Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City Investment Co.

14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 383, 23 Ohio Dec. 474, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 11
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMay 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 383 (Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland Builders Supply Co. v. City Investment Co., 14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 383, 23 Ohio Dec. 474, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 11 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Babcock, J.

The City Investment Company, before advertising for bids for the construction of their building known as the Swetland, solicited offers by supply men of such- material as they wished [384]*384to have used in the construction of their building. They solicited of the plaintiff prices for Darlington brick, in large quantities, but to be sold and charged to the contractor when one was engaged. The Cleveland Builders Supply Company made a written proposition, as requested, for the supply of brick; but since they were to sell to an unknown and unengaged contractor to whom the bills for the brick were to be charged, they naturally wanted some security for such sales. Their offer is as follows:

‘‘ Cleveland, Ohio, July 8, 1910. “The City Investment Company,
“Cleveland, Ohio.
“Gentlemen: We hereby propose to furnish for the building of your company on Euclid avenue, this city, 75,000 more or less light gray Darlington brick of a quality and color same as samples submitted to you and marked ‘A Grade’ (identified by our name and your name written in ink thereon), at a price of seventeen dollars and fifty cents ($17.50) per thousand delivered at the building.
“We also propose to furnish 150,000 more or less, light gray Darlington brick' of a quality and color same as samples submitted to you and marked ‘B Grade’ (identified by oúr name and your name written in ink thereon), at a price of sixteen dollars ($16.00) per thousand delivered at the building.
“First shipment of the brick to be delivered within two weeks from time notice is given us to ship, and balance of brick to be delivered as fast as needed for the work and so as not to in any way delay same.
“The above brick to be charged and billed to the contractor for the mason work on said building, you guaranteeing the finan, cial responsibility of said mason contractor.
“Very truly yours,
“The Cleveland Builders Supply Co., by Bert J. Graham,
“Accepted: “Mgr. Brick Dept.
“The City Investment Co., by R. H. Swetland, Sec’y.”

The controversy is as to the meaning of the concluding clause, “you guaranteeing the financial responsibility of said mason contractor.” What does this guarantee import?

The plaintiff says defendant guaranteed the collectibility of the bills for brick furnished under this offer. The defendant says [385]*385it only guaranteed that tbe contractor should be a financially responsible person or company, when furnished to .the plaintiff to avail himself or themselves of the offer. ' •'

The contract was let to the Forest City Construction Company. It was a newly organized corporation, with ten or fifteen, thousand dollars capital stock, of which about half had been subscribed. Of this, a controlling number of shares was issued :to John Schmeller, who had been theretofore in the mason- contracting business, and who furnished the tools of his trade for the stock issued to him. He contributed nothing further to the corporation. The secretary of the company turned over,- in payment for his stock, a piece of real estate worth about $5,000, on which was a $3,500 mortgage. A few others bought stock, and paid in cash for the same $1,500. This was all of its assets when the company began business shortly before taking, this contract."

During the early part of the year 1910 it made three or four contracts for the building of buildings in the city of Cleveland, which contracts were of such'magnitude that any one of them involved a responsibility several times larger than the assets of the company. Presumably, there was a prospective profit ■ on each of these contracts, if things came out .right in the end. One of the contracts was for the construction of the. Henke Building on Lorain avenue, which building collapsed on November 22d of that year, and prostrated the Forest City Construction Company in its fall. This company had, in the early part of the year, taken the contract to build the Henke Building, a concrete construction involving perhaps not less than $100,000. The building collapsed, either by reason of some fatal weakness in its plan of construction, or for failure on the part of the construction company to use proper material or proper workmanship. The company was doubtless insolvent, without knowing it, months before the collapse occurred, since its obligation to properly construct the building made it liable to the owners for all that it had cost them, and much more to clear away the debris, although apparently its claim against the owners of the building was a valuable asset; but I do not place my opinion in this .case [386]*386-on .the question of the solvency of the contractor at the time of entering into this contract with the plaintiff for the brick furnished by the plaintiff, for which it filed an attested account.

The guarantee was in this case financial responsibility. Responsibility. is the ability to respond; in a word, the ability to pay for the brick as the bills for the same matured in the course of the business. As is said in Sturgis & Company v. Bank of Circleville, 11 O. S., 168, et seq.:

“A guarantee, in its strict legal and commercial sense, is said to be ‘an undertaking by one person to be answerable for the payment of some debt or the due performance of some contract or duty by another person, who himself remains liable to pay or perform the same. Originally, the words warranty and guaranty were the same. * * * They are now sometimes used indiscriminately; but in general, warranty is applied to a contract as to the title, quality or quantity of a thing sold; and guaranty is held to be the contract by which one person is bound to another for the fulfillment of a promise or engagement of a third party.’ Each is, alike, an undertaking by one party to another to indemnify or make good the party assured against some possible default or defect, in the contemplation of the parties. A guaranty is, perhaps, always understood, in its strict legal and commercial sense, as a collateral warranty, and often as a conditional one, against some default or event in the future,' The term warranty, on the other hand, is generally understood as an absolute undertaking in presentí, as well as in futuro, against the defect, or for .the quantity or quality contemplated by the parties in the subject-matter of the contract.”

Was this a warranty of the financial quality of the contractor who was to be given the privilege of accepting this offer for the brick? Or was it a guaranty of the due performance of the contract about to. be entered upon by the contractor ?

The court is cited to many cases where the rules of interpretation are given. These are to be resorted to as aids in determining the meaning of the contract when its meaning is doubtful.

Defendant calls attention to the case of Sweitzer v. Baker, 95 Cal., 539, where the court announces the rule that: “An agreement to pay the debt of another can not be inferred from doubtful language which, although it might be capable of being construed as a guaranty, does not exclude an inference, equally [387]

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 383, 23 Ohio Dec. 474, 1913 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-builders-supply-co-v-city-investment-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1913.