141 N.W. 64 | N.D. | 1913
(after stating the facts as above). A motion is made to dismiss the appeal, for the reason that the appellants have failed to perfect the same by serving and filing a sufficient undertaking within one year from the date of notice of entry of judgment. There is no doubt in our minds that the undertaking is defective. The justification, indeed, fails entirely to state that the sureties are worth “the sum therein mentioned, over and above their debts and liabilities not by
Respondent also moves for a dismissal of the appeal, for the reason that appellant has violated rule 16 of this court by failing to include in his abstract all of the evidence, exhibits, etc., necessary to a proper consideration of the case, as the same appear in the settled statement of the case. He is, however, in error in regard to the rule. Rule 16 applies merely to trials de novo, of which this is not one. Rule 12, it is true, requires all material parts of the record to be embodied in the abstract, but rule 13 gives to the respondent the opportunity to prepare an amended abstract if he deems the abstract of the appellant insufficient. We do not believe that any material exhibits were omitted. Even if they were, the omission would hardly be ground for the dismissal of the appeal.
Respondent also urges that the appellant has failed to file abstract and briefs within the time required by statute, and that therefore the appeal should be dismissed. The notice of appeal and undertaking on appeal were served upon the respondent in the latter part of August, 1911, and were filed in the office of the clerk of the district court on the 6th day of January, 1912. Respondent contends that, the record showing that the appeal was perfected more than sixty days prior to the April term of this court, it was necessary, under the statute, that the cause “should be heard at said term, unless, for good cause shown, it was continued,” and that since no steps were taken in the matter, or abstract or briefs filed until the month of August, 1912, the appeal must be deemed to have been abandoned. He cites § 7231, Rev. Codes 1905, which provides that, “unless continued for cause, all civil cases appealed to the supreme court shall be heard at the next succeeding term of court in either of the cases following: (1) When the appeal is taken sixty
Appellants, on the other hand, seek to excuse their delay by showing that the transcript was not obtained until May 15, 1911; that the statement of the case was settled June 22, 1911; that the notice of appeal and undertaking were served on the 22d day of July, 1911, and filed on the 6th day of January, 1912; that during February they sent the abstract to the printer, but that the'printer delayed and failed to get out the same in time for the April term of the court, though he did so in ample time for the October term, and that the abstracts were filed and served in ample time for the October term. Plaintiff and respondent insists, nevertheless, that the appeal should be dismissed, and that § 7231 of the statute is mandatory. Counsel cites the South Dakota cases of Todd v. Carr, 17 S. D. 514, 97 N. W. 720 ; Russell v. Deadwood Development Co. 16 S. D. 644, 94 N. W. 693 ; Bunday v. Smith, 23 S. D. 308, 121 N. W. 792 ; Whitcher v. Foote, 30 S. D. 39, 128 N. W. 1022 ; Neilson v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co. 27 S. D. 96, 129 N. W. 907. None of these cases, however, bear out his proposition in its entirety. In all of them the court exercised its discretion, or the motion for dismissal was made at the proper time. The statute, we believe, is not self-executing. All that it and the rules provide is that at the next succeeding term of court the cases shall be heard, and, unless the briefs and abstracts are filed, shall be dismissed unless good ground is shown for their continuance and they are continued hy the court. Plaintiff and respondent made no motion for a dismissal at the April term. If he had done so, this court, in its discretion, could have dismissed the appeal, or, on a proper showing, have continued the case until the October term. We hold, in short, that the statute is not self-executing, and since, under the showing in this case, the delay seems to have been excusable, we will now when the point is first raised deny the motion to dismiss the appeal.
