Powers & Weightman v. Bumcratz
Powers & Weightman v. Bumcratz
Opinion of the Court
The point which has been made to sustain the demurrer to the petition, on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, is, that there is no statement of the acceptance of the guaranty, of notice of its acceptance, or of the credit which was given. The question, as to the necessity of such statements, to entitle
In the case of Douglass v. Reynolds, 7 Peters, 113-129, a letter was addressed by the defendants to the plaintiffs, in the following words: “ Gentlemen — Our friend, Mr. Chester Haring, to assist him in business, may require your aid, from time to time, either by acceptance Or indorsement of his paper, or advances in cash. In order to save you from harm, in so doing, we do hereby bind ourselves severally and jointly to be responsible to you, at any time, for a sum not exceeding eight thousand dollars, should the said Chester Haring fail to, do so.” On the trial of the case the court was asked to give as instructions to the jury, among others, the following propositions : 1. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letter of guarantee, they must prove that notice had been given, in a reasonable time after said letter of guarantee had been accepted by them, to the defendants that the same had been accepted. 2. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letter of credit, they must prove that, in a reasonable time after they had made advances, acceptances or indorsements for said Haring on the faith of .said letters of guarantee, they gave notice to said defendants of thé amount and extent thereof. 3. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letters of credit, they must prove that a demand of payment had been made of Chester Haring, the principal debtor, of the debt sued for; and in case of non-payment by him, that notice of such demand and non-payment should have been given in a reasonable time to the defendants; and in failure of such proof, the defendants are. in law discharged.”
The supreme court of the United States, in an opinion delivered by Story, J., held that the first proposition in point of law was correct, and said: “ A party giving a letter of guarantee has a right to know whether it is accepted, and whether the person to whom it is addressed means to give credit on the footing of it, or not. It may be most material, not only as to his' responsibility, but as to his future rights and proceedings. It may regulate, in a great measure, his course of conduct, and his exercise of vigilance in regard to the party
The first of these propositions, that as to notice of the ac
• It is manifest that the rule thus laid down, as shown by the statement of it, and the reasons for it, was regarded as belonging to the doctrine of notice, to the right or duty of a party under a contract to receive or give notice, and not as a rule of construction, bearing on the question of the inception of a contract. It appears to have been considered, as said in the case of Tuckerman v. French, 7 Greenleaf, 115, 116, as an implied condition in the guaranty, that notice should be given of its acceptance. But in the most recent case on the subject in the supreme court of the United States, The Louisville Manf. Co. v. Welch, 10 Howard, 461, 475, the court, speaking of notice of the acceptance of a guaranty, “ and of the intention of the party to act under it,” say: “ The rule, requiring this notice within a reasonable time after the acceptance, is absolute and imperative in this court, according to all the cases; it is deemed essential to an inceptióú of the contract.”
The expression “ of the intention to act under it,” in connection with the idea that the notice, “is essential to the inception of the contract,” will be noted. For it would be singular, if the notice of the acceptance of the guaranty, should be essential to the inception of the contract, and yet be subsequent to that which is the performance of the contract on the part of the guarantee, and constitutes its consideration. It will also be observed, that in some of the former cases the-first proposition as to notice of acceptance seems not to be distinguished from the second proposition, as to notice of advances made under the guaranty, but they apparently run into each other. The case of Russell v. Clark, 7 Cranch, 69-91, is cited as the earliest authority in the supreme court of the United States for both propositions. In that case, what was claimed to be a guaranty or letters of credit being under consideration, it was said by Marshall, C. J.: “ The court can not consider these letters as constituting a contract by which Ulark and Nightingale undertook to render themselves liable for the engagements of Robert Murray & Co. to Nathaniel Russell. Had it been such a contract, it would certainly have
“ The exactness and precision which peculiarly distinguish mercantile transactions,” and not the necessity for reciprocity of assent in a contract, was the idea in the mind of the chief justice. And it may be observed in passing, that could the rule he sanctioned be limited to merchants who are, or ought to'be, exact and precise in their transactions, it might be a very proper one; but there can not be one rule of law for such merchants, and another for ordinary men, who may have occasion to give or require guaranties — to the farmer, for example, who gives credit to the purchaser of his produce on the guaranty of a merchant. If, as to such men, to make a guaranty effectual, the three notices shown by the propositions in the case of Douglass v. Reynolds, were required, it would, in the language of the judge who decided that case, in an elaborate statement and re-examination of the doctrine he had aided so much to establish, “ throw such arduous duties on the guarantee (as I desire to call the party accepting the guaranty), as would materially tend to impair the utility and convenience of that instrument.” Wilder v. Savage, 1 Story R. 22-32.
