108 Ga. 14 | Ga. | 1899
The Waxelbaum Company brought suit against Manry upon an instrument of which the following is a copy:
“Georgia, Randolph County. For and in consideration of the sum of one dollar in hand paid, and the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I, J. IT. Manry, do hereby guarantee the prompt payment of all accounts and notes given in settlement for goods purchased by G. W. Grubbs of Bethel, Georgia, from the Waxelbaum Company of Macon, Georgia, to the extent of four hundred dollars. Be it further understood that I, J. H. Manry, shall be at liberty to withdraw this guarantee at any time, provided that the account of G. W. Grubbs is paid.
[Signed] J. H. .Manry.”
It was alleged in the petition, that G. W. Grubbs was dead, and that his estate was insolvent, and that at the time of his death he was indebted to the plaintiff for goods bought in a sum exceeding four hundred dollars. The defendant filed an answer in which .he alleged, that goods to the amount of four hundred dollars were sold Grubbs by the plaintiff on the faith of defendant’s guaranty, and that these goods were paid for by Grubbs; that defendant only intended by the guaranty to be responsible for this amount, and did not intend that his contract should be a continuing guaranty; that if the written instrument given plaintiff by him contains any such stipulation, it is a fraud on him and contrary to his undertaking; that defendant is advised that the estate of Grubbs is insolvent, but believes there will be something in the estate to pay on all notes due and owing by the estate; that defendant owes the plaintiff nothing on the contract sued on. The plaintiff de
It is further insisted, that even if the obligation undertaken by the defendant was a guaranty, it was not a continuing one, but was to cease when Grubbs paid the first indebtedness he incurred amounting to four hundred dollars, and that all subsequent credits were extended to him solely on his own promise to pay. The intention of the parties must be gathered from the instrument and the circumstances surrounding its execution. The correspondence which led up to the execution of this guaranty was all between the plaintiff and Grubbs, and hence can throw no light on Manry’s intention. At the time of the execution of this instrument Grubbs owed the plaintiff nothing, for it had persistently refused to extend credit to him unless he would procure the defendant as his guarantor; and hence the instrument does not refer to any indebtedness existing at the time of its execution. Instruments of this character should have a liberal construction in order to arrive at the true intention of the parties. Was it the intention of
In a case of this character adjudicated cases do not render much assistance, but an examination of some of the cases where similar instruments were construed will show that the ruling we make is in harmony with the authorities. In Wheelan v. Keegan, 7 Irish Com. Law Rep. 544, suit was brought on the following instrument: “I hereby guarantee the payment of
Judgment affirmed, with direction.