89 F. 464 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1898
This suit is brought by the McIntosh-1 lunting ton Company against Charles M. Reed to recover the sum of $3,981.09, with interest from January 15, 1897. Trial by jury was waived. The court finds the facts and law as herewith noted:
Findings of Fact.
(1) The plaintiff is a corporation duly organized under the law of the state of Ohio, the defendant is a citizen and resident of the state of Pennsylvania, and the amount in dispute is $3,981.09, with interest. (2) On December 6, 1895, Leo Sehlaudecker gave to the plaintiff company a written order for bicycles, and subsequently the plaintiff company sent to Sehlaudecker, for signature by Reed, the paper on which this suit is based, which paper Reed signed on December 10, 1895, and returned to Sehlaudecker. (Copies of said papers are herewith attached, marked Exhibits A and B, and are parts of these findings.) This latter paper Sehlaudecker returned to the plaintiff. Meanwhile the Sehlaudecker order had been in the hands o£ one Enright, the credit man of the plaintiff, awaiting the return of Reed’s paper. On
Conclusions of Law.
As found above, Schlaudecker had placed an order for bicycles with the plaintiff, and, by the terms" of his order, had agreed to furnish security for his probable purchases. In pursuance of that arrangement, plaintiff furnished Schlaudecker with the forms of security desired. This paper the defendant signed, and placed in Schlaudecker’s hands. The latter delivered it to the plaintiff, and it thereupon extended to him the credit desired. What was the relationship established thereby between the plaintiff and the defendant? Kramph v. Hatz, 52 Pa. St. 529, draws the distinction between a surety and a guarantor. A surety undertakes to pay if the debtor does not, while a guarantor undertakes to pay if the debtor cannot. In Reigart v. White, Id. 440, it is .stated that in suretyship there is a direct liability to the creditor for the act to be performed, while a guaranty is a -liability only for the ability of another to perform this act. In Seltzer v. Greenwald, 2 Wkly. Notes Cas. 395, it is well said: “A suretyship is a direct contract to pay the debt of another. It insures the particular claim.” Tested by this standard, it would seem that Reed’s engagement was one of suretyship, • and not guaranty. That the word “guaranty” was used in describing the paper, and that term employed in the undertaking itself, are not controlling facts. Sherman v. Roberts, 1 Grant, Cas. 261. The true meaning of the paper is reached from ascertaining from the whole of it what it was meant to effect. The engagement therein specified was absolute, definite, and unconditional. There was no condition to be performed by the plaintiff, except the extending of the credit which it was the averred purpose of the paper to secure. Upon such extension of credit, and the existence of an unsettled account within a fixed limit, and on a day certain, the absolute, unconditional promise of the defendant to pay attached. The paper being an absolute, direct, and unconditional promise, engagement and assumption by the defendant, as his own, of Schlaudecker’s indebtedness in existence on the day named, we see no reason why notice of the acceptance of that undertaking should be given the defendant. The paper was absolute and unconditional in its terms. Manifestly, it was given to Schlaudecker for delivery. Its self-announced purpose was to secure credit; and the absolute, unconditional character of Reed’s promise to pay the debt thus created, coupled with the- extension of the credit sought, operated as an immediate acceptance by Reed’s own authority of his offer of suretyship. See Reigart v. White, 52 Pa. St. 438. In accordance with these views, we are of opinion
Finding of the Court.
We find in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the sum of $3,981.09, with interest from January 26,1897.