In a statement of the doctrine in that case, the judge goes beyond notice of an intention to act on the guaranty, and appears to require consent, while his own language in Doug
It is not necessary to comment on the numerous cases in the state courts following the decisions in those of the United States, which discuss the doctrine as to notice of acceptance of a guaranty. The same uncertainty as to the principle on which the doctrine rests — as to the purpose and extent of the notice required — will be found to exist; and it may be added, that there is also uncertainty as to what, in point of time, would be regarded a reasonable notice, and what circumstances would dispense with the necessity for notice. Compare Crafts v. Isham, 13 Conn. 28, with New Haven Co. Bank v. Mitchell, 15 Conn. 206; Bushnell v. Church, Id. 406, and White v. Reed, Id. 457; Train v. Jones, 11 Verm. 444, and Oaks v. Weller, 13 Verm. 106, with Oaks v. Weller, 16 Verm. 63; Lowry v. Adams, 22 Verm. 160, and Noyes v. Nichols, 28 Verm. 159; Babcock v. Bryant, 12 Pick. 133, and Mussey v. Raynor, 22 Pick. 223, with Allen v. Pike, 3 Cush. 238; Norton v. Eastman, 4 Greenl. 521, and Tuckerman v. French, 7 Greenl. 115, with Howe v. Nickels, 22 Maine, 175; and see also, Woodstock Bank v. Downer, 27 Verm. 543; Beebe v.
In view of this uncertainty, it might well be questioned whether the doctrine was founded in correct principle, and adopted by the courts of the United States on a careful consideration of the authorities which they recognized as evidence of the rules of law. Accordingly, we find that in the most commercial state of the Union, all of the propositions in Douglass v. Reynolds have been denied to be law. In the case of Douglass v. Howland, 24 Wend. 35-49, the subject was discussed, and the authorities examined by Cowen, J., and he there says: “ I am aware that there are a class of cases which hold that, under a contract guaranteeing a debt yet to-be made by another, the guarantor is not liable to a suit without notice that the guaranty has been accepted and acted upon. Indeed they go farther: if notice of accepting the guaranty be not given within a reasonable time, no debt whatever arises. Babcock v. Bryant, 12 Pick. 133. I will only say, that these cases have no foundation in English jurisprudence, where the adjudications are numerous and clear the other way.” He then cites and comments on a number of English cases, and proceeds : “ I forbear to search farther for the English law, after the admission implied by Douglass v. Reynolds, 7 Peters, 113, 125. The question was there examined by Mr. Justice Story. The only English cases cited by him, are Oxley v. Young, 2 H. Bl. 613, and Peel v. Tatlock, 1 Bos. & Pull. 419, * * *. In Oxley v. Young, the surety was holden liable; and I do not find any countenance given to the idea, that notice was necessary by way of condition. The defendant ordered goods for another, and guaranteed that he should pay for them. They were accordingly shipped to him by the plaintiff, the guarantee. It is true, that notice of the shipment was given to the defendant; and he sought to raise a defense, on the subsequent neglect of the vendor. Eyre, C.J., said, the right to sue on the guaranty attached when the order was put in a train for execution, subject to its being actually executed; and the right could not be divested, even by the willful neglect of the
By referring to the quotation before made from Edmonston v. Drake, 5 Peters, 624, 637, it may not be entirely correct to say, that 0. J. Marshall does not cite an English case, he adopts the authorities quoted by counsel as unquestionably establishing the principle, and among those authorities are several English cases. The cases of Nisbet v. Smith, 2 Bro. C. C. 579, and Rees v. Barrington, 2 Ves., jr. 540, two of those cited are not cases of guarantors, but of sureties on bond, claimed to have been discharged by change of contract, or by giving of time. The case of Samuel v. Howarth, 3 Merivale, 272, another case cited, is the case of a guarantor, but he claimed to be discharged as a surety by the giving of time to the principal debtor. It is highly probable from the statement of the case, that there was no notice of the acceptance of the guaranty, of the advances under it, or of the default of the principal debtor, until after his bankruptcy, but no point was made on either of those grounds. A case is also cited from 1 Atk. 91, but the case there found has no manner of application, nor any case we have been able to find in that volume.
