Fifth National Bank of Cincinnati v. Woolsey

21 Misc. 757, 48 N.Y.S. 148
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 Misc. 757 (Fifth National Bank of Cincinnati v. Woolsey) 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
Fifth National Bank of Cincinnati v. Woolsey, 21 Misc. 757, 48 N.Y.S. 148 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

McAdam, J.

The defendant and nine other stockholders of the B. M. Bishop Cigar Company, an Ohio corporation, executed an. instrument in writing in which, - after setting forth the amount of stock held by them respectively, they recited that the company desired to borrow money from the plaintiff, and that the plaintiff had refused to make the loans unless their payment was acceptably' guaranteed; whereupon the said stockholders-jointly and severally agreed that all drafts, checks, notes and bills which the bank might discount for said corporation, and which remained due and unpaid within one year from December 4, 1891,. not exceeding $10,000 in the aggregate,- would be paid by them. They further agreed among themselves that they would adjust any losses growing out of said guaranty'pro rata, according to. the amount of stock held by them respectively. Between December 15,1891, and February 1, 1892, the plaintiff handled for the company six notes aggregating $10,500, the last of which matured April 25, 1892. On July 15, 1892, at a meeting of the company’s stockholders; it was ordered that its business be closed up, and a committee was appointed for that purpose. The company thereupon quit manu[759]*759factoring, and thereafter from time to time disposed of the stock on hand, and finally sold the remnants of the stock and the fixtures at auction. Up to July 15, 1892, the plaintiff handled notes of the company aggregating $39,500, of which it then held $11,000. After this date the company gave the plaintiff renewed notes for those held by it without getting any fresh advance of money. The plaintiff took the last of these notes from the company November 2, 1892, having up to that time handled forty-two of the company’s notes, aggregating $64,000, of which seventeen, aggregating $24,500, were handled by the plaintiff after the company ceased to manufacture. From this it will be seen that the company had an active account with the bank. On December 1, 1892, the plaintiff had seven past-due notes of the company, amounting to $11,000 and drawing eight per cent, interest, the legal rate allowed to national banks in Ohio where the agreement fixes that sum. These were all renewals of prior notes' which the plaintiff had discounted. The company paid $500 on these obligations, thereby reducing its indebtedness- to $10,500. The defendant urges that the guaranty was not continuing, and was exhausted with the first loan of $10,000. The common law of Ohio bearing-on the subject not having been proved (Code, § 942), it will be presumed to be that prevailing in New York, which, therefore, furnishes the rule for decision affecting the true construction of the contract. Monroe v. Douglass, 5 N. Y. 447; Savage v. O’Neil, 44 id. 298; Waldron v. Ritchings, 3 Daly, 288. The guaranty is not confined to one instance, but applies to succeeding discounts during the course of a year, and is clearly a continuing one to the extent of $10,000. Gates v. McKee, 13 N. Y. 232; Rindge v. Judson, 24 id. 64; City Nat. Bank v. Phelps, 16 Hun, 158; Weil v. Hecht, 14 Misc. Rep. 230. " If a party means to be surety only for a single dealing, he should take care to say so.” Merle v. Wells, 2 Camp. 413; City Nat. Bank v. Phelps, supra, at p. 160. The renewing of the notes under this particular guaranty must be held to have carried with it all the benefits of the discounts which the plaintiff made on the faith of it, for it was by reason of such discounts that the plaintiff became the bona fide holder of enforcible obligations in the form of renewed notes. In short, the result is the same as if the old notes had been paid from the proceeds of the renewed paper if the plaintiff had gone through the form of discounting it for the company. The very purpose of the guaranty, as it recites, was to enable the company [760]*760to borrow money and to induce the plaintiff to loan to it such sums from ■ time to time a§ it • required. It is unlike the guaranty of a particular note, for .'the renewal of .such an obligation would discharge the surety. 1 Wait’s Act. & Def. 582; Hubbard v. Gurney, 64 N. Y. 457. Here no time is specified for which the notes are to run, that matter being deemed unimportant to. the guarantors so long as the obligations given matured within one year; so that it is apparent. . that short renewals could not prejudice the guarantors, who as stockholders in the company were.helping themselves by helping it. The defendant was not only a stockholder, interested and benefited by what the plaintiff did for the company, but was a director and its vice-president as well, and, therefore, presumably cognizant" of the various discounts which the guaranty was given to procure, and of the renewals made. In Schwartz v. Hyman, 107 N. Y. 565, Judge Earl said: Very little, if any, aid for the construction of this guaranty can be derived from reported cases.” This guaranty, like that in the case cited, must be construed in the light of its own peculiarities. The terms used and language employed are' .to have a reasonable interpretation according to the intention of the parties as disclosed in the instrument, read in connection with the surrounding circumstances, the relations of the parties and the purpose for which the guaranty Was entered into. The contract of a surety must be construed fairly and reasonably, according to the intention of the parties, and where the question is as to the meaning of his obligation,. there is no difference between it and the contract of any other party. Smith v. Molleson, 148 N. Y. 241. One of the seven notes fell due FTovember 29, 1892, and the other six were payable “ on December 1,1892, fixed.” The term fixed ” as here used means without grace (Durnford v. Patterson, 7 Martin, 460; 12 Am. Dec. 514), and this, was undoubtedly .what the parties intended when they used the expression. The guaranty is dated December 4, 1891, and the words. “ within one year from the date hereof ” include .the last day of the specified period (26 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 3, 7; 5 Laws. R. & R., § 2495); so that by necessary construction the seven notes fell due within the time prescribed by the guaranty. The defendant pleads in defense that the plaintiff renewed the seven notes which it held on December 1, 1892, by taking an omnibus note made by the company for $10,500, the aggregate amount due, and thereby extended the time of payment Beyond December 4, 1892, when the year expired, . [761]*761whereby she was no longer chargeable under the guaranty. With respect to this it appears that the company wanted the plaintiff to carry the seven past-due notes until the former became possessed of funds to pay them. The plaintiff declined to do> this because the bank examiner might call the bank to account for carrying overdue paper, but agreed not to press its demands if the company gave a live note, enforcible at any time, that would not on its face bear" evidence of past maturity; whereupon the company in the " latter part of December, 1892, gave' the note of $10,500-, antedated December 1, 1892, payable “ on demand after date,” in which it was recited that the seven past-due notes were retained by the bank as collateral security. ' The note was taken in that form for the reason that the bank refused to extend the time of payment, and did not intend to do so when it accepted the new note, and the next inquiry is as to the legal effect of the .transaction. According to the laws of Ohio, as proven at the trial by oral testimony, the acceptance of the $10,500 note, payable “ on demand after date,” did not extend the time of payment, as it became due on the day of its date without grace. Citing Union Cent. L. Ins. Co. v. Curtis, 35 Ohio St. 357. That case refers to a note payable

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Bluebook (online)
21 Misc. 757, 48 N.Y.S. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-national-bank-of-cincinnati-v-woolsey-nysupct-1897.