56 Ga. 72 | Ga. | 1876
1. This case has been long and anxiously considered; on my part, painfully. The true law of it, in so far as it involves the doctrine of guaranty, seems to me yet not quite free from doubt. Partly for that reason, I gave my consent to a reversal of the judgment, on terms, to afford opportunity for amending the first special plea. That plea, it will be perceived, does not rest simply on the law of guaranty in general, but strongly indicates that at the time the guaranty was entered into there may have been a promise by Shorter, express or implied, that he would call for the money then said to be ready. The plea is defective, (if it be the purpose of it to allege such a promise,) in not setting out what Shoter said on the occasion, or the fact that he was silent, giving ground tacitly to infer the promise. If, by word or conduct amounting to a promise, he induced Wright to believe that he would call for payment and get the money then said to be
2. In so far as the pleas, or any of them, rest alone on the bare law of guaranty, they are overruled by this court, as they were by the court below. Speaking for myself only, I will briefly classify guarantors, and then point out what I take to be the true position of some of them in regard to diligence on the part of creditors: Guarantors, viewed in reference to the consideration of their contract, are either mere sureties or more than sureties. They are mere sureties when the consideration of the guaranty moves, not to them, but to the person for whose performance they become bound. They are more than sureties when the consideration is a benefit flowing to themselves: 2 Parsons on Contracts, 21, 22 ; Code, section 2148. Regarded in reference to the substance of their contract, they undertake, either for the collectibility, or for the payment of the given debt. A guarantor of any class may, by his contract, limit his liability according to his own pleasure, and stipulate for such diligence or preliminary action on the part of the creditor as he may choose to exact. In the absence of any special terms, the most favored guarantors are those who are mere sureties and guarantee collectibility only; and the least favored are those who, for a consideration moving to themselves, guarantee payment. If the guaranty be of the payment of a pre-existing debt, and expressed in general terms, the guarantor, if a mere surety, cannot insist on a higher degree of diligence in the creditor than could be exacted in the same case and under the same circumstances, in behalf of
3. The third head-note needs no expansion. It can scarcely be questioned as law; and the plea to which it applies, taken as a whole, presents no valid defense.
4, 5. The fourth and fifth head-notes are full enough; and if in need of authority, will be found supported by 6 Lansing, 56, and 6 Blackford, 389; see, also, 31 Alabama, 435.
6. The ground upon which this case is distinguished from that in 37 Georgia Reports, 423, is indicated in the sixth head-note. Here there is a legal subject matter in existence; in that case there was none.