145 P. 153 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
This is an action on a guaranty. The appeal is by defendant from a judgment and from an order denying him a new trial. Defendant also appeals from an order refusing to dissolve an attachment.
Plaintiffs are assignees of Gage, Mills Co., a partnership, and the action is brought for the reasonable value and the alleged contract price of lumber alleged to have been sold and delivered by said partnership to the Metropolis Construction Company, a corporation, and is founded upon a written instrument of guaranty signed by defendant in the words and figures as follows:
"San Francisco, Cal., Dec. 21st, 1909.
"MSS. GAGE MILLS CO., "No. 2005 Market St., City.
"Gentlemen:
"In consideration of having delivered lumber other materials that you will continue to deliver same to the Metropolis Construction Co. of No. 24 Cal. St. — I hereby guarantee the payment — at due date — of all the accounts for goods already delivered to be delivered to the above Construction Co. in the future.
"Yours truly, "A. W. REINECKE.
"Witness: Louis P. Schwerdt."
The answer admits the execution by the defendant of the said instrument of guaranty, but denies all the other material allegations of the complaint, and pleads exoneration of the guaranty under section
After trial, the court found in favor of the plaintiffs on all the issues and judgment was accordingly entered against the defendant for the sum of $6319.91, being the amount of plaintiffs' *698 demand and interest from the time of commencing suit to the rendition of judgment. The defendant owned one share of stock in the Metropolis Construction Company. He was also, as he termed it, "accommodation treasurer" of the corporation, but performed none of the duties of that office. The partnership had been selling lumber to the corporation for several weeks, when W. L. B. Mills, a member of the partnership, prepared the instrument of guaranty here declared on, and sent it by Louis P. Schwerdt, a salesman of the partnership, to the defendant, with the request that the defendant should sign the same, which the defendant did. Originally, and for several months after the guaranty was made, the partnership was selling to the corporation "cash on sixty days." Subsequently the corporation being slow in its payments the partnership refused to give the corporation sixty days' time to pay its bills; and it was accordingly arranged between them that thirty days' time should be given the corporation when if it could not pay, notes at between thirty days and sixty days would be accepted. Under this arrangement, the partnership accepted a series of notes from the corporation, commencing in May, 1910, and ending in November, 1910, which notes were payable in thirty, thirty-five, forty-five, and sixty days after date. The notes given by the corporation to the partnership to and including September, 1910, were all paid by the corporation at maturity. A note given October 31, 1910, payable in thirty days, was also paid at maturity. The corporation, however, gave and the partnership accepted two notes which are unpaid for goods sold in September, 1910, also two notes for goods sold in October, 1910, which are not paid. These notes were given and accepted by the partnership in each instance thirty days after the sale and for a sufficient number of days to make the day of payment in each instance more than sixty days after the sale.
It is the contention of the defendant that these four notes, aggregating five thousand one hundred dollars, extended the time of payment of the amount, and that the acceptance of such notes by the partnership, under the terms of section
There can be no doubt that if what was done in this case as to each of the notes would amount to an extension of the *699
time of payment thereof beyond what was understood by the parties to be meant by the term "due date," the defendant was exonerated, and plaintiff cannot recover. (Daneri v. Gazzola,
But, as by the terms of the guaranty the credit was not limited or restricted in any respect as to time, we think that any reasonable change as to the length of the credit would not relieve the guarantor from his liability thereunder, unless such term of credit materially changed the contract of *700 guaranty. It is not claimed that the terms, as changed, were unreasonable.
When the guaranty was executed, the period of credit was sixty days. Subsequently, in order that the corporation and the partnership might continue business relations, that period of credit was changed and a new date of payment was agreed on, — namely, that thirty days' credit should be given, at the expiration of which the account was to be paid or at the option of the corporation it was to give its note for some period of time varying according to circumstances from thirty to sixty days. Under these facts it is apparent that the giving of the notes was a part of the new arrangement which did not, in any material respect, change the contract of guaranty, and they marked the period of credit within which the payments were to be made. This brings the guarantor within the terms of his guaranty, — namely, that the accounts would be paid at "due date," and his liability follows.
Coming now to the proposition of whether or not the notes may be regarded as having been given and accepted as absolute payment, little need be said. Receipts for the notes and entries in the books of account kept by the partnership refer to the notes as having been received in payment. This, with other evidence in the record, would be sufficient, no doubt, to support a finding that the notes were accepted by the partnership as payment (Jenne v. Burger,
As to the appeal from the order denying a motion to dissolve the writ of attachment issued in the above entitled action, it appears that the ground of the motion was that *701
the writ of attachment issued for a greater amount than that stated in the affidavit. Assuming that this was true, in which event the motion would be well founded (Finch v. McVean,
Taking up the last point made by defendant, we think it equally clear that a contract of guaranty is a contract "for the direct payment of money." It is a collateral contract for a "direct payment of money." If the payment is "direct," it is immaterial whether the obligation is principal or collateral. (Hathaway v. Davis,
It follows from what has been said that the appeal from the judgment and from the order refusing a new trial, as well as the appeal from the order refusing to dissolve the attachment, should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Lennon, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 5, 1915. *702