The ease of Skip v. Huey, 3 Atk. 91, was undoubtedly the one intended, and, like two of the others, is that of a surety
We have carefully examined the cases of Oxley v. Young, 2 H. Bl. 613, and Peel v. Tatlock, 1 Bos. & Pull. 419, and can not see how the fairness and correctness of the comment upon them of Cowen, J., before quoted, can be denied or disputed. If there be English cases sustaining the doctrine of Douglass v. Reynolds, they have not been cited in the decisions of the courts of the United States. In several of the cases decided in the state courts, English cases are cited. In Craft v. Isham, 13 Conn. 28, 39, which, though decided before Douglass v. Howland, had not been reported, and is therefore not, referred to by Cowen, J., it is said, as to the decisions in Douglas v. Reynolds, and Adams v. Jones, that, “ so far from being opposed to, or unsupported by, authorities, they are founded on principles which have long since been settled, and are familiar in Westminster-Hall. We barely refer to the authorities.” The cases cited are, McIver v. Richardson, 1 Maul. & Sel. 557; Gaunt v. Hill, 1 Stark. Ca. 10; Symons v. Want, 2 Stark. Ca. 371; Payne v. Ives, 3 Dowl. & Ry. 664; Glyn v. Hertel, 8 Taunt. 208; Bacon v. Chesney, 1 Stark. Ca. 192; Combe v. Wolf, 8 Bing. 156; Phillips v. Astling, 2 Taunt. 206; Morris v. Cleasby, 4 Maul. & Sel. 566.
The bearing on the point of some of these cases, it is difficult to perceive. Bacon v. Chesney, was the case of a guaranty for goods to be sold on eighteen months credit, and it was claimed that there had been a credit of only twelve, but it being shown there was a mistake, the plaintiff recovered.
It will be seen that in none of these cases is there anything as to the acceptance of a guaranty, and so far as any of them bear on the doctrine of notice, it is the duty of notice imposed by the contract, and that in reference to a collateral liability for the payment of a bill of exchange. 2 Taunt. 206. It was this duty of notice to which the reasoning of Cowen, J., in Douglass v. Howland, was directed, when he says: “The short answer which the English cases, decided long before our revolution, furnish, is, that the guarantor, by im quiring of his principal, with whom he is presumed to be on intimate terms, may inform himself perfectly, whether the guaranty were accepted, the conditions, fulfilled and payment made. Where that can be done, the cases all hold that notice is not necessary, even as preliminary to the bringing of an action, much less to found a right of action. The only exception is the well known one of collateral parties to bills of exchange and promissory notes.” Vide Phillips v. Astling, 2 Taunt. 206. It is evident that the necessity for reciprocity of assent in a contract, as the ground on which notice of the acceptance of a guaranty was required, had not then been claimed in any case, or it had not come under the notice of the judge. Now, after the declaration in the case cited from
The other cases cited in Crafts v. Isham, bear on that view of the question, but before proceeding to an examination of them, it may be observed, that the general application of the doctrine of notice to guaranties of future credit or advances, appears quite clearly to be contrary to the authorities, and the resort to a different ground became necessary. Authorities in addition to those cited in Douglass v. Howland, will be found collected in a 'note in 2 American Leading Cases, 57, 'which contains an able and thorough investigation of the whole subject.
It is said, in a modern work on contracts, “ Care must be taken in all cases to mark the distinction between a consummate and perfect guarantee, and a mere proposal, or offer, or tender of a guarantee, which must be accepted, and the acceptance notified to the maker, and his final assent to the engagement be obtained, ere it can become a perfect and conclusive contract.” Addison on Contracts, 113. The first case cited-to show this distinction is M’Iver v. Richardson, 1 M. & S. 557; one of the cases cited in Crafts v. Isham, and of which it was said by Wilde, J., in Allen v. Pike, 3 Cush. 241, that it was the leading case on the point of notice of acceptance of a guaranty of future credit or advances. He states the decision, says it has been followed by numerous similar ones in this country, naming Adams v. Jones, 12 Pet. 213; Eaton v. Tiffany, 2 Har. & Gill, 22; Norton v. Eastman, 4 Greenl. 821; Tuckerman v. French, 7 Greenl., 115, and Beekman v. Hale, 17 Johns. 134; and that “ The distinction is between an offer to guaranty a debt -about to be created, the amount of which the party making the offer does not know, and it is uncertain whether the offer will be accepted, so that he may be ultimately liable; and the case of an absolute guaranty, the terms of which are definite as to its amount and extent. In