Defendants and appellants assign as error the action of the court in admitting in evidence the original contract between the Rawleigh Medical Company and the defendant Laursen, for the performance of which the appellants are sought to be held as guarantors. On the trial the execution by the defendant Laursen and by the appellants was
So, too, it is to be borne in mind that appellants are sued not upon the original contract, but upon the guaranty thereto attached, and the original contract is only important in so far as it furnishes a measure of liability. The contract of guaranty provides: “In consideration of the W. T. Eawleigh Medical Company extending credit to the above-named person, we hereby guarantee to it, jointly and severally, the honest and faithful performance of the said contract by him, waiving acceptance and all notice, and agree that any extension of time or change of territory shall not release us from liability hereon. (Signed) C. J. Lee, Sam Blank.” The guaranty was merely an offer that if the Eawleigh Medical Company would accept the contract above mentioned, the
But appellants also insist that the guaranty was merely an offer of guaranty, and that, there being no proof in the record of an acceptance of the same directly communicated by the plaintiffs to the guarantors, no liability can be had thereunder. There is no merit in this contention. In their written offer, if offer it be, the guarantors expressly waived “acceptance and all notice,” and we see no reason why parties may not contract as they please, as long as the contracts which they make are not against public policy. At any rate, we have yet to find a case where a waiver of such notice of acceptance has been held to be a nullity. On the other hand, the validity of such agreements has been constantly upheld. 14 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 1149; Brandt, Suretyship, § 225; Hughes v. Roberts, J. & R. Shoe Co. 24 Ky. L. Rep. 2003, 72 S. W. 799 ; Davis Sewing Mach. Co. v. Rosenbaum, — Miss. —, 16 So. 340 ; People’s Bank v. Lemarie, 106 La. 429, 31 So. 138, 141 ; Bank of California v. Union Packing Co. 60 Wash. 456, 111 Pac. 573 ; Wadsworth v. Allen, 8 Gratt. 174, 56 Am. Dec. 137 ; Bickford v. Gibbs, 8 Cush. 154 ; Story, Contr. 5th ed. § 1133 ; Swisher v. Deering, 104 Ill. App. 572, affirmed in 204 Ill. 203, 68 N. E. 517. We realize ■that counsel for appellant seeks to distinguish some of these cases by alleging that in them not only was the notice of acceptance waived, but there was an express consideration of $1 or more for the guaranty. It is true that such expressed consideration existed in some of the cases cited, but in none of them was it made the foundation of the holding or •decision. The fact of the consideration, indeed, was absolutely ignored in all of them, and the holdings were based upon the proposition that the guarantor was “sui juris, and that no legal reason can be given why he could not agree to dispense with the notice of acceptance.” See Hughes v. Roberts, J. & R. Shoe Co. 24 Ky. L. Rep. 2003, 72 S. W. 799, 800.
We also are aware of the decisions in Standard Sewing Mach. Co. v. Church, 11 N. D. 420, 92 N. W. 805 ; William Deering & Co. v. Mortelle, 21 S. D. 159, 16 L.R.A.(N.S.) 352, 110 N. W. 86 ; and Emerson Mfg. Co. v. Tvedt, 19 N. D. 8, 120 N. W. 1094, cited by •counsel for appellant. In the two prior cases, however, there was no waiver of acceptance and notice, while the third case is an authority
The case, indeed, is almost parallel in principle with that of Garland v. Gaines, 73 Conn. 662, 34 Am. St. Rep. 182, 49 Atl. 19, and which case is undoubtedly supported by the authorities. In it a householder, being unwilling to rent some rooms to a college student without the guaranty of his father, signed a lease in duplicate, and sent the same to the boy, to be executed by him, and to have the guaranty at, the foot thereof signed by his father, they both being out of the state. The lease was signed and returned to the plaintiff, and the boy took possession of the rooms thereafter. He went away without paying the rent, and the father was sued. “It is true there must have, been a legal consideration for the contract of guaranty,” the court said, “but such consideration need not have moved from the plaintiff to the defendant. If the guaranty was executed contemporaneously with the lease, and was an essential ground of the credit extended to the lessee, that was a sufficient consideration. . . . If the guaranty was executed subse
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.