Corson, P. J.
This was an action brought by plaintiff against the defendant Seward as principal, and the defendants Price and Buell as guantors, of two promisso^ notes for $1,-000, executed by sa,id Seward to plaintiff. Defendants Price and Buell recovered judgment, and the plaintiff appeals.
Respondent's objection to the consideration of the appellant’s assignment of errors on the ground that the bill of exceptions contains no specification of the errors relied on cannot be entertained, for the reasons stated in Peart v. Railroad Co. (S. D.) 67 N. W. 837. Nor is their point concerning the undertaking well taken, as money was deposited in lieu thereof as provided in Sec. 5218, Comp. Laws. The guaranty upon the back of each of the notes signed by said Price and Buell was as follows: “For value received, we hereby waive protest of the within note, and we hereby guaranty payment of the same, with all costs and expenses paid or incurred in collecting the same.” The answer of Price and Buell contained the following defenses:
“(2) That on or about the 21st day of February, 1894, the defendants Warren W. Price and Charles J. Buell requested the plaintiff to proceed to collect the said note from the defendant William H. Seward, the maker thereof, and then and there gave notice to the plaintiff that, in case of its failure to sue the said maker, that these defendants would hold themselves'discharged from any obligations upon the said note as indorsers and guarantors thereof. (3) That at the time of the said request or demand upon the plaintiff the said William H. [330]*330Seward, the maker of the note, was then amply able to pay the same, and had sufficient property within the state of South Dakota and the county of Pennington, subject to execution, to pay the said note, and the same could have been collected from the maker by process of law; but that the plaintiff neglected and refused to proceed against the said maker of the said note, as it was requested to do, and that thereafter the said maker of the said note became, and now is, wholly insolvent, and has departed from this state. The allegations of this paragraph are made on information and belief.
‘‘Second. For a second defense to the first cause of action set forth in said complaint: {1) That the note described in the first cause of action in the said complaint was at all the times hereinafter mentioned secured by the pledge of ten shares of capital stock of the Black Hills National Bank, a corporation duly organized under the national banking laws of the United States of America, and formerly engaged in the banking business at Rapid City, South Dakota, which said ten shares of stock was pledged and deposited by the defendant William H. Seward with the plaintiff to secure the payment of the said note. (2) That these defendants, on or about the 21st day of February, 1894, and shortly after the maturity of the said note, demanded of the plaintiff that it should forthwith proceed to collect the said note by foreclosure of its lien upon said bank stock, and a sale thereof in the manner provided by law; but that the plaintiff refused and neglected to do so. That at the time of the aforesaid demand or request, to wit, on ór about February 21, 1894, and for several months thereafter, the said ten shares of bank stock was of the reasonable value of $1,250, but that by reason of the subsequent failure and suspension of the said Black Hills National Bank the said bank stock has become wholly worthless; and by reason of the plaintiff’s refusal and neglect to foreclose its lien on said ten shares of bank stock pursuant to the request or demand of these defendants, they have been deprived of the benefit of the said security. ” [331]*331The same defenses were pleaded to the $60 note. These defendants, on the trial, introduced evidence in support of their answer, which plaintiff moved to strike out on the ground that the defendants were guarantors, and not sureties, and hence could not make the defenses set up in the answer. The motion was overruled, and the plaintiff excepted. At the close of all the evidence the plaintiff moved the court to direct a verdict for the plaintiff upon substantially the same grounds. This motion was denied, exception taken, and the case was submitted to the jury.
We are of the opinion that the court ruled correctly in overruling plaintiff’s motion to strike out the evidence, and in denying the plaintiff’s motionfor a direction of the verdict. The contention of the appellant that the court erred in his rulings would probably be correct if Price and Buell were in fact guarantors, and not sureties. But, while the defendants, Buell and Price, used the term “guaranty” in their contract, it would seem they were, under our Code, sureties, assuming, as it is apparently conceded, that they executed the guaranty to give credit to the principal debtor, and not for any benefit to themselves. Under the provisions of our code, where such is the case, the party is a surety, and not a guarantor, within the meaning of those terms as used in the Code. The text-books and most of the reports make no very clear distinction between a surety and a guarantor. But in preparing the Civil Code for the state of New York (but which was never adopted in that state) the commissioners, in their notes to Sec. 1558, of which our Sec. 4297 is a copy, make a clear and well defined distinction between a surety and a guarantor. They say: “The distinction between a surety and a guarantor is, that the former enters into the contract primarily for the benefit of the debtor, while with the latter the benefit of the principal debtor is no part of the inducement to him to contract.” Civ. Code, N. Y. p. 467. In other words, a guarantor is one who enters into the contract mainly for his own benefit and not for the benefit of [332]*332the principal debtor. The distinction above made was adopted by the commissioners who prepared the California Codes. See note to Sec. 2b31, Civ. Code Cal. The chapter on guaranty and the chapter on suretyship are to be construed with this distinction in view.
