Diamond T Motor Car Co. v. Eucker

160 A. 41, 10 N.J. Misc. 814, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 23, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 A. 41 (Diamond T Motor Car Co. v. Eucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diamond T Motor Car Co. v. Eucker, 160 A. 41, 10 N.J. Misc. 814, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

Aokekson, S. 0. C.

This action is upon a written guaranty. The complaint alleges in substance the sale of a certain "Diamond T” motor truck by the defendant, to the Tri-County Carrier Company, under a conditional sale agreement reserving title in the seller and providing for payment of the balance of the purchase price in monthly installments secured by notes with acceleration of payments in case of any default. It is further alleged that at the time of said sale on October 29th, 1928, the defendant assigned said conditional sale agreement and guaranteed the payments due in accordance therewith to the Diamond T Motor Car Company, Incorporated, the plaintiff herein, which guaranty is made a part of the complaint and reads as follows:

"Por value received the undersigned hereby sells, assigns and transfer to Diamond T Motor Car Company, 81 Williams [815]*815street, Long Island City, New York, all of the right, title and interest of the undersigned, in to and under lease agreement made this date with the undersigned by Tri-County Carrier, Incorporated, 726 East Twenty-sixth street, Paterson, New Jersey, covering Diamond T motor truck 80063024, including the notes therein referred to and thereby secured and including the property therein described, together with all of the rights of the undersigned with respect to the enforcement thereof and of said notes and with respect to said property, and the undersigned guarantees to Diamond T Motor Car Company full performance of said instrument and the prompt. payment of said notes and warrants that the property therein described is free and clear of any and every claim of any kind whatsoever, other than this instrument. Should any deficiency result to Diamond T Motor Car Company with respect to the amount due on said notes upon enforcement of said rights as to said property, the undersigned agrees to pay Diamond T Motor Car Company such deficiency, together with such reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees involved in said enforcement or rights of said property, and further agrees that any etxension or forebearance which may be granted with respect to the said instrument or said notes shall not in any manner release the undersigned from the endorsement of this guaranty.

“Eucker Motor and Repair Co.

(Signed) Edward Eucker, See"

The complaint further alleges a default in the monthly payments, repossession of the truck by plaintiff, and sale thereof at public auction at 81 Williams street, Long Island City, New York, on June 21st, 1929, in accordance with the “Conditional Sales act” (Pamph. L. 1919, ch. 210, p. 468), for the sum of $1,000 resulting in a deficiency, &c., for which judgment is asked against the defendant as guarantor.

The body of the answer, filed by the defendant, consists of certain admissions and denials, to which is appended eight separate defenses and a counter-claim. The plaintiff now moves to strike out the body of the answer as sham or frivolous and the separate defenses and counter-claim as frivolous.

[816]*816First turning our attention to the separate defenses, we find that the first alleges that:

“The said plaintiff failed to make diligent effort to enforce the collection of the obligation from the said principal debtor, the Tri-County Carrier Company, mentioned in the complaint and has wholly failed and unreasonably neglected to proceed against it.”

This action is to recover from the defendant, guarantor, the deficiency alleged to have resulted from the sale of the truck in question, and the pertinent provisions of the written guaranty are as follows:

“Should any deficiency result to Diamond T. Motor Car Company, with respect to the amount due on said notes upon enforcement of said rights as to said property the undersigned” (defendant), “agrees to pay Diamond T Motor Car Company such deficiency, together with such reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees involved in said enforcement or rights of said property, and further agrees that any extension or forebearance which may be granted with respect to the said instrument or said notes shall not in a manner release the undersigned from the endorsement of said guaranty.”

This is not the ordinary guaranty of collection, requiring the exhaustion of all remedies for satisfaction of the debt before recourse to the guarantor. It is rather a limited guaranty of collection confining the' guarantee’s efforts to collect, before calling upon the guarantor, to the exhaustion of the remedies specifically set forth in the guaranty itself. The plain wording of the guaranty in question, so far as applicable to the present form of action, requires the seller or his assigns to establish a “deficiency” by first enforcing his rights against the “property,” and upon this being done the guarantor’s obligation became an absolute guaranty of payment. 28 C. J. 978, note 6, and cases cited; McMurray v. Noyes, 72 N. Y. 523 ; 28 Am. Rep. 180.

It'is to be noted that the defense in question does not allege a failure to give notice to the defendant of the default in making the installment payments, but rests entirely upon the proposition that the plaintiff has failed to make diligent effort [817]*817to enforce collection of the obligation from the principal debtor and in fact has not proceeded against it at all, but this the plaintiff was not required to do, after establishing a deficiency by selling the truck as required by the terms of the guaranty. We must keep in mind that this defense as pleaded, does not allege a failure to make diligent efforts to determine the deficiency by proper sale o£ the truck, but only such failure with respect to proceeding against the principal debtor. The first defense is, therefore, frivolous and will be stricken out.

The “second defense” is as follows:

“The said plaintiff failed to comply with the Conditional Sales act mentioned in the complaint of the plaintiff in that:

(a) It failed to give ten days’ written notice to the defendant or to the buyer, the Tri-County Carrier Company, of the sale.

(b) It failed to give notice of sale by posting at least three notices in different public places within the filing district where the motor truck was to be sold, at least five days before the sale.

(c) It failed to give notice of said sale at least five days before the sale by publication in a newspaper published or having a general circulation within the filing district where the motor truck was to be sold, although more than $500 had peen paid on the purchase price.

(d) The plaintiff failed to give notice of intention to retake the motor truck which was-the subject of the said conditional sale.”

The only reason urged for striking out this defense is that it is frivolous. The various subdivisions of this defense are, as will be observed, predicated upon the alleged failure of the plaintiff to comply with certain provisions of the said “Conditional Sales act” in selling the truck to establish the alleged deficiency for which this action is brought. Plaintiff claims that it established such deficiency in accordance with the requirements of said act, as it was required to do in order to hold the defendant to this provision of his guaranty. Subdivisions (a), (b) and (c) of this defense set forth failure [818]

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 41, 10 N.J. Misc. 814, 1932 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-t-motor-car-co-v-eucker-nj-1932.