49 S.E. 325 | S.C. | 1904
November 12, 1904. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action against James S. Blalock, L.W.C. Blalock and Mrs. M.E. Browning, individually, and as partners, and against the corporation known as the Goldville Manufacturing Company, of Goldville, S.C. to recover the price of certain machinery alleged to have been sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendants. After the commencement of the action, all the defendants except Mrs. M.E. Browning went into bankruptcy, and no judgment was claimed against them.
Mrs. Browning answered the complaint, denying that she was a partner, and setting up the defenses that she was released from her liability as guarantor by reason of the fact that the time for payment was extended by the plaintiff without her consent, and that the indebtedness was satisfied by notes given on the 1st day of May, 1901. On the 30th day of July, 1900, the plaintiff proposed to the Goldville Cotton Mill to furnish it certain machinery to be delivered about the 15th of December, 1900, for $9,104.52, upon the following terms: "One-half cash, one-fourth in six months, one-fourth in twelve months. Payments to be made in current exchange. Deferred payments secured by bankable notes bearing interest at six per cent. per annum. The builders will furnish men to erect machinery, you paying $4.00 per day for erection while at mill, and furnish common labor for unboxing, cleaning and assisting in erecting the same." This proposition was accepted.
On the 7th September, the following instrument of writing was executed: "Whereas, the Goldville Manufacturing Company, Goldville, S.C. have purchased machinery from the Providence Machine Company, Providence, R.I., amounting to nine thousand one hundred and four dollars and fifty-two cents ($9,104.52), payable one-half cash, one-fourth in six months; one-fourth in twelve months; deferred payments to be secured by bankable notes, bearing interest at six per cent. per annum. We hereby agree to indorse the said notes, and *151 should the Goldville Manufacturing Company fail to pay for the said machinery on terms of contract made between themselves and the Providence Machine Company, dated July 30th 1900, or shall fail to pay any notes when due which are given in payment, we, the undersigned, do hereby bind and obligate ourselves jointly and severally each with the other and with the Providence Machine Company to make good and pay to the Providence Machine Company the amounts which may be due them in accordance with contract above mentioned.
Goldville Manufacturing Co., per J.S. Blalock.
J.S. Blalock, L.W.C. Blalock, M.E. Browning.
Goldville, S.C. September 7th, 1900."
On the first day of May, the notes were made. The one described in the complaint is as follows:
"$2,317.10. Goldville, S.C. May 1st, 1901.
Six months after date, we promise to pay to the order of Providence Machine Company, two thousand three hundred and seventeen and 10-100 dollars, at Providence, Rhode Island, with interest thereon, and at six per cent. per annum, value received.
Goldville Manufacturing Co., J.S. Blalock, President.
L.W.C. Blalock, Secy. and Treas.
Signed on back J.S. Blalock and L.W.C. Blalock."
The letter acknowledging the receipt of the notes is as follows:
"Providence, R.I., May 6th, 1901.
Goldville Manufacturing Co., Goldville, S.C.
Gentlemen: Two notes duly to hand. Enclosed find statementin settlement. The item of $81.94 is for interest on $4,552.26, on one-half of account from date due, January 12th to May 1st, date of notes (would refer you to your letter of April 22).
Yours truly, W.C. Pierce, Treas." *152
The following is a copy of the statement enclosed in the letter:
"Providence, R.I., May 1st, 1901.
Goldville Manufacturing Co. to Providence Machine Co.,
Dr.
1900. For account rendered.
Dec. 12. For merchandise per bill rendered ...................... $9,104 52
1901. Cr.
Jan. 31. By cash .................... 4,552 26
108 days interest, from January 12th to May 1st ...................... 81 94 ________ $4,634 20
Cr.
May 6. By note, May 1, 6 mos ........ $2,317 10 By note, May 1, 12 mos ....... 2,317 10 _________ $4,634 20
Settled as above, May 6th 1901.
Providence Machine Company, by F. Pierce." The machinery was shipped on the 10th and 12th of December, 1900, to the Goldville Manufacturing Co., which was incorporated on the 23rd of October, 1900. Mrs. Browning became a stockholder if not also a director of this corporation. The cash payment was made, but notes for the deferred payments were not signed by Mrs. Browning nor indorsed by her. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed upon numerous exceptions.
