The evidence, which was excluded, would have warranted a finding that the plaintiffs conducted themselves in the matter of collecting the rent now sued for without that care, which a man of ordinary prudence would have devoted to it, and that the defendant has suffered from not knowing that the rent was not paid by the tenant for twenty-three months before the plaintiffs made a demand upon him for it; but it would not have warranted a finding of fraud, or facts tantamount to fraud.
It is true that there is a statement in the opinion of Mr. Justice Wells in Vinal v. Richardson which supports the defendant’s contention; in that case, he said: “Formal notice is not necessary in order to charge the guarantor with liability. All the cases agree that in this respect there is a distinction between an indorser and a guarantor. Negligence of the holder of the guaranty, in permitting the claim to slumber, when the guarantor might reasonably suppose it had been paid when due, or in the usual course of business, is the real ground on which the guarantor is exonerated. It is delay without notice, not the bringing of a suit without notice, that is fatal to the holder of the guaranty.” But that proposition,' which was obiter in Vinal v. Richardson, is not consistent with Watertown Ins. Co. v. Simmons, 131 Mass, 85, not cited at the argument in the case at bar, unless a distinction is to be drawn between a guarantor of rent to be paid each month and sureties on a bond conditioned for the monthly payment of sums to be collected by the principal of the bond. Watertown Ins. Co. v. Simmons was a case where suit was brought against the sureties on a bond, with the condition just stated, and the defence set up was that the plaintiff had failed to notify the sureties that for thirteen months before a demand wras made upon them, the principal had failed to make payment in full of the sums collected by him; it was held that this was not a defence, and on the ground that, “ the creditor owes no duty of active diligence to take care of the interest of the surety. It is the business of the surety to see that his principal performs the duty which he has guaranteed, and not that of the creditor.”
The defendant’s difficulty in this case is to make out that a lessor owes any duty to one who has guaranteed the payment of rent.
Where no duty is owed there cannot be negligence, as was lately decided by this court in Shepard & Morse Lumber Co. v. Eldridge, 171 Mass. 516. See also Patent Safety Gun Cotton Co. v. Wilson, 49 L. J. Q. B. (N. S.) 713.
The defendant has undertaken to make out that there is a duty on the creditor to give notice to the guarantor. He has undertaken to establish this, in the first place, on general principles, which are common to all cases where persons are secondarily liable; his proposition is that, in every such case, a creditor is bound so to conduct himself in dealing with one primarily liable as not unnecessarily or unreasonably to injure one secondarily liable. But no such duty is owed to those secondarily liable; the duty owed them is a much narrower one; it is to do no act which affects the rights, to which the surety is subrogated on meeting his guaranty, either in property held by the creditor as security for the debt guaranteed, or to bring suit against the principal debtor; if the creditor abstains from doing such an act, he has performed his whole duty to the surety. There is no duty upon the creditor to take active measures to collect the debt from the principal debtor or to notify the person secondarily liable that the principal debtor is in default; no authority beyond National Bank of South Reading v. Sawyer, ante, 490, and Watertown Ins. Co. v. Simmons, 131 Mass. 85, need be cited to that point.