If the defendants Price and Buell made their guaranty upon the note in controversy before it was delivered, and for the purpose of giving credit to the maker, they are sureties, and entitled to all the rights of sureties, notwithstanding the use of the word “guaranty” in their contract. By Sec. 4305, Comp. Laws, it is provided: “A surety may require his creditor to proceed against the principal, or to pursue any other remedy in his power which the surety himself cannot pursue, and which would lighten his burden; and if, in such case, the creditor neglects to do so, the surety is exonerated to the extent to which he is thereby prejudiced.” This section is copied from Sec. 1566 of the New York Code, above referred to, and is an innovation upon the common law rule as adopted in many of the states outside of New York. The cases referred to by the New York Code commissioners as authority for the rule, and adopted by the code commissioners of California, are: Pain v. Packard, 13 Johns. 174; King v. Baldwin, 17 Johns. 384; Warner v. Beardsley, 8 Wend. 195; Manufacturing Co. v. Sweeting, 10 Wend. 163; Scroeppell v. Shaw, 3 N. Y. 446; Remsen v. Beekman, 25 N. Y. 552. The rule as codified in our state has been followed in New York since the original case of Pain v. Packard, supra; Colgrove v. Tallman, 67 N. Y. 95.
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Corson, P. J.
This was an action brought by plaintiff against the defendant Seward as principal, and the defendants Price and Buell as guantors, of two promisso^ notes for $1,-000, executed by sa,id Seward to plaintiff. Defendants Price and Buell recovered judgment, and the plaintiff appeals.
Respondent's objection to the consideration of the appellant’s assignment of errors on the ground that the bill of exceptions contains no specification of the errors relied on cannot be entertained, for the reasons stated in Peart v. Railroad Co. (S. D.) 67 N. W. 837. Nor is their point concerning the undertaking well taken, as money was deposited in lieu thereof as provided in Sec. 5218, Comp. Laws. The guaranty upon the back of each of the notes signed by said Price and Buell was as follows: “For value received, we hereby waive protest of the within note, and we hereby guaranty payment of the same, with all costs and expenses paid or incurred in collecting the same.” The answer of Price and Buell contained the following defenses:
“(2) That on or about the 21st day of February, 1894, the defendants Warren W. Price and Charles J. Buell requested the plaintiff to proceed to collect the said note from the defendant William H. Seward, the maker thereof, and then and there gave notice to the plaintiff that, in case of its failure to sue the said maker, that these defendants would hold themselves'discharged from any obligations upon the said note as indorsers and guarantors thereof. (3) That at the time of the said request or demand upon the plaintiff the said William H. [330]*330Seward, the maker of the note, was then amply able to pay the same, and had sufficient property within the state of South Dakota and the county of Pennington, subject to execution, to pay the said note, and the same could have been collected from the maker by process of law; but that the plaintiff neglected and refused to proceed against the said maker of the said note, as it was requested to do, and that thereafter the said maker of the said note became, and now is, wholly insolvent, and has departed from this state. The allegations of this paragraph are made on information and belief.
‘‘Second. For a second defense to the first cause of action set forth in said complaint: {1) That the note described in the first cause of action in the said complaint was at all the times hereinafter mentioned secured by the pledge of ten shares of capital stock of the Black Hills National Bank, a corporation duly organized under the national banking laws of the United States of America, and formerly engaged in the banking business at Rapid City, South Dakota, which said ten shares of stock was pledged and deposited by the defendant William H. Seward with the plaintiff to secure the payment of the said note. (2) That these defendants, on or about the 21st day of February, 1894, and shortly after the maturity of the said note, demanded of the plaintiff that it should forthwith proceed to collect the said note by foreclosure of its lien upon said bank stock, and a sale thereof in the manner provided by law; but that the plaintiff refused and neglected to do so. That at the time of the aforesaid demand or request, to wit, on ór about February 21, 1894, and for several months thereafter, the said ten shares of bank stock was of the reasonable value of $1,250, but that by reason of the subsequent failure and suspension of the said Black Hills National Bank the said bank stock has become wholly worthless; and by reason of the plaintiff’s refusal and neglect to foreclose its lien on said ten shares of bank stock pursuant to the request or demand of these defendants, they have been deprived of the benefit of the said security. ” [331]*331The same defenses were pleaded to the $60 note. These defendants, on the trial, introduced evidence in support of their answer, which plaintiff moved to strike out on the ground that the defendants were guarantors, and not sureties, and hence could not make the defenses set up in the answer. The motion was overruled, and the plaintiff excepted. At the close of all the evidence the plaintiff moved the court to direct a verdict for the plaintiff upon substantially the same grounds. This motion was denied, exception taken, and the case was submitted to the jury.
