107 A.D. 8 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The following is the opinion of Bischoff, J., delivered at Special Term:
The action is upon a guaranty of payment and collection of an assigned bond and mortgage for §5,000, expressed in the following
Four separate defenses are pleaded, to which the plaintiff demurs for insufficiency. The first separate defense alleges that the guaranty was, by its terms, a guaranty of collection, not of payment, and that the plaintiff, having taken no steps to collect from the original obligor, cannot charge the defendant. As to this it may be said that any doubt as to the meaning of the words “payment and collection,” as used in this guaranty, is resolved by the final clause, “ and I do promise to pay the same at maturity thereof.” To give exclusive effect to the word “ collection ” would be to give no effect whatever to the word “ payment,” and would require that the express promise to pay at maturity, upon the part of the guarantor, be wholly disregarded. The only possible meaning of this covenant is that the guaranty relates to payment, not merely to collection, and gives the holder an election to proceed in the first instance, either against the principal or against the guarantor. (Tuton v. Thayer, 47 How. Pr. 180.) The first defense, therefore, proceeds upon an erroneous construction of the agreement and is insufficient. For a second separate defense it is alleged that in an action brought by this plaintiff to foreclose the mortgage, the plaintiff released his claim against the original obligor to the extent of $500, but refused to make the same concession to the defendant, and thereby so modified the relations existing between himself and the obligor as to release the guarantor. A partial release, such as this, only operates to release the guarantor pro tanto, since, being made after maturity, it affects no obligation as to which the contract of guaranty was executory when the so-called “ change ” occurred (See Kingsbury v. Westfall, 61 N. Y. 356), arid the release inures to the benefit of the guarantor only to the extent to which the claim was thus reduced as upon a partial payment. Hot being designated as a partial defense (Code Civ. Proc. § 508), the matter must be tested as though pleaded for the purposes of a complete defense
See 2d ed.— [Rep.