There was nothing in the terms of the contract of guaranty in the case at bar which cast upon the lessor the duty of giving to the guarantor notice that the rent had not been paid. The terms of the guaranty in this case were that the defendant does “ hereby guarantee to the said lessors, their heirs and assigns, the true and punctual payment of the rent, taxes and interest reserved at the times and in the manner there mentioned, and, in default
If, therefore, there was any duty upon the lessor to give notice to the guarantor that the rent was in default, it must be found in the nature of the contract of a guarantor, and, after the decision in Watertown Ins. Co. v. Simmons, in the nature of the contract of a guarantor, as distinguished from the contract of a surety on a bond, such as was before the court in that case. The difference between the contract of a guarantor and the contract usually entered into by a surety, is that in case of a guarantor, the promise of the person secondarily liable is a collateral promise to pay, in case default is made by one who is primarily liable for the thing guaranteed, while a surety contracts directly as a principal to pay the sum of money for which he is secondarily liable. See Bigelow, J., in Allen v. Herrick, 15 Gray, 274, 285. So far as this difference is concerned, the contract of the surety upon a bond conditioned for the payment of sums collected by a third person, partakes of the nature of the contract of a guarantor and not of the contract of a surety. Moreover, in one of the earliest cases in England in which it was held that notice to a guarantor was not a condition precedent to his liability, the decision was put upon the ground that no such duty was owed by the creditor to the guarantor; it is the case of Brookbank v. Taylor, in the Exchequer Chamber, and reported in Cro. Jac. 685; that was a writ of error brought in an action to collect rent from a guarantor; the error assigned was “ because it is not alleged, that notice was given that the other had not paid.—Sed non allocatur; for he at his peril ought to take cognizance of the non-payment and pay the rent, otherwise the promise is broken.” To the same effect, see Baron Parke, in Walton v. Mascall, 13 M. & W. 452, 458; and Lord Eldon, in Wright v. Simpson, 6 Ves. 714, 734, who says: “ But the surety is a guarantee; and it is his business to see, whether the principal pays, and not that of the creditor.” No distinction, therefore, can be made between the contract of a guarantor and the contract of a surety on a bond, so far as this question is concerned, and what was said in Water-
There are doubtless expressions in the early cases in Massachusetts which countenance the proposition that a guarantor is in all cases entitled to notice of the principal debtor’s default. It was decided in this Commonwealth in Oxford Bank v. Haynes, that the guarantor of a note, even when the only person liable on it is the principal debtor, is entitled to such a notice and if he is damnified by not receiving it within a reasonable time, he is discharged; that case has been followed or recognized in many subsequent cases; Talbot v. Gay, 18 Pick. 534 ; Sigourney v. Wetherell, 6 Met. 553 ; Whiton v. Mears, 11 Met. 563 ; 564; Bickford v. Gibbs, 8 Cush. 154; Parkman v. Brewster, 15 Gray, 271; Protection Ins. Co. v. Davis, 5 Allen, 54, 58. This rule has been recognized for more than seventy years, and it is now too late to question it. When it was first adopted, it was assumed in England as well as in this Commonwealth that the guarantor of a note had the same right to notice that an indorser had, the only difference between the two being that in the case of a guarantor, notice could be given at any time before damage was sustained, and that damage from lack of notice had to be proved ; see Phillips v. Astling, 2 Taunt. 206; Van Wart v. Woolley, 3 B. & C. 439; and the later case of Hitchcock v. Humfrey, 5 M. & G. 559; the law seems to be otherwise settled in England to-day; see Walton v. Mascall, 13 M. & W. 72; but see Bindley, L. J., in Carter v. White, 25 Ch. D. 666, citing with approval Byles on Bills, (12th ed.) 295, who lays down the Massachusetts rule. The weight of authority is against the Massachusetts rule; the cases are collected in Ames, Cases on Suretyship, 240, note 1.
It has never been decided that the rule applied in Oxford Bank v. Haynes is one of general application. In Dole v. Young, 24 Pick. 250, Clark v. Remington, 11 Met. 361, and Paige v. Parker, 8 Gray, 211, it was assumed that the rule applied in case of a general guaranty for the payment of goods to be subsequently purchased ; and in Cabot Bank v. Bodman, 11 Gray, 134, it seems to have been assumed to be a rule of general application. But
It is not necessary to consider now whether notice must be given to the guarantor in cases like Lennox v. Murphy, 171 Mass. 370, in order to throw upon him the duty of seeing that the sums guaranteed by him are paid; it may be that in case of such a contingent guaranty, it is not the duty of the guarantor to see that the sums guaranteed are paid until the contingent guaranty has been made certain by notice stating what sums are due and when they are due, although such notice is not a condition precedent on which his liability depends. See in this connection Hoar, J., in Whiting v. Stacy, 15 Gray, 270.
However that may be, there is no case in this Commonwealth in which the rule of Oxford Bank v. Haynes has been enforced, in case the thing guaranteed is a debt, definite in amount and in time of payment; but, on the contrary, Chief Justice Shaw said, with reference to that case, in delivering the opinion of this court in Salisbury v. Hale, 12 Pick. 416, 424, which involved the question of a guaranty of rent: “ Without deciding whether the doctrines of that case can be extended beyond promissory notes and other mercantile contracts, we -are of opinion, upon the principles of that case, notice, in the present, was not necessary,” because there had been no change of circumstances.
We are of opinion that when the obligation of the guarantor Js to pay a definite sum at a definite time, it is his duty to see chat the sum guaranteed is paid, and that there is no duty on the creditor to give notice to the guarantor of a default in pay
Exceptions overruled.