Dauber v. Blackney

38 Barb. 432, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 192
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 Barb. 432 (Dauber v. Blackney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dauber v. Blackney, 38 Barb. 432, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 192 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court, Hoyt, J.

The plaintiff, in his complaint before the justice, alleged that the defendant was indebted to one Ira Whitcomb in the sum of fifty dollars, for a buggy sold and delivered to the defendant, in June, 1855, and that before the commencement of the action the demand, account and cause of action was assigned to the plaintiff, and that the same had not been paid, &c. The defendant interposed a general denial, and an allegation of payment. On the trial [433]*433it was proved that the defendant, on the 15th of October, 1855, applied to said Ira Whitcomb to purchase a buggy. Whitcomb asked $80 for the buggy. The defendant then held a note against Nelson and Orville Bishop, of which the following is a copy :

“Qowanda, June 19,1855.
$50. By the first day of January next, for value received, I promise to pay Philip Davis or bearer fifty dollars and use.
Nelson Bishop.
Orville Bishop.”

The defendant wanted to turn out this note, towards the purchase price, and wrote the following guaranty on the back of it: “ I hereby guarantee the collection of the within note. Oct. 15, 1855. Seley Blackney.”

Whitcomb told him he would not take the note, unless he would make it good. The defendant hesitated some time, and Whitcomb told him he would not take it unless he would do it. He said he would do it, and did. After he signed the guaranty Whitcomb took the note, and let him have the buggy. The balance the defendant was to pay in money, which he paid in a short time. About the 1st of December, 1855, Whitcomb sold the note and guaranty to the plaintiff. ' The note not being paid, when due, the plaintiff, in the month of January, 1856, commenced an action thereon, against the makers. The summons was served on one of the defendants on the 24th of January, and on the other defendant on the 6th of March, 1856. Judgment was perfected on the 31st day of March, and an execution was issued thereon on the 16th of April, 1856, which was subsequently returned unsatisfied. 0

Subsequent to the transfer of the note to the plaintiff, Whitcomb gave him a written assignment of any and all claim, demand, cause and causes of action he had against Blackney, for the buggy sold to him, and on account of his guaranty of the note made by the Bishops,

[434]*434I think it sufficiently appears hy the case that the plaintiff had used due diligence to collect the note in question, of the makers. In the case of Brown v. Curtiss, (2 N. Y. Rep. 225,) the plaintiff had a note against the defendant, for borrowed money. The defendant, in exchange therefor, transferred to the plaintiff a note against one Gr. F. Brown, and executed the following guaranty upon the back thereof: I guarantee the payment of the within!” The court of appeals held that although the guaranty was in form a promise to answer for the debt of another, it was still in substance an engagement to pay the guarantor’s own debt in a particular way, and would be good without any writing. And it was held that the statute of frauds did not apply to such a case; that the guarantor did not undertake as a mere surety for the maker, but on his own account, and for a consideration which had its root in a transaction entirely distinct from the liability of the maker.

The case of Wood v. Wheelock, (25 Barb. 625,) decided by this court, is much relied on as an authority against the right to recover in this case. And if the decision in that case can be sustained, consistently with the cases in the court of appeals, I shall be free to concede the plaintiff cannot recover in this action. In .that case it was shown that the defendant sold to the plaintiff a note against one Anderson, received the money therefor, and indorsed on the back thereof this guaranty: “I guarantee the payment of the within note. Sylvester Wheelock.” That cause was tried before me, as a referee, and supposing it to come within the principle and class of cases sanctioned and approved in Brown v. Curtiss, a report was made in favor of the plaintiff, and the judgment was reversed by the general term of this court. Justice Greene, who delivered the opinion in the supreme court, said that he could see no difference, in principle, between that case and the case of Spicer v. Norton, (13 Barb. 542.) He says the facts of that case were that Spicer, the plaintiff, sold to the defendant a note made by one Lawton, for $50Q. [435]*435The defendant paid for this note, in part, by a note for $117.34 made by one Gleason. At the same time the defendant gave to the plaintiff a written agreement, reciting the transfer of the Gleason note to the plaintiff, and stating that he, the defendant, held himself accountable for the payment thereof on condition that the plaintiff used proper exertions to collect the same. The action was brought on this agreement, and the supreme court held that the agreement was within the statute of frauds, and gave judgment for the defendant, and the judgment was affirmed by the court of appeals. I agree that that case was in substance and in principle like the one now under consideration, so far as the statute of frauds is concerned. But it by no means follows that the court of appeals in that case held that the agreement was within the statute of frauds, from the simple fact that the judgment was affirmed by that court. It is perfectly apparent that the guaranty in that case was a guaranty of collection ; and no proceedings whatever had been taken for the collection of the note, of the maker; and that poiut was distinctly made on the trial. The plaintiff was nonsuited, and the judgment was affirmed in the supreme court and in the court of appeals. It is true the supreme court held the guaranty to be within the statute of frauds; and it is equally clear that if the court of appeals had come to a different conclusion, the judgment must still have- been affirmed, for the reason that the contract was a guaranty of collection, and no steps had been taken to collect it of the maker. The decision in that case has not, as I have been able to discover, been reported, in the court of appeals; and without the opinions, we have no means of determining on which ground the court proceeded.

In the case of Durham v. Manrow, (2 Comst. 535,) C. P. Durham, one of the defendants, was the holder of a note made payable to himself or bearer, executed by Ephraim Durham. C. P. Durham purchased a horse of the plaintiff, gnd transferred to him the note, He, with the other defend[436]*436ant, at his request, executed a joint guaranty of its payment, not expressing any consideration. This guaranty was, by a vote of four to three of the judges of the court of appeals, held not to he within the statute of frauds, and therefore valid,. Judges Strong, Buggies, Cady and Shankland voting in favor of its validity, and J ewett, Gardiner and Hoyt against it; the latter on the ground stated by Jewett, J. in his opinion—that at all events the defendant Moulthrop was a mere surety for his co-guarantor, and no consideration being stated in the instrument, that it was void by the statute of frauds, as to him, and a joint action could not he sustained against him and Durham, under the former system of pleading. Bronson, J. did not hear the argument, and therefore took no part in the decision.

In the case of Hall v. Farmer, (2 Comst. 553,) Iiathern

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Bluebook (online)
38 Barb. 432, 1862 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dauber-v-blackney-nysupct-1862.