22 Me. 164 | Me. | 1842
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
— Cases of guaranty are scarcely to be assimilated to those of indorsers, under the mercantile law of bills of exchange and promissory notes, in any of the rules, as to demand and notice. Clark & al. v. Burditt, 2 Hall, 197; 1 Story’s R. 22; Lee v. Dick, 10 Peters, 482. A guarantor
As to the offer of a bond, &c. in lieu of the guaranty, in this case it was but a proposition on one side, not acceded to on the other, and could not affect the rights of the plaintiff under the guaranty.
As to the third ground relied upon in the defence, against a portion of the plaintiff’s claim, we are of opinion that it cannot prevail. The order was sold to the plaintiffs by the defendant bona fide and absolutely in toto. The property in it therefore became wholly the plaintiff’s. It was the intention, for aught that appears, that he should avail himself of the whole amount due of the drawees; and if he could not, that the defendant should be responsible for it. And this view of the point, if authority were necessary to sustain it, is fully borne out by the case of Oakley v. Boorman, 21 Wend. 588.
Exceptions overruled and judgment on the verdict.