8 Watts 361 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
If the maker was insolvent, the contract was broken the instant it was made, and the guarantee had an immediate right of action on it. The words of a guarantor are to be taken as strongly against him as the sense will bear, tempered, however, by the circumstances of the occasion. To warrant that a debt is collectible, therefore, is to warrant that it is legally demandable, and that the debtor is of competent ability to answer it —not that he will pay it when demanded by execution. That an execution would be a very satisfactory test of his ability, is indubitable; but that it is the only legitimate one, is disproved by those cases in which insolvency has been established by matter in pais, as legal excuse for an omission of notice by an endorsee; and it would be unreasonable to exact a greater measure of proof from a guarantee, by suspending his remedy till he had demonstrated that there had been a breach of the contract by actual experiment, a condition which, in this case, was not expressly or impliedly prescribed. It is, indeed, possible that an action prosecuted to extremity, might have extorted the debt from the sympathies of the debtor’s friends; but it is equally possible that an adverse title, though perfect, in all its parts, might be rendered unavailing-by some unforeseen accident in an ejectment against the vendee of a warranted title, yet he is not bound to hold the possession till it is wrested from him by process, to enable him to have recourse to his covenant of warranty. These are remote contingencies, which, unless they are specially provided for, enter not into the stipulations of a contract. Where, indeed, an action against the principal debtor is made a condition precedent by the terms of the guaranty, it must first be prosecuted to execution; but that it was intended to be a condition, must appear from some circumstance or expression in the contract.
But the proof, as it was offered, would not have shown the plaintiff to be a party to the guaranty. By the seventeenth section of the British statute of frauds, a promise to answer the debt of another must be in writing, and the names of the parties, in England,
Judgment affirmed.