An examination of M’Iver v. Richardson will show that no point was made, that a debt was about to be created; that the amount of the debt was unknown, or that it was uncertain whether the guaranty would be acted on, or that the terms were indefinite. The decision turned on the question, whether the writing imported a guaranty or only an offer to guaranty. The guaranty in M’Iver v. Richardson was in these words: “ I understand A. & Co. have given you an order for rigging, etc., which will amount to about four thousand pounds, I can assure you, from what I know of A.’s honor and probity, you will be perfectly safe in crediting them to that amount; indeed I have no objection to guaranty you against any loss from giving them this credit.” It was claimed by one of the counsel, Brougham, that the paper did not of itself import a guaranty, and at the utmost amounted only to a tender of a guaranty which had never been accepted. This, it was admitted in reply, was the question. The court said that the question was, “whether the paper imports to be a perfect and conclusive guaranty, or only a proposition tending to. a guaranty. The paper, therefore, must be construed according to the plain natural import of its terms. The import is, that the party signing it understood that A. & Co. had given an order for goods amounting to about 40001; that this order remained unexecuted; and then, as if a question had been put to the' defendant respecting the honor or probity of A. & Co., the defendant says: I can assure you from what I know of A., you will be perfectly safe in crediting them.to that amount; and then he adds, indeed, I have no objection to guaranty you against any loss from giving them this credit: which words-import, that if application were made he would guaranty. * * * Considering this as a mere overture to guaranty, it appears to us that the defendant ought to have had notice that it was so regarded, and meant to be accepted, or that there should-have been a subsequent assent on his part to convert it into a, conclusive guaranty.” 1 M. & S., 563.
It is proper to notice in this connection, another case, though not one of those cited in Crafts v. Isham. In Mozley v. Tinkler, 1 C. M. R. 692, the writing was this : “ E. informs me, that you are about publishing an arithmetic for him. I have no objection to being answerable as far as 502.; for my reference apply to B.” It was said by Parke, B.: u It is not necessary in a contract of this nature that both parties should be bound; it is sufficient if the party sued is shown to be liable. If the guaranty had stopped at the words “ 50h,” I should still have been inclined to think, on the authority of McIver v. Richardson, that the plaintiffs ought to have given notice to the defendant, that they had accepted his guaranty. But the subsequent words render the point quite clear, that the defendant only intended to be bound by the instrument, in case, upon inquiry, the plaintiffs should be satisfied with regard to his solvency.” 1 C. M. R. Exch. 696.
In each of these cases we find the court scanning and construing the language, to ascertain whether there was an absolute guaranty, or a mere offer to guaranty, requiring assent. The inference, therefrom, is very strong, that there was no rule known to those judges, that in every case of a guaranty of future credit or advances, there must be other evidence of acceptance, than acting on the guaranty.
The case of Payne v. Ives, does not appear to have been decided on the authority of M'Iver v. Richardson, but on its
It would be doing injustice to the courts which have held notice of the acceptance of a guaranty of future credit or ad
' In the case of Kennaway v. Treleavan, S. M. & W. 498, 501, it was said by Parke, B.: “A great number of the cases are of contracts not binding on both sides at the time when made, and in which the whole duty to be performed rests with one of the contracting parties. A guaranty falls under that class; when a person says — ‘ In case you chose to employ this man as your agent for a week, I will be responsible for all such sums he shall receive during that time, and neglect to pay over to you,’ — the party indemnified is not therefore bound to employ the person designated by the guaranty, but if he do employ him, then the guaranty attaches and becomes binding on the party who gave it.” In the case of Mills v. Blackall, 11 Q. B. 358, 364, it was said by Patteson, J.: “ The mutuality of obligation is not a sound criterion. In a contract of guaranty for further advances to a third person, the plaintiff is not always bound to make the advances; but the duty to see him harmless arises upon the advances being made.” And by Wightman, J., in the same case, the “ objection that -there is no mutual liability, would be of great weight, if the
We have examined some of those cases, in which the guaranty being indefinite as to the amount and time of the advances, something might be expected in the pleadings, or points made, as to notice of the acceptance of the guaranty, but nothing of the kind appears. Johnston v. Nichols, 1 C. B. 251; Chapman v. Sutton, 2 Id. 634; Boyd v. Moyle, Id. 644; Martin v. Wright, 6 Q. B. 917; Bell v. W. P. Bank of England, 9 C. B. 154; Harlor v. Carpenter, 3 J. Scott, 172; Hitchcock v. Humfrey, 5 M. & Gr. 559; Mayer v. Isaac, 6 M. & W. 605; Liverpool Borough Bank v. Eccles, 4 H. & N. Exch. 139; Allan v. Kenning, 9 Bingh. 618.
