23 Misc. 109 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1898
The respondent leased certain premises in the city of Hew York to one Robert G. Bredin, for the term of one year, reserving therefor a rental which the lessee agreed to pay in equal monthly instalments. The lease also .contained a covenant by which the lessee bound himself to pay the Croton water rent assessed upon the premises during the term demised. It was a part of the. consideration of the letting that the appellant should guarantee the payment of the rent and the performance by Bredin of the other covenants contained in the lease which were to be performed by him. The guarantee, which was in writing, was accordingly executed and delivered simultaneously with the delivery of the lease. By its terms the appellant covenanted and agreed with the respondent that if default should at any time be made by the said Robert G. Bredin in the payment of the rent and the performance of the covenants contained in the lease on his part, to be paid and performed, he, the appellant, would well and truly pay such rent, and also all damages that might arise in consequence of the nonperformance of said covenants or either of them, without requiring notice of any such default from the respondent “ after all means have been exhausted against said Bredin.”
The sole question, therefore, which is presented by the record for our consideration is whether, as a matter of law, the proceedings taken by the respondent against Bredin satisfied the- condition of the guaranty expressed in the words “ after all means have been exhausted against said Bredin.” While it is conceded that the means thus referred to import legal remedies, it is still .claimed that the respondent ,was not entitled to rest upon the return of the ¡execution unsatisfied, but was «bound to take proceedings supplementary to execution against the" judgment debtor; and that, so long as there existed any remedy provided by law for the collection of a debt which had been untried by the respondent, the condition of the guaranty was unsatisfied and no action thereon .would lie. We do not consider this claim tenable. While it was entirely competent for the parities to the contract to have assented to such a condition, and to have made the limitation- upon the guarantor’s liability as biroad as the claim here made, they did not explicitly do so, but by the use of a general and somewhat inartificially framed stipulation, have left its meaning to be determined by the court as a matter ,of construction. *
The construction must bé a reasonable one, and in harmony with that which the court has placed Upon similar conditions. We are of the opinion that the guaranty in question was one of collection, and.that the liability of the appellant did not attach until the respondent had exhausted her remedies for the collection of the claim against the principal debtor. When this has taken place, it
In the case at bar the respondent has fully met the requirements of the law as thus laid down. , She was “ to ¡exhaust all means against ” the principal debtor; that is, she was bound to proceed against him first for the collection of the debt, and to employ all the remedies which in such cases the law declares to be appropriate for the purpose. When the execution against, the principal debtor was returned unsatis¡iied, she had complied with all which the law prescribed as necessary to establish the ¡ultimate fact on which the guarantor’s liability was in effect predicated, namely, the inability of the principal debtor to pay the debt, ¡and her right of action against the appellant became complete..
All that the appellant .urges here, in support of a more enlarged construction of the guaranty under consideration by reason of the
We find no reason, in the peculiar phraseology of the guaranty in this case, for the application of any different rule. As .we have already intimated, the parties could have extended the terms of . the condition so as .to include supplementary proceedings, but, upon' whát we think to be a reasonable construction of the very general language winch they have employed, we are of the opinion that 'they have failed to do so. It follows that the judgment below must be affirmed, with costs.
Gildeesleeve and Gibgbbich, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.