Benjamin v. Hillard

64 U.S. 149, 16 L. Ed. 518, 23 How. 149, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 758
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 16, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 64 U.S. 149 (Benjamin v. Hillard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Hillard, 64 U.S. 149, 16 L. Ed. 518, 23 How. 149, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 758 (1860).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered the opinion of the court.

In September, 1847, Hillard & Mordeeai employed the. firm of Hopkins & Leach to make at Elmira, in New York, and deliver to them at Wilkesbarre, Pennsylvania, a steam engine, and apparatus necessary to put the same in complete operation, of the best materials and in the most substantial and workmanlike .manner, according to specifications, and warranted to be of sufficient capacity and strength to drive six run of stones, and the gearing and machinery necessary for flouring and gristing purposes. Also, to make and deliver the cast-iron, wrought-iron, steel, and composition work for driving six run of stones, and the machinery attached, of the best materials and workmanship. These they were to erect and put up on a foundation prepared by Hillard & Mordeeai, who were to afford the proper aid for that purpose. The machinery was to be completed and delivered at Wilkesbatre upon the first safe and navigable rise in the water of the river (Chemung) in the ensuing spring;' and Hopkins & Leach were to give a responsible individual for security for the money paid on the contract; and for its fulfilment, Hillard & Mor- ' decai agreed to pay two thousand dollars the first of December, 1847; two thousand dollars the first of February, 1848; and the remainder upon the completion of the work, for which payments they were to be allowed interest. Before the first payment,.the. defendant subscribed an agreement, endorsed on the contract, as. follows: “For value - received, I hereby guaranty the performance of the within contract on the part of Hopkins & Leach; and in case of non-performance thereof, *163 to refund to Messrs. Hillard & Mordeeai all . sums of money they may pay or advance thereon, with interest from the time the same is paid.” This suit was brought on this guaranty by Hillard & Mordeeai for the- insufficiency of the work done by Hopkins &'Leach. On the trial, they adduced testimony to show that the engine and apparatus set up by Hopkins &■ Leach were not of the best material, nor of substantial and workmanlike construction, and had not strength to drive six run of stones, and in improving them they had sustained expense and loss; that from the middle of December, 1847, till December, 1858, the time when the work was finished, they had advanced fifty-five hundred- dollars, and that only a trifling balance existed at that date, which was paid before the work had been tested by use; that afterwards, and in that month, defects were discovered, of which Hopkins & Leach had notice. In consequence of which, they made efforts to improve their work; but in June, 1849, the plaintiffs procured an examination to be made by three machinists and engineers, whose report upon the imperfection of the machinery was communicated to Hopkins & Leach and to the defendant, and who were required to amend their work. This notice and report were read to the jury, the defendant .excepting to their competency. The defendant, after the case of the plaintiff was submitted to the jury, insisted to the court that his contract was merely a guaranty, either of the performance of the' agreement by Hopkins & Leach by the delivery of the machinery, or the refunding of the moneys that might be paid before that event; and that the advances of the plaintiffs, being in drafts or notes, and not within the time limited by the contract, the defendant was not liable at all, or if liable, only to the extent of the payment of $4,000, until they had fully performed their contract; and the plaintiffs having fully paid off Hopkins & Leach, and receipts being given, the defendant had a right to consider his guaranty as at an end.

The court overruled a motion to nonsuit the plaintiff, and instructed the jury that the defendant was responsible on his ■contract, not only for the non-payment of the money advanced .-(to Hopkins & Leach in case they failed to make and delivei *164 the engine and machinery,'but also , for the. full and faithful performance of all of the agreement of Hopkins & Leach. The general rule is, to attribute to the obligation of a surety the same extent as that of the principal. Unless from the terms of the contract an intention appears to reduce his liability within more narrow bounds, a restriction will not be imposed by construction contrary to the nature of the engagement. If the terms of his engagement are general and unrestricted, and embrace the entire subject, (omnem camam,) his liability will be measured by that of the principal, and embrace the same accessories and consequences, .(connexorum et dependcntium.) It will be presumed that he had in view the guaranty of the obligations his principal-had assumed. Poth. on Ob., 404; 3 M. and S., 502; Boyd v. Moyle, 2 C. B., 644.

In the case before us, the contract of the surety is not in the alternative, but consists of two'terms: one, that the principals shall perform their engagement, not merely by the delivery of some machinery, but of such machinery as the contract includes; the other, that if there be a non-performance, whether excusable or not, the money advanced on the contract shall be secured to the plaintiffs to the extent for which their principals.are liable.

The defendant,-to sustain his defenee-that the plaintiffs had varied their agreement with Hopkins &' Leach, adduced testimony to the effect that the latter had informed them of their inability to complete the work “ by the first safe and navigable rise in the river,” and that they assented to the delay proposed by them till another rise; that a portion of the work was sent in April, and a portion in June, and a portion in October, and that the plaintiffs were not ready to receive it until October, and it was not erected until December, 1848, at which time a settlement took place, and the plaintiffs paid the small balance then due.

The Circuit Court instructed the jury that the waiver by the ■ plaintiffs of the punctual delivery of the engine and machinery did not constitute such a change in the contract as to discharge the guarantor. That a mutual alteration of the. con tract, by the' .principal parties would operate to discharge the *165 defendant as a guarantor; but an acquiescence on the part of the plaintiffs in a. longer time than was specified in the contract for fulfilment, especially as the time of fulfilment was somewhat indefinite, would not, .as matter of law, operate to discharge the defendant; and the. court declined to charge the jury “ that if they believed that the performance of the contract was essentially altered or varied, or the time- of the delivery of the machinery at "Wilkesbarre extended upon good consideration, without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, the plaintiffs were not eutitled to recover.”

The agreement of Hopkins & Leaeli comprised the manu facture of complicated machinery of distinct parts and differ ent degrees of importance, and these were to be transported to a distance,' there to be set up in connection with other works about .which other persons’were employed. That such a contract should not be fulfilled to the letter by either party is not a matter of surprise. ■ The. covenants are independent, and there is nothing that indicafes that a failure on either part to perform one of these covenants Would authorize its dissolution, or that the breach could not be compensated in damages.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 U.S. 149, 16 L. Ed. 518, 23 How. 149, 1859 U.S. LEXIS 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-hillard-scotus-1860.