In the case of White v. Woodward, 5 C. B. 810, 814, it was claimed by counsel that “ the declaration should have averred notice to the defendant within a reasonable time after the supply of the goods.” He said this question was first broached in Peel v. Tatlock, 1 B. & P. 419, and notice held necessary by Dr. Story in Cremer v. Higginson, 1 Mason, 323, and 1 Story R. 22, 33. Cresswell, J., said, “ Suppose the defendant had no notice of the supply to Slaiter, and no notice of the non-payment by him, until the amount was demanded of him. What then? ” The counsel replied: “ The demand if within a reasonable time would be notice.” Wilde, C.J., “You do not show that it was not within a reasonable time. The defendant was liable ipso facto, upon Slater’s failure ta pay.” Such is the only mention of the doctrine as to notice
Our examinations into the decisions which have been cited as showing, that the doctrine of Douglass v. Reynolds was a common law doctrine, imposing no new burden on those using a well-known mercantile instrument, has been minute and particular, both on account of the importance of the question, and the fact that there has been a' previous decision in this state on the subject.
In the case of Taylor v. Wetmore, 10 (Ohio Rep. 490, the court, having decided the case on the ground that there was no contract with the plaintiffs, the letter of credit not having been addressed to them, but to another firm, say, that though this point is decisive, another question is made, which may as well be settled. The court then express an opinion, on the authority of the cases of Russell v. Clark and Adams v. Jones, which, as stated in syllabus, is, that “where a bill of goods is taken upon the faith of a letter of credit, notice of it must be given at once to the guarantor.” We are aware of the importance of adhering to former decisions, but do not think we are bound by an opinion which it was not necessary to express, and evidently was expressed without a thorough consideration of the question.. It is moreover a single case. (Gifford v. Livingston, 2 Denio, 380, 394, n.) It involves no rule of property, and, if followed, would impose the duty of giving notice in a business transaction, required neither by the doctrine of the common law on the subject, nor by wise policy.
A regard for uniformity of decisions, strongly inclines us to yield to the authority of cases decided by the supreme court of the United States. But we can not do so when satisfied that a rule has been adopted, as a rule of the common law, as to which there is, not a conflict among those authorities recognized as evidence of that law, but an absence of authority. It is also to be observed, that the state with which our commercial relations are the most important, from the beginning rejected that rule, and after full consideration adheres to that rejection. Union Bank v. Coster, 3 Comst. 203.
In another state, which has sustained the rule by several decisions, a strong intimation has recently been given that it is erroneous. In the case of Paige v. Parker, 8 Gray, 211, 213, it is said: “ On this point, a distinction which is sometimes overlooked, is to be taken between a guaranty and an offer of a guaranty. In the case of an offer of a guaranty, as in the case of any other offer or proposal, an acceptance thereof, seasonably made known to the party offering, is necessary to the completion of the contract. But express notice of the acceptance of an absolute guaranty is not always, if ever, necessary for the purpose of binding the guarantor. In the state of New York, the courts hold that no notice of acceptance is necessary, when the guaranty is absolute.”
The distinction thus pointed out is the one sustained by the authorities we have examined, and the question whether an instrument be an absolute guaranty, or a mere offer to guaranty, depends upon a fair construction of its terms. Applying this rule, and rejecting that which would make every undertaking to be responsible for a credit to be given to a third person, a mere offer or proposal to guaranty, it is scarcely necessary to say, that the instrument sued on in this case, is an absolute guaranty.
There are two grounds of demurrer to the petition, which remain to be noticed: 1. A misjoinder of causes of action. And, 2. A misjoinder of parties defendant. If Moellar be jointly liable with the defendant, Bumcratz, there is, of course, no misjoinder of causes of action. If the parties be severally liable on the obligation, then the code, section 38, provides that they may be included in the same action. If, as argued, Moeller be not liable at all on the instrument, then he may have been improperly sued, but that does not concern the defendant, Bumcratz. The code allows a demurrer only for a defect of parties, section 87, and one party can not demur be
Being of opinion, for the reasons which have been stated, that the petition shows a cause of action against the defendant, Bumcratz, and that the court of common pleas erred in sustaining his demurrer, and rendering judgment against the plaintiff, and that the district court erred in affirming that judgment, the judgment of the district court will he reversed, .and rendering the judgment which should have been rendered by that court, the judgment of the common pleas will be reversed and the ease remanded to that court for further proceedings.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
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