered the -burden was upon the plaintiff to show and prove performance on its part as averred in its petition. The defendant in this case, Angie Schultz, -did not rely upon or plead a change or modification of the original contract, o-r the making and substitution of a new contract in its stead, but she relied upon the non-performance by plaintiff of the express terms of the contract in suit, performance of which were a prerequisite to its right to recover on said bond. Hence the authorities cited and relied upon by counsel for plaintiff in error in this case, relating as they do, in nearly every instance, to cases where
The attitude of the defendant, Angie Sehlutz, in this case is purely defensive, and her answer in effect merely a denial of the IDerfoutnaoice by plaintiff of the terms amid conditions of said "contract necessary to he performed by it in order to put the surety on said bond in default and to entitle plaintiff to recover thereon against 'Mm. If, os alleged in defendant’s answer, there was on the part of the brewing company such failure to perforin the terms and conditions of said contract as released the surety, then if the brewing company would excuse such non-performance on its pant amid relieve itself from the penalty of such violation because of the consent thereto of the surety in said bond, the burden is upon it to plead and prove such consent, and not upon the surety t'o show and prove that such failure to perform was without his consent. The denial by plaintiff in its reply of the allegations of defendant’s answer pleadingv non-performance, was wholly unnecessary, inasmuch as it had already averred 'in its amended petition full performance of said .contract on its part, and the effect of defendant’s answer was simply to deny such averment. In this ease no rejDly by plaintiff was necessary, and the filing of one did not have the effect to ehahige the issue 'arising on the amended petition and the answer thereto, nor did it operate to sliift the burden of proof. The charge as given was therefore erroneous.
Judgment of the circuit court affirmed.