After the Circuit Judge had submitted the case to the jury, they came into the Court room for further instructions, and upon being asked by the presiding Judge whether their difficulty arose from a difference of opinion as to the law or as to the facts, the foreman replied, "It seems to be a diversity of opinion as to when this note should have been given." The presiding Judge thus concluded his second charge to the jury, which states succinctly his construction of the contract: "The notes should have been given when the machinery was delivered or within a reasonable time thereafter. When it was delivered, is a matter of fact for you. What is a reasonable time, is a matter of fact for you to find out, and if you were to find that the notes were not given within a reasonable time afterwards, then under the law that would be a change of the contract, as I construe the paper, and a change of the contract, if ever she guaranteed the contract, would release her, so far as the guaranty is concerned. I am asked to charge you, if there was a change, and she consented or acquiesced in it, what would be the effect? Well, if this lady, if there was a change, and she consented or acquiesced in it with full knowledge, then it would not release her; but if there was a change without her knowledge, without her consent and acquiescence, then she would not be." The assignments of error to this charge are as follows:
"The errors being: (1) Laying down too narrow a limit for the giving of the notes; (2) in not declaring the law of reasonable time, but leaving it to the jury; (3) in not charging that three or four months under the circumstances was not an unreasonable time; (4) in violation of sec. 26. art. V., of the State Constitution, by charging the jury in respect to matters of fact, in saying that if the notes were not given at the delivery of the machinery or not within a reasonable time thereafter, the contract was changed and the guarantors released; (5) the change, if any, was immaterial, a mere *154 delay, non-action on the part of the guarantors as well as principal debtor and the actual delay of four and one-half months was not, as a matter of law, an unreasonable time under the circumstances; (6) because the defendant, as guarantor, is estopped to plead delay in the execution of the notes, as she was at fault in not signing notes, and in not making request upon the creditor to hasten up the transaction; and was a director and stockholder at the time of the execution of the notes, and was represented by her agent, L.W.C. Blalock, in her connection with the mill; (7) because the machinery had to be erected before the full performance of the contract; (8) the guaranty enlarges upon the terms of sale, and stipulates for two classes of notes; first, indorsed bankable notes, as security for the credit portion of the purchase money; second, any kind or form of notes given in payment not security when due, not necessarily at six or twelve months from delivery of the machinery."
On the former appeal in this case (
Furthermore, the charge was erroneous in that the Circuit Judge expressly charged, or necessarily assumed as a fact, which was set up as a defense, that the notes materially changed the terms of the contract by extending the time of payment, or that the notes were accepted in satisfaction of the indebtedness, which fact was also relied upon as a defense in the answer. Mere indulgence extended the principal by the creditor will not discharge the guarantor. Shubrick
v. Russell, 1 DeS. Eq., 315; Witte v. Wolfe,
In the application of these principles, the jury must determine whether there was such a change in the contract as to release the defendant. Merely construing the language of the warranty, it is manifest that the parties did not contemplate that the giving of the notes in "payment" of the indebtedness should be "in settlement" of the liability resting upon the obligors under the terms of the warranty. Therefore, if the words "in settlement" in the letter and statement were used in the sense of the word "payment," as intended by the parties in the guaranty, then they do not show that the plaintiff intended to release the defendant from her obligation as a guarantor. Whether the words were so used, presents a question of fact for the jury.Glover v. Gasque,
It will thus be seen that the liability of the defendant was dependent upon the intention with which the notes were *157 executed and not upon the question whether they were made within a reasonable time after the delivery of the machinery. The charge of his Honor, the presiding Judge, was, therefore, erroneous.
The next question for consideration is whether his Honor erred "in allowing the defendant's attorney, against the plaintiff's objection, to introduce in evidence a statement of F. Pierce, the book-keeper of the plaintiff, purporting to show an alleged settlement of the account by notes of Goldville Manufacturing Co.; the error being that it does not come within the scope of the authority of a book-keeper to make contracts for the company." The statement, as we have said, was enclosed in the letter hereinbefore mentioned, which was written in reply to one of the Goldville Manufacturing Co. The statement was adopted by W.C. Pierce, who had the authority to make or alter contracts entered into with the company, and the ruling was correct.
