Furst v. McNitt

178 P. 411, 104 Kan. 245, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1919
DocketNo. 21,924
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 178 P. 411 (Furst v. McNitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furst v. McNitt, 178 P. 411, 104 Kan. 245, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 235 (kan 1919).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The plaintiffs broúght this action against B. McNitt, Henry Buss, and Elbridge Phillips, the defendants, upon the following written obligation:

“In consideration of Furst & Thomas extending credit to . . . Salesman [B. McNitt] we, the undersigned, jointly and severally, guarantee to them the faithful performance of this contract by him, and full settlement according to its terms, for all goods sold to him on credit by them, hereby .waiving notice of acceptance and all notice as to the account of said Salesman, and we agree that any extension of time to him shall not release us from liability hereon.
“ (Guarantors sign here) P. O. Address. Business or Occupation.
“Henry Buss, Speed, Kansas, Farmer,
“Elbridge Phillips, Logan, Kansas, Farmer.”

Plaintiffs’ petition alleged that in 1912 they entered into a contract with B. McNitt, thereby appointing him their agent for the sale of their wares, and in consideration of their extension of credit to McNitt, these defendants and others signed the above obligation, and that McNitt had made default in his contract to pay for certain merchandise furnished to him by plaintiffs, that McNitt was insolvent, and that defendants refused to pay.

' Defendant Buss, after denying that he had signed the instrument, answered (2) that the instrument was given without consideration, (3) that when he learned that plaintiffs claimed that he had signed he immediately, on January 5, 1915, gave them notice that he denied liability, (4) that there was a misjoinder of causes and of parties as theretofore urged in his overruled demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, and (5) that [247]*247plaintiffs had full knowledge of McNitt’s defaults but neglected to proceed against him while he still had property to satisfy his debt to plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs’ demurrer to these numbered defenses was sustained.

Defendant Phillips’ answer admitted (1) that he signed some instrument while working in his corn field, that he could not read without spectacles, and that McNitt, who presented the paper to him with a request for his signature, stated that it was only a recommfendation of McNitt, and being unable to read and believing its contents to be what McNitt told him,' he signed the document; (2) that there wás a misjoinder of causes and of parties as theretofore urged in his overruled demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, and that no execution had been issued against McNitt nor any effort made to collect the debt from him; (3) that there was no consideration for defendant’s signature to the instrument; and (4) that he had notified plaintiffs in January, 1915, that he denied liability, at which time McNitt had goods of plaintiff and outstanding accounts and other sources amply sufficient to satisfy plain-: tiffs’ account, if they had used reasonable diligence, and that plaintiffs knowingly allowed McNitt to continue the sale of their merchandise and to collect and sequester outstanding accounts, when they might have collected from him.

This action was filed August 11, 1917, some two years and seven months after defendants notified plaintiffs that they denied liability.

Plaintiffs’ demurrer to all parts of Phillips’ answer was sustained.

Both defendants appeal. They first project the question whether the instrument signed by defendants was a contract to guarantee the payment of McNitt’s debtor a' contract to indemnify plaintiff against the default of McNitt. Defendants contend that their obligation belongs to the latter class, and they invoke the rule that an indemnitor is not liable until the indemnified parties have exhausted their remedies againát the principal obligor. (McNall v. Burrow & White, 33 Kan. 495, 6 Pac. 897; Burton v. Dewey, 4 Kan. App. 589, 592, 46 Pac. 325; 12 R. C. L. 1057, 1090-1094.)

[248]*248This contention is susceptible of several answers. Our code of civil procedure, section 38, provides :

“Persons severally liable upon the same obligation or 'instrument, including the parties to bills of exchange and promisory- notes, and indorsers and guarantors, may all or any of them be included in the same action, at the option of the plaintiff.” (Gen. Stat. 1915, § 6928.)

This provision tends to lessen litigation, and the rights of parties who are only secondarily liable can be equitably and adequately safeguarded in the judgment, by directing that execution be first issued upon the property of those primarily liable, and that that source of satisfaction be exhausted before levying upon the property of those secondarily liable. (Emery v. Bank, 97 Kan. 231, 233, 155 Pac. 34; Bank v. Bowdon, 98 Kan. 140, 157 Pac. 429.)

Moreover, the obligation signed by defendants, in form and scope, is an unconditional guaranty, and under that sort of an obligation the default of the'party whose contracts, fidelity or conduct is guaranteed, matures the liability of the guarantors, and the party for whose benefit the guaranty was made need not await an unsuccessful execution against the principal obligor before proceeding against the guarantors. (Crissey v. Loan Co., 59 Kan. 561, 567, 53 Pac. 867; 14 A. & E. Encycl. of L., 2d ed., 1141, 1153; 12 R. C. L. 1089.)

It should also be noted that plaintiffs’ petition alleged that the principal obligor, McNitt, was wholly insolvent, and that the debt could not be collected from him. There is an ancient legal maxim that the law requires no one to do vain or useless things (2 Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, Rawle’s 3d Revision, 2143), and the rule is well established that where the principal obligor is admittedly insolvent, the indemnified party may proceed at once against the guarantors, without first pursuing a futile action against the’principal. (12 R. C. L. 1091.) In a note to Fall v. Youmans (67 Minn. 83), 64 Am. St. Rep. 398, 399, it is said:

“And, in some jurisdictions, it is held that due diligence requires the prosecution of the debtor to execution and return of nulla bona, and that insolvency is no excuse for a failure to prosecute; . . . But in other jurisdictions the principle is recognized that the law requires no idle act, and that it is more just not to require a suit, with all its attendant expense and trouble, where it must be fruitless, and to allow, under some circumstances, the diligence to be waived by the party for whose benefit it is required. Hence, it is held in some states, that if the maker of a [249]*249note, or other debtor, be so utterly insolvent that an action against him would be fruitless, the holder of the guaranty is not obliged to institute legal proceedings against the debtor 'before resorting to a suit on the guaranty. [Citing cases.] . . . *It is clear that insolvency does not excuse suit unless the fact is proved in some way, but the ascertainment, upon correct and sufficient proofs, of entire and notorious insolvency [or if that fact is conceded by demurrer], is recognized by the law as answering the demand of due diligence, and as dispensing with the more dilatory evidence óf a suit.” ■ ■

The foregoing' also disposes of defendants’■ second contention — the misjoinder of parties and of causes of action. 'The default of the principal and of the guarantors was essentially but one cause of action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P. 411, 104 Kan. 245, 1919 Kan. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furst-v-mcnitt-kan-1919.