Acme Manufacturing Co. v. Reed

47 A. 205, 197 Pa. 359, 1900 Pa. LEXIS 745
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 125
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 47 A. 205 (Acme Manufacturing Co. v. Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acme Manufacturing Co. v. Reed, 47 A. 205, 197 Pa. 359, 1900 Pa. LEXIS 745 (Pa. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Bbown,

The appellant brought suit on an alleged guaranty to it by the appellee, and a verdict was directed in the latter’s favor, because no notice had been given him by the former of its-acceptance of the same. It seems that, in December, 1895, Leo Schlaudecker had given the appellant an order for a lot of bicycles, which it did not fill. Subsequently, a representative of the company saw him and requested security for the order sent in. On February 24, 1896, he sent another order to the appellant for the bicycles that had been ordered in December, and, in giving it, used the regular form of contract adopted by the company. It was as follows, a portion of the first sentence having been written:

“Ebie, Pa., 2-24,1896.

“Acme Manueactubing Co.,

“Reading, Pa.

“ Gentlemen: I herewith hand you my order, through your representative for.......quantity and specifications already sent in......... Stormer bicycles, this order not being subject to countermand:

“Discount ... .Terms: F. O. B. Reading, Pa........days.

“ Deliveries to be made as follows:

“ December................. April...................

January................... May ...................

February.................. June...................

March..................... July...................

“ This order is given with the understanding that......... have the exclusive sale of Stormer bicycles in the following territory, viz:.............................................. so long as..........give your bicycles proper and fair representation.

“ This order is taken subject to the approval of the Acme Manufacturing Co. If notice to the contrary is not given within thirty days after receipt of the order at their office in Reading, Pa., it will be understood that the order is accepted.

“ Remarks...............................................

(Signed.) “ Leo Schlaudeckeb.

For Acme Manueactubing Co.”

[363]*363Though the order purports to have been taken by the Acme Manufacturing Company, it was simply sent to the company by Schlaudecker.

The company liad not signed the paper. It is not, on its face, a contract, between the parties, but simply an order from Schlaudecker, who had used the company’s regular form of contract, in which it appeared that the order would be considered accepted, unless notice to the contrary was given by the company within thirty days from its receipt at the office in Reading. On the back of the order there is the following, which is the subject of this suit:

“ guaranty.

“ In consideration of $1.00 paid me by Acme Manufacturing Co., the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged........... of the city of Erie, county of Erie, state of Pennsylvania, do hereby guarantee to the said Acme Manufacturing Co., the prompt fulfillment of all the covenants and conditions of the within contract on the' part of Leo Schlaudecker, and that the within named Leo Schlaudecker will make the payments therein specified according to the terms thereof.

“Witness my hand and seal this........day of.......... A. D. 189 .

“Witness....................

“ Chas. M. Reed. (Seal.) ”

This order, with the indorsement, reached the company’s office some time in April, 1896, and, without any notice to Reed, bicycles were shipped to Schlaudecker from time to time in pursuance of it. He did not pay for them, and, after trying to collect from him, the company resorted to Reed on the foregoing guaranty.

If this guaranty was absolute and accepted when given for the payment of indebtedness about to be created by Schlaudecker, notice of its acceptance by the appellant was not necessary to fix the liability of the guarantor: Gardner v. Lloyd, 110 Pa. 278. On the other hand, as was said by the late Chief Justice Green, in that case, after citing numerous authorities and well-considered cases, “ In all of them the doctrine is in force that where the event is future and depends upon the will of the guarantee, he must give notice of acceptance to the [364]*364guarantor before the latter becomes subject to any liability.” “There is no principle of the law of contracts more firmly settled than that a guarantor of future credit or advancing is entitled to notice from the party giving the credit, of his acceptance of the guaranty, unless, indeed, the agreement to accept be contemporaneous with it: Wildes v. Savage, 1 Story, 26. And even this is rather an instance of simultaneous proffer and notice of acceptance, than an exception to the rule. Without such notice there is no contract, for a party giving a letter of guaranty has a right to know whether the person to whom it is addressed means to hold him ultimately responsible, inasmuch as his own caution and vigilance may, in a great measure, be regulated by his knowledge of the fact. The authorities to this point are numerous and concurrent. Many of them are brought together by Mr. Justice Stout, in his treatise on contracts. In one of them (Edmonston v. Drake, 5 Peters, 624), the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking of this species of suretyship, says, ‘It would indeed be an extraordinary departure from that exactness and precision which peculiarly distinguish commercial transactions, which is an important principle in the law and usage of merchants, if a merchant should act on a letter of this character, and hold the writer responsible, without giving notice to him that he had acted on it: ’ ” Kay v. Allen, 9 Pa. 320. It was urged in that case that a precedent request by the creditor to the party subsequently offering the guaranty was equivalent to notice of acceptance, but Bell, J., says : “ I find no warrant for this view in any of the cases with which I am acquainted. . . . Indeed, it is difficult to imagine how precedent request alone can supply the place of subsequent notice, since after request made and proffer of guaranty, the merchant may refuse the credit or advance craved, and, without notice, the surety cannot know whether he has or not.”

In Adams v. Jones, 12 Peters, 207, Stout, J., said the question before the court was, “Whether upon a letter of guaranty addressed to a particular person, or to persons generally, for a future credit to be given to the party, in whose favor the guaranty is drawn, notice is necessary to be given to the. guarantor, that the person, giving the credit, has accepted or acted upon the guaranty and given the credit on the faith of it.” [365]*365His answer was, “We are all of opinion, that it is necessary; and that this is not now an open question in this court, after the decisions which have been made in Russell v. Clark, 7 Cranch, 69,” and other cases. What we said in Coe v. Buehler, 110 Pa. 366, is most appropriate to the case now before us. “ The absence of notice of acceptance by the plaintiffs to the defendant is fatal to their claim. When the defendant signed the guaranty it was his proposition only. The contract which he proposed to guarantee had not been executed or accepted by the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A. 205, 197 Pa. 359, 1900 Pa. LEXIS 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acme-manufacturing-co-v-reed-pa-1900.