164 Iowa 421 | Iowa | 1914
The plaintiff’s action is brought upon the following written contract:
June 3, 1908.
Whereas, the directory board of the Des Moines Corn Milling Company of Des Moines, Iowa, have authorized the
Now therefore, in consideration of the premises and in order to enable said company to secure loans or credit for the sum above mentioned, each of the undersigned agrees to guarantee and does hereby absolutely and without condition guarantee that said company will pay all loans and credits which it may secure from the Valley National Bank of Des Moines, Iowa, when due, according to the terms of the instruments evidencing the same, to the extent of the par value of said stock now owned by him as shown below, said guaranties being several and not joint, and will on default of said company on. demand made by said bank, pay said sum to be credited on indebtedness of said company to said bank.
And H. H. Polk and G. B. Hippee hereby absolutely without condition guarantee that they have the power and authority to bind and do hereby bind the estate of Jefferson S. Polk by this agreement, and each of the undersigned hereby waives notice of acceptance of this guaranty and all other notices of every kind necessary or proper to be given either before or after the giving of said credit.
The undersigned also guarantees that said loans have been duly authorized by the board of directors of said company and that it has the legal right to make said loans in the maximum aforesaid.
The aggregate amount of the loans and credits guaranteed hereby shall not at any time exceed thirty thousand dollars, and this guaranty shall cover all loans and credits not in excess of said sum during the year 1908, including renewals, extension, and new loans, the intention being that the guaranties shall not end with the payment of this indebtedness originally incurred up to the limit stated, but shall include all indebtedness up to said limit during the year 1908.
This guaranty shall cover loans made during the year 1908 and no other, and shall not exceed thirty thousand dollars ($30,000). And the parties hereby further agree to pay
Name. No. of Shares.
N. T. Guernsey. Ten (10) guaranteeing $1,000.
Estate of Jefferson S. Polk. Thirty (30) guaranteeing $3,000.
H. H. Polk. Fifty-one (51) guaranteeing $5,100.
Alice K. Polk. Ten (10) guaranteeing $1,000.
G. B. Hippe. Thirty (30) guaranteeing $3,000.
P. J. Mills. Twenty (20) guaranteeing $2,000.
Chas. S. Den-man. Eighteen (18) guaranteeing $1,800.
D. S. Chamberlain. Thirty-seven (37) guaranteeing $3,700.
Jansen Haines. Six (6) guaranteeing $600.
J. B. Weaver, Jr. Six (6) guaranteeing $600.
Wilton McCarthy. Six (6) guaranteeing $600.
L. E. Harbach. Five (5) guaranteeing $500.
J. H. Cownie. Twelve (12) guaranteeing $1,200.
J. H. Polk. Thirty-five (35) guaranteeing $3,500.
B. F. Kauffman. Five (5) guaranteeing $500.
The defendant has little standing room for his defense. All that is claimed against him is the amount separately guaranteed by him. No other party to the contract has resisted its obligations. The contract is something more than a contract of mere guaranty; it is signed by the stockholders of the borrowing corporation. The signers purport to be parties in “interest.”
The following excerpts from Bank v. Gay, 57 Conn. 224 (17 Atl. 555, 4 L. R. A. 343), is quite in point:
Courts, when called upon to construe contracts guaranteeing the faithful discharge of the duties of an office, adhere closely to the letter, for this reason: That the obligor has assumed a burden of responsibility solely for the benefit of another, without compensation or possibility of profit to himself, and therefore the law will add nothing to it by way of presumption. In the ease before us the defendant, with others, desired to become a manufacturer, of course, for pecuniary profit. For the purpose, among others, of putting a limit to individual responsibility for losses, they associated themselves under the statute as a joint-stock .corporation. Being unwilling individually to contribute the necessary capital from money in hand, they determined to borrow it from the plaintiff. For convenience in the transaction of the business, the money was borrowed upon ,notes made by the corporation. To avoid the inconvenience of indorsements by several individuals of each of a large number of original notes and the renewals thereof, the obligors made one comprehensive continuing contract of indorsements in the form of a guaranty under their respective hands and seals. In effect, there
Apart from the question of beneficial consideration, however, the very terms of the contract will bear no other construction than that put upon it by the trial court.
In Savings Bank v. Boddicker, 105 Iowa, 548, a guaranty contract was construed which was less emphatic and specific in its terms than the one under consideration. Such contract contained the following provisions: “It is the intention and purpose of this instrument or obligation to fully protect and indemnify the said Benton County Savings Bank or its assigns against any and all loss by reason of the failure of the said Miller & Sons to pay their indebtedness now owing (or which may be contracted hereafter) to the said Benton County Savings Bank. ’ ’ Construing such provision this court said:
The evidence tended to show that the time of paying some of the indebtedness of J. S. Miller & Sons which existed when the bond in suit was given was afterwards extended, and that new indebtedness was thereafter contracted; and it is insisted that the bond does not cover either class of indebtedness. The bond, in terms, covered the indebtedness of the firm which it owed to the plaintiff at the time the bond was given, or which should thereafter be contracted. . . . But all the provisions of the bond must be construed together, and, when that is done, it is clear that the bond was intended to secure the payment of the indebtedness of the firm to the plaintiff which existed at the time the bond was given, and also that which should be created by contract thereafter. The provisions were sufficiently broad to include renewals of existing debts, as well as those which should otherwise accrue, for the continuance of the business of the firm was evidently contemplated, and contracts for the extension of existing debts were as much within the scope and purpose of the bond as were those which should be thereafter created.
Somewhat in point also are the following cases: Hoyt v. Quint, 105 Iowa, 444; Iron Co. v. Cutlery Co., 130 Iowa, 736;
The judgment below was right, and it is accordingly —Affirmed.