59 S.E. 540 | N.C. | 1907
Verdict and judgment for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed. Plaintiff, holding a valid account, past due, for goods sold and delivered to the Globe Publishing Company, to the amount of $286.88, and having some reason to complaint of inattention on the part of the company to his letters concerning it, placed the same in the hands of an attorney for collection. Defendant, who was the (148) president of the Globe Company, wrote protesting against such course, whereupon plaintiff wrote that if defendant would give notes for the account and indorse the same, the plaintiff would withdraw the claim from the hands of the attorney. Defendant replied, giving plaintiff general assurance of payment, but not offering to indorse any notes for the account. Thereupon plaintiff wrote defendant a letter containing this statement: "Now, please do not misunderstand us; we are making a claim against the Globe Publishing Company, and not against you, and if you have any confidence yourself in the Globe Publishing Company you will indorse the notes. Should we have a satisfactory settlement from you by Friday of this week, properly secured, we will withdraw the claim entirely from the hands of the attorney; otherwise, we will authorize him to proceed to collect the account by suit, if necessary. If you should decide to indorse the note, and will wire us at once, we will withdraw the claim immediately." In reply, defendant wrote, on 25 June instant, saying: "Will you be so kind as to hold up this account until 10 July? If so, I will guarantee that it will be paid on that date." Plaintiff immediately replied, agreeing to the delay.
The account was not paid, and some time thereafter the company became insolvent, and the present action was instituted against defendant, *108
personally, on the agreement contained in this written correspondence. Recovery was resisted by defendant, chiefly on the ground that the plaintiff was required to show that he had proceeded with diligence against the principal debtor. The evidence does not indicate very clearly that the plaintiff has been at all remiss in this respect, but, conceding that this should be established, we are of opinion that it would not avail to relieve defendant from liability, for the reason that the agreement shown by the correspondence is a guarantee of payment and not (149) simply of collection, and, on default of the principal, the defendant's obligation to pay became absolute. Cowan v. Roberts,
It is objected further that the court declined to permit defendant to testify as to what he intended by the letter in which he guaranteed the payment, to wit, that he only intended to give the promise as president of the company and not as an individual, citing in support of his position the case of Typewriter Co. v. Hardware Co.,
In the case before us the letters express the entire contract between the parties. The obligation on the part of the defendant is explicit and *109 absolute. The consideration, the assent to the delay asked for, is sufficient (Clark on Contracts, p. 121), and there is no reason shown why the plaintiff's recovery should not be sustained. The objection to the second deposition is without merit, and we find no error which gives defendant any just ground for complaint.
No error.
Cited: Basnight v. Jobbing Co.,