American Exchange National Bank v. Goubert

104 N.E. 928, 210 N.Y. 421, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1241
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 104 N.E. 928 (American Exchange National Bank v. Goubert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Exchange National Bank v. Goubert, 104 N.E. 928, 210 N.Y. 421, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1241 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Cabdozo, J.

The defendants have given to the plaintiff, The American Exchange National Bank, a bond of indemnity which we are called upon to construe.

The bank held a note for $2,800, which was secured by stock of the Goubert Manufacturing Company. The defendant Goubert, in whose name the shares stood, was not a party to the note, nor indebted to the bank. He brought an action against the bank to recover possession of the certificate of stock, upon a claim that as against him the bank held it without right. He moved in that action for an injunction restraining the.bank from disposing of the stock until the action was determined. The court made an order granting the injunction “only upon condition that the plaintiff, within ten days from the date hereof, file an undertaking, with sureties to be approved by this court, in the sum of one thousand five hundred ($1,500) Dollars, agreeing to indemnify and hold the defendant, the American Exchange National Bank, harmless from any and all damage, interest, cost or other expenses by reason of, or growing out of, the issuance or continuance of the injunction, and as security for the amount of indebtedness claimed to be due to the defendant, and for which it claims to hold said certificate of stock as collateral.”

A bond was thereupon filed by Goubert and his surety. It deviates in important particulars from the undertaking called for by the order, but it was accepted as suffi *424 eient. It recites the entry of an order granting the injunction upon condition that the plaintiff (Goubert) file an undertaking “ agreeing to indemnify and hold harmless the defendant (the Bank) as therein mentioned.” It binds the obligors to the payment of $1,500/ and it states the condition of the bond as follows:

“Now, therefore, the condition of this obligation is such that if the above bounden Auguste A. Goubert shall indemnify and hold the defendant, The American Exchange National Bank, harmless from any and all damage, interest, cost or other expenses by reason of or growing out of the issuance or continuance of the injunction as security for the amount of the indebtedness claimed" to be due the defendant, and for which it claims to hold a certificate of stock as collateral, then this obligation to be void, else to remain in full force and virtue.” The action brought by Goubert to recover possession of the certificate of stock was dismissed upon the merits; and the bank brings this action to recover on the bond. The stock has been sold for $700, and after crediting this and other payments, there remained due upon the bank’s note at the time of the trial a balance of upwards of $2,000. The finding is that the value of the stock when sold was no lower than the value at the date of the injunction. To hold the defendants liable for any part of the unpaid balance, it must, therefore, be found that they agreed not merely to pay any damages resulting from the injunction, but also to the extent of $1,500 to assume the debt, for which neither of them was liable up to the execution of the bond. The courts below have held, though not without division of opinion, that the bond, construed in the light of the order, imports a liability for the debt. (Am. Exchange Nat. Bank v. Goubert, 135 App. Div. 371.) They have held, however, that the contract is a guaranty of collection, and not of payment, and hence that the unpaid balance cannot be recovered, because the bank has not exhausted its legal remedies against the parties *425 to the note. The recovery has, therefore, been restricted to the expenses of the litigation in which the injunction was granted; and the case comes here upon an appeal by the bank.

If we confine our consideration to the language of the bond, we shall find nothing to indicate that the defendants intended to assume, the debt. All that they did was to undertake to hold the bank harmless from loss as a result of the injunction. It is true that in undertaking to indemnify the bank even to that hmited extent, they stated that they did so “as security for the amount of the indebtedness ” for which the stock was collateral. But that statement did not add anything to the scope of their engagement. If the bond had been silent on the subject, the necessary consequence of a promise to make good a depreciation in the value of the collateral during the period that its use was restrained, would be to add to that extent to the security for the debt. The security of the bond would take the place of the security of the stock, and the debt would in each instance be the thing secured. The bond, therefore, considered by itself, creates an obligation to pay the damagns and expenses resulting from the injunction, and nothing else. In legal effect, it does not go beyond the statutory undertaking prescribed by section 620 of the Code of Civil Procedure. It imposes no obligation on its makers to assume and pay the debt except to the extent necessary to make good the impairment of the value of the collateral as a result of the injunction.

The argument is made, however, that the language of the bond may be enlarged by reference to the terms of the order under which it was given. The order calls for an undertaking rather than a bond; and though this difference of form in itself is immaterial, the attempt to preserve in the bond a phraseology appropriate to an undertaking, has emphasized the confusion. We think it is true that the undertaking prescribed by the order *426 was to supply a two-fold protection: it was to indemnify the bank against any damage or expense resulting from the injunction; and it was also to secure the indebtedness for which the stock was then held as collateral. Indemnity against loss resulting from depreciation in the stock was sufficiently assured by the requirement that the bank be saved harmless from the damage caused by the inj unction. To limit to such loss the direction that the undertaking should also secure the amount of the indebtedness is to make that provision meaningless. When called upon to choose between a construction that gives significance to all the clauses of the order and another that makes one of the clauses meaningless, we must prefer the former. (People v. Lee, 104 N. Y. 441, 449.)

We are thus confronted by an order which requires an undertaking not merely to pay the damages resulting from the injunction, but also to pay the debt, and a bond given in assumed compliance with the order, which is confined to the payment of the damages alone. The question is, how far conditions in respect of which the bond is silent may be incorporated into it so as to conform its meaning to the requirements of the order. That this bond was supposed to constitute a compliance with the order is not doubtful. The fact that it was made with that intent is stated in substance in its recitals. If the meaning of the bond were doubtful or ambiguous, we should have the right, in view of those recitals, to limit or to enlarge its operation accordingly. (Sonneborn v. Libbey, 102 N. Y. 539, 550; Elmendorf v. Lansing, 5 Cow. 468; Smith v. Molleson, 148 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
104 N.E. 928, 210 N.Y. 421, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 1241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-exchange-national-bank-v-goubert-ny-1914.