5 Ga. App. 279 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The controlling question in the case arises upon the construction of the contract signed by Cheshire and Bush. If this is a contract of guaranty, the demurrer on the ground of misjoinder
It is insisted, however, that by the provisions of our Civil Code,. §2966, the writing sued on is a contract of suretyship, since in. a contract of guaranty the consideration must be “a benefit flowing-to the guarantor.” Always when the promisee incurs legal detriment in exchange for the promise, it is sufficient to make the-promise binding, and it is' immaterial whether the benefit which, is the counterpart of the detriment inures directly to the promisorhimself or to some one else for whose benefit he made the promise. Furthermore, it is ip be presumed that ha receives some^
The nature of a contract is to be determined from the language used, together with the other circumstances of the transaction. Since the contract of guaranty is a separate undertaking and is often entered into before or after the main contract to which it is collateral, it quite frequently happens that it is supported by an independent consideration; and the presence of such a consideration may be a circumstance indicating guaranty and not suretyship. But, as we have already said, the fundamental difference between these two classes of contracts is that the surety is primarily liable, while the guarantor is only secondarily liable; the surety joins in the promise which his principal makes, while the guarantor makes a separate and individual promise in which his principal may or may not join, the sole purpose of which is to give the creditor additional recourse in the event he is unable to make his money out of the rights given him by the main contract. The fact that the promisor receives no independent benefit from the consideration which makes his promise binding does not of itself impose upon him primary liability, when the language used and the other circumstances of the transaction clearly indicate only contingent and secondary liability. When a man promises to become sponsor for the debt of another, his promise is to be strictly construed. Civil Code, §2968. The wise man wrote, “He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it, and he that hateth surety-ship is sure.” Proverbs, XI, 15. When men, disregarding this ancient warning, take upon themselves the obligation which Judge Lumpkin has called “a lame substitute for a thorough knowledge of human nature,” every ambiguity and doubt is to be resolved, not so as to increase, but so as to decrease the burdens thereb3r assumed. Jones v. Whitehead, 4 Ga. 397, 402. As has been said by Chief Justice Marshall, “The law will subject a man, having no interest in the transaction, to pay the debt of another, only when his undertaking manifests a clear intention to bind himself
Judgment reversed.