The first exception is as follows: "I. His Honor, the presiding Judge, erred, it is respectfully submitted, in excluding the testimony offered by the plaintiff at the trial in the following particulars: (1) In the deposition, de beneesse, of William C. Pierce, the statement of L.W.C. Blalock that the Goldville Manufacturing Co. was a partnership, composed of Jas. S. and L.W.C. Blalock and Mrs. M.E. Browning. (2) The testimony of the defendant, Mrs. M.E. Browning, as a deposition, de bene esse, taken upon her own motion before O.K. Mauldin, Esq., notary public, and used in evidence in the former trial of the case. (3) The questions propounded by plaintiff's attorney to the witness, L.W.C. Blalock, as to what was the object of the promoters of the Goldville Manufacturing Co. in having it incorporated; what was the cost of building and equipping the mill, and the amount of the debts owing by the Goldville Manufacturing Co. and its promoters, when it was chartered on October 23, 1900. (4) The record or judgment roll of the Court of Common Pleas for Laurens *158 County, in said State, in the case of the C.N. L. RailroadCo. v. the Goldville Manufacturing Co., of Goldville, S.C. the object of the testimony being to show the insolvency of the Goldville Manufacturing Co. on January 6, 1901, and the extent of its indebtedness. (5) Duplicate schedules of assets and liabilities of the Goldville Manufacturing Co., of Goldville, S.C. of Jas. S. and L.W.C. Blalock, being records in bankruptcy of the District Court of the United States for the District of South Carolina. (6) The question propounded by the plaintiff's attorney to the witness, L.W.C. Blalock, to refresh his memory, if he had not stated in a letter to Sexton Robbins Company, agent of plaintiff, as to who composed the firm of the Goldville Manufacturing Co."
The first assignment of error cannot be sustained, for the reason that the mere declarations of a person are not admissible in evidence for the purpose of establishing the fact that another is a member of a partnership.Bank v. Anderson,
Neither can the second assignment of error be sustained. The testimony seems to have been taken under section 2878 of the Code of Laws, and if so, either of the parties to the action had the right to call for its production.Pulaski v. Ward, 2 Rich., 119; Petrie v. R.R.,
The third assignment of error does not state in what particulars the ruling was erroneous.
It may be that the testimony mentioned in the *159
fourth and fifth assignment of error was admissible under the ruling in Fales v. Browning,
The sixth assignment of error is not well taken. The testimony which the plaintiff's attorney sought to educe from the witness was irrelevant, unless the object was to show by the declarations of the witness that Mrs. Browning was a member of the partnership. We have hereinbefore shown that such testimony was inadmissible.
The tenth exception is as follows: "Because his Honor erred in charging defendant's first and second requests as follows: `Persons may associate themselves together for the purpose of forming a corporation without being partners and without rendering themselves liable as partners;' and second, `when a corporation is formed and one takes stock therein, he does not incur any liability as partner' — the error being that said propositions were inapplicable to the case and misleading, as the testimony shows that the promoters contracted debts as partners in building the mill and purchasing the machinery before the corporation was formed." It is not contended that the propositions of law embodied in the requests to charge were not sound, but that they were inapplicable and misleading in this case. The reason assigned by the appellant to show why they were inapplicable and misleading, is that the testimony shows that the promoters contracted debts as partners. This ground rests upon the assumption of a fact that was in dispute and hotly contested. This exception must, therefore, be overruled.
The eleventh exception is as follows: "Because his Honor erred in charging defendant's third request, as follows: `A person cannot be made a partner against his will; so that if one does not consent to become a partner and does not permit his or her name to be used as a partner, there can be no ground of liability as such.' The *160 error being to ignore the law of a silent or dormant partner, because he may be held liable as a partner upon acts merely, such as the contribution of two or more persons of property, labor or skill, in some lawful purpose for their common benefit, although they may deny or be ignorant of the relation of partnership or its results." Again, it is not contended that the proposition in the request was unsound, but that his Honor should have charged the law as to silent or dormant partners. If the appellant desired the Circuit Judge to charge the law as to dormant partners, requests should have been presented to that effect. The exception cannot be sustained.
The views hereinbefore expressed practically dispose of all the questions in the case.
It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed and the case remanded to that Court for a new trial.