We are of the opinion that the court ruled correctly in overruling plaintiff’s motion to strike out the evidence, and in denying the plaintiff’s motionfor a direction of the verdict. The contention of the appellant that the court erred in his rulings would probably be correct if Price and Buell were in fact guarantors, and not sureties. But, while the defendants, Buell and Price, used the term “guaranty” in their contract, it would seem they were, under our Code, sureties, assuming, as it is apparently conceded, that they executed the guaranty to give credit to the principal debtor, and not for any benefit to themselves. Under the provisions of our code, where such is the case, the party is a surety, and not a guarantor, within the meaning of those terms as used in the Code. The text-books and most of the reports make no very clear distinction between a surety and a guarantor. But in preparing the Civil Code for the state of New York (but which was never adopted in that state) the commissioners, in their notes to Sec. 1558, of which our Sec. 4297 is a copy, make a clear and well defined distinction between a surety and a guarantor. They say: “The distinction between a surety and a guarantor is, that the former enters into the contract primarily for the benefit of the debtor, while with the latter the benefit of the principal debtor is no part of the inducement to him to contract.” Civ. Code, N. Y. p. 467. In other words, a guarantor is one who enters into the contract mainly for his own benefit and not for the benefit of [332]*332the principal debtor. The distinction above made was adopted by the commissioners who prepared the California Codes. See note to Sec. 2b31, Civ. Code Cal. The chapter on guaranty and the chapter on suretyship are to be construed with this distinction in view.
If the defendants Price and Buell made their guaranty upon the note in controversy before it was delivered, and for the purpose of giving credit to the maker, they are sureties, and entitled to all the rights of sureties, notwithstanding the use of the word “guaranty” in their contract. By Sec. 4305, Comp. Laws, it is provided: “A surety may require his creditor to proceed against the principal, or to pursue any other remedy in his power which the surety himself cannot pursue, and which would lighten his burden; and if, in such case, the creditor neglects to do so, the surety is exonerated to the extent to which he is thereby prejudiced.” This section is copied from Sec. 1566 of the New York Code, above referred to, and is an innovation upon the common law rule as adopted in many of the states outside of New York. The cases referred to by the New York Code commissioners as authority for the rule, and adopted by the code commissioners of California, are: Pain v. Packard, 13 Johns. 174; King v. Baldwin, 17 Johns. 384; Warner v. Beardsley, 8 Wend. 195; Manufacturing Co. v. Sweeting, 10 Wend. 163; Scroeppell v. Shaw, 3 N. Y. 446; Remsen v. Beekman, 25 N. Y. 552. The rule as codified in our state has been followed in New York since the original case of Pain v. Packard, supra; Colgrove v. Tallman, 67 N. Y. 95. We may reasonably presume that the codifiers of our own Code had before them these notes and decisions of the courts of New York, referred to by the commissioners, in preparing the Code for this state, and adopted the provisions of the proposed Code for New York, as construed by the commissioners of that state. These notes and the decisions referred to are valuable aids in construing the various provisions of our Code. It is quite clear from these notes and decisions that the commissioners intended [333]*333by the section above quoted to adopt the New York rule. Mr. Deering in his recent annotated California Codes, says, in a note to the corresponding section in the Civil Code of that state that the adoption of that section changed the rule as it previously existed in California. Deering’s Civ. Code Cal., note to Sec. 2845. Treating the defendants Price and Buell as sureties, their answer sets up a good defense, and the various issues arising thereunder should have been submitted to the jury. The learned circuit court, however, in his charge to the jury proceeded on an erroneous theory. He instructed the jury that there was but one issue in the case for them to determine, and that was, in substance, whether or not the bank stock pledged by the principal defendant as additional security for the notes was of any value when the notes became due, and if of any value, what value. No negligence on the part of the plaintiff for a failure to sell the bank stock is alleged, and unless the defendants Price and Buell were sureties, and had the right to require the plaintiff to proceed and collect the notes as provided in Sec. 5305, Comp. Laws, before referred to, they would nut be exonerated by the mere delay of the plaintiff in selling the stock. The evidence was conflicting as to whether or not Price and Buell did direct the plaintiff to proceed and sell the stock, and also as to the value of the stock when the notes became due. The failure of the court to submit the former question to the jury was clearly error, for which a new trial must be granted.
' The nature and character of the demand made upon the creditor to proceed against the principal debtor and the pledged security is important. The demand must be specific and definite, in order to be sufficient to exonerate the surety. Kennedy v. Falde, 4 Dak. 319, 29 N. W. 667. It might be necessary to submit to the jury the question under the proof as to whether or not the defendants Price and Buell were sureties or guarantors under the rules we have laid down for determining that question. The judgment and order of the circuit court denying a new trial are reversed, and a new trial ordered.