Dupee v. Blake

35 N.E. 867, 148 Ill. 453
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 35 N.E. 867 (Dupee v. Blake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dupee v. Blake, 35 N.E. 867, 148 Ill. 453 (Ill. 1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the Court:

By the terms of the bond sued upon, as the same is described in the declaration, it was conditioned that J. C. Ferguson & Co. should at all times faithfully perform the duties of a warehouse proprietor or manager, and should “promptly pay or cause to be paid any damages sustained by any person or persons on account of neglect of duty, fault or fraud by said J. C. Ferguson & Co. as proprietor or manager of a warehouse for the storage of provisions.” Appellant, as one of the sureties on the bond, obligated himself that the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co., as constituted at the date of the bond, towit: on January 31, 1884, would perform the duties and pay the damages specified in the bond. Although the declaration fails to state who composed the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co. when the bond was executed, yet it appears from the first and third pleas filed by the defendant, that the bond was executed by N. M. Neeld, J. C. Ferguson and E. W. Ferguson “and their sureties.” Hence, the sureties in the bond only bound themselves for the faithful performance of said duties, and the prompt payment of said damages, by the said firm when consisting of the three last named persons.

The declaration avers, by way of showing a violation of the condition of the bond, that more than two years after the date of the bond, towit: on May 16, 1886, J. C. Ferguson & Co. borrowed $20,000.00 of the Metropolitan National Bank, giving their note for that amount payable on demand, and pledged as collateral security therefor ten warehouse receipts for 2500 barrels of mess pork, dated May 1, 1886, and signed by J. C. Ferguson & Go., each acknowledging the receipt of 250 barrels of mess pork stored in said J. C. Ferguson & Co.’s warehouse; that said firm became insolvent, and fraudulently removed from said warehouse the property called for by said receipts while the same were outstanding and said note was unpaid, whereby the collateral securities became of no value, and the Bank sustained damages to the amout of $5000.00.

It appears from the first and third pleas of the defendant, that said firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co. consisted of N. M. Neeld, J. C. Ferguson, E. W. Ferguson and E. B. Howard when said loan was made and said warehouse receipts were pledged as collateral security, and when the receipts were made worthless by the fraudulent removal of the property therein described. Hence, the firm which violated the condition of the bond was not the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co., composed of Neeld and the two Fergusons, but the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co., composed of Neeld, the two Fergusons and E. B. Howard.

By demurring to the defendant’s first and third pleas, the plaintiff admitted the trtfth of the averments therein contained; and therefore admitted that a firm composed of Neeld and the two Fergusons executed the bond as principals, and that a firm composed of Neeld, the two Fergusuns and Howard failed to perform the duties and pay the damages named in the condition 'of the bond. A demurrer to a plea submits the whole record to the consideration of the court; and the court must give judgment to the party who, on the whole, appears entitied to it. (1 Chitty on Plead. page 668; Murphy v. Richards, 5 Watts & Serg. 279; Hall v. Hurford, 2 Clark, (Pa.) 291; Iglehart v. State, 2 Gill & Johns. 235; 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, page 560 and cases in note 9). The demurrer to the pleas, therefore, presents the question whether a surety, who guarantees the performance of a condition by a firm,- can be held liable for the default of the firm after it has been changed by the addition of a new member. We think that this question, arising out of such a state of facts as is presented by the pleadings in this record, must be answered in the negative.

The rule is that, if a surety engages for an individual, the engagement is understood to extend to the acts of that individual alone, and will not continue if he takes in a partner. In other words, the surety for a single individual is not liable for a partnership of which such individual is a member. A surety, who guarantees that a firm composed of particular individuals will do certain acts or discharge certain duties, can not be held liable where there is a change in the firm, although the firm name is not changed. As the surety’s liability is strictissimijuris and cannot be extended by construction, his guaranty to a partnership is extinguished if any partner is taken into or retires from .the partnership, unless it appears from the terms of the instrument, that the parties intended the guaranty to be a continuing one without reference to the composition of the firm. A party may be induced to become surety for the individuals who compose a firm because of his confidence in their integrity, prudence, accuracy and ability as business men, but he cannot be presumed to have intended to become responsibe for the possession of such qualities by some third person, who may be afterwards taken into the firm without his knowledge or consent. It is often in the power of one partner, by want of discretion or integrity, to ruin another. (Barnett v. Smith, 17 Ill. 565 ; Brandt on Suretyship and Guaranty, secs. 98-1002 Parsons on Contracts, page 19, note (q); Theobald on Prin. and Surety, page 72; Bellairs v. Ebsworth, 3 Camp. 52; Palmer v. Bagg, 56 N. Y. 523 ; Shaw v. Vandusen, 5 Up. Can. Q. B. Rep. 353 ; Spiers v. Housten, 4 Bligh’s New Rep. 515; Dry v. Davy, 2 Perry & Dav. 249; Backhouse v. Hall, 6 Best & Smith Q. B. 507). It follows, that appellant, who became surety for J. C. Ferguson & Co. when that firm was composed of Neeld and the two Fergusons, did not continue to be liable as surety for the firm after it was changed by the admission into it of E. B. Howard.

The first and third pleas set out in hcec verba the instrument of release, which was executed by the Bank on March 15,1887, and aver that the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co., consisting of Neeld, the two Fergusons and Howard, were thereby released and discharged from their liability for said loan of §20,000.00 ; that said debt was thereby settled and satisfied; that said warehouse receipts, held by the Bank as collateral security for the payment of said debt, were thereby released as such security, and discharged of all claims thereon by the Bank; and that the Bank was not damnified by reason of any thing contained in the condition of said bond. The third plea alleges that this release was made without the consent of the defendant, Dupee.

It is provided in the release, that the Bank, in consideration of the conveyance of certain real estate by Neeld, the Fergusons and Howard, and of the assignment of certain contract rights by “said J. C. Ferguson & Go.,” composed of said four persons, “does from all debts due and owing from them to said bank hereby release said Neeld, Edward W. Ferguson, Howard, and John G. Ferguson, and each of them as to all money, property, claims, demands, rights and interests which they may hereafter obtain or acquire, except their liability or the liability of any or either of them upon a certain bond,” namely, the bond above described, upon which this suit is brought. One of the debts due from Neeld, Howard and the Fergusons to the Bank was said note for §20,000.00, given by the firm of J. C. Ferguson & Co. of which they were members, and secured by the pledge as collateral security of said warehouse receipts so issued by said last named firm.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E. 867, 148 Ill. 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupee-v-blake-ill-1893.