Benton v. Gibson

19 S.C.L. 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1833
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.C.L. 56 (Benton v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benton v. Gibson, 19 S.C.L. 56 (S.C. Ct. App. 1833).

Opinion

O’Neale, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are three classes of the defendant’s guaranties: 1st the judgment; 2d. the unnegotiable note on Whitfield; 3d. three negotiable notes, past due.— The same rule, it appears to me, will govern the two first classes. The third will be subject to a different rule.

An assignment of an unnegotiable note, in the usual form, would not cast any liability on the assignor. The law merchant has no application to such a transfer ; and none of the rules which govern the indorsment of negotiable notes, or bills of exchange, can control the liability of the defendant. Judgments and unnegotiable notes, are made assignable by acts of our Legislature, so far as to enable the assignee to sue in his own name, which he could not do at common law. As the law creates no such liability on the assignor, from the act of assignment, as it does on the indorsor, from the act of indorsement; it follows, that the rules, regulating or discharging the liability of the indorsor, cannot have any direct application to the liability, which may be created by the con[59]*59tract of assignment. The contract to become liable immediately and without condition, or remotely and with condition, is, itself, the law of the case. In cases of general guaranties of unnegotiable securities which may be assigned, all that the law implies, as a condition to the assignor’s liability, is, that the assignee should, within a reasonable time, first seek payment from the party to the security, by the usual and ordinary means, by which payment is enforced, before he resorts to the guaran tie of the assignor. To this rule there are exceptions, as in cases where the maker is insolvent at the time of the assignment, or becomes so before the note or other security falls due; or where the maker,' before the note or other security is due, removes from and without the limits of the State. In the first of these exceptions, the insolvency of the maker dispenses with the necessity of an attempt to collect the debt by the ordinary means, a recovery at law, and process of execution; in the other, it is generally impossible to sue, and hence, in this case, no act of diligence is required to he done by the assignee, to satisfy the contract of guaranty. It is, by the existence of either of the facts, which constitute these exceptions, turned into an absolute contract to pay instead of the original party. For the law never requires a party to do any act which is either in vain or impossible.

The general rule which I have stated, it appears to e, is fully sustained by the case of Wilson v. Mullen, 2 M’C. 236. In that case the assignment was of an unnegotiable note, and was accompanied by a promise, to make the same good, if it was not. The assignee (or indorsee as he is called in the case) sued the maker to the first Court after it became due, but gave no notice to the assignor until nearly or about a year after the note was due. This was held to be sufficient diligence to charge the assignor on his contract of guaranty.

In that case, judge Nott in delivering the opinion of the Court remarks, “ as the note in this case was not a negotiable one, the assignor would have incurred no liability by an assignment in the usual form; he ap[60]*60pears ÍO have been aware of that, by the form which he *ias adopted. He has therefore undertaken, to use his own language, to ‘make it good,’ which will admit °f no other construction than that he intended to guarantee the solvency of the maker. All therefore that could be required of the indorsee was that he should first use the ordinary means to get. payment from the maker before he should resort to the indorser; that he has certainly done.”

From the case of Wilson v. Mullen it is seen that the circumstance of having sued as soon as possible, was held to be all the diligence which the contract required. It was a general guaranty, and the authority is therefore direct and immediate in the support of the rule which I have stated. The exceptions to the rule are sustained by the analagous case of Warrington v. Farber, 8 East, 242; in which it was held that the bankruptcy of the parties to the bill of exchange dispensed with the necessity of a demand from them.— Lord Ellenborough in that case says “the same strictness of proof is not necessary to charge the guarantors as would have been necessary to support an action on the bill itself, when by the law merchant a demand upon and refusal by the acceptors, must have been proved, in order to charge any other party upon the bill, and this, notwithstanding the bankruptcy of the acceptors, as was recognized in the argument of Russell v. Langstaffe. But this is not necessary to charge guarantees, who insure as it were the solvency of their principals, and therefore if the latter become bankrupt and notoriously insolvent, it is the same as if they were dead; and it is nugatory to go through the ceremony of making a demand upon them.” In this view of the law all the other judges concurred.— The case of Barret v. May, 2 Bail. 1, does not apply to this part of the case, for the guaranty there, was of a negotiable note, transferred before due.

In relation to the judgment, it is necessary to notice, that after stating the case, the amount due, including principal and interest, is set down, and under it is written, “for value received. I assign to B. [61]*61K. Benton or order the above case of John Gibson v. James C. Bellune and Henry Davis, amounting to $1664 40, and I do hereby guarantee the payment of the above sum and „the interest which may be due, to said B. K. Benton or order.” '

This is a guaranty of the solvency of the defendant in the judgment, and is subject to the implied condition, that the assignee should, within a reasonable time, seek payment from them by the usual and ordinary means, before resorting to the guarantor. This was complied with by the lodgment of a fi. fa. in the sheriff’s office, within nineteen days after the assignment, and the proof of the insolvency of Bellune by a discharge from an arrest under a ca. sa. on the case assigned, under the prison bounds act, the return of the fi. fa. against both nulla bona, and of the impossibility of arresting Davis under the ca. sa., or of making his pi-operty available, under the fi. fa. while he remained in the State. So far as this part of the case is concerned, the verdict is correct. The note upon Whitfield was not negotiable and was not due when transferred ; the guaranty on it was a general one; before it fell due the maker had removed from this State.— This rendered, prima facie any atttem.pt to collect it unavailing, and dispensed with the necessity of proving diligence; in this respect also, the verdict is correct.

This brings me to the third and last class of the defendant’s guaranties, the three negotiable notes which were negotiated and guarantied after due. In relation to negotiable notes, a general guaranty is in legal effect, an indorsement. The notes in this case were payable to bearer, the guaranties of them, as in the case of Eccles v. Ballard, 2 M’Cord, 389, must be regarded as new bills. But still, either an actual or constructive demand of payment from the maker and notice to the guarantor within a reasonable time, was necessary. In the case of Barrett v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.C.L. 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benton-v-gibson-scctapp-1833.