Jackson v. . Swart

75 N.E. 226, 182 N.Y. 373, 20 Bedell 373, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 935
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 3, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 75 N.E. 226 (Jackson v. . Swart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. . Swart, 75 N.E. 226, 182 N.Y. 373, 20 Bedell 373, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 935 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiffs, as the personal representatives of Maurice J. Smith, deceased, sought to recover against the defendants upon three negotiable promissory notes amounting *376 in the aggregate to $2,000, executed at various times between the 24tli of May, 1887, and the 27th of April, 1888. These notes were all made by parties living in Kansas, the identity of whom the record does not disclose further than the- name. They were all made payable to the same payee, who indorsed them without recourse to the defendants or some of them. They were payable five years after date at'the Girard National Bank of Philadelphia, and attached to them were interest coupons, at the rate of seven per cent, payable semi-anniially. It appears that the defendants themselves or some of them paid the interest or most of it upon these notes up to the time that they became due. But, so far as appears, the makers never paid anything on any of them. They were not known at the bank where the notes were payable, and no funds were ever deposited to meet either principal or interest.

At the time of the delivery of these notes to the plaintiffs’ testator the defendants delivered with them an instrument in writing which it is claimed was a guaranty of the collection of the several notes. This action is based upon this instrument as well as the notes themselves. The courts below have held that the paper was simply a guaranty of collection arid the plaintiffs have been ■ defeated on that grourid. If the instrument is to be interpreted as a guaranty of collection and nothing else, then beyond all doubt the case has been correctly decided. But we think that while the paper does contain words of guaranty of the collection of the notes on the part of the defendants, it does in legal effect contain much more. It is, we think, not a mere guaranty of collection but a special contract in which the parties have bound themselves to do certain things, and in which the defendants had assumed certain powers and obligations touching the collection of the notes which will be hereafter pointed out. This paper also contained a transfer of a grant or mortgage by the makers of the notes of certain lands in Kansas as a security for their payment when they became due.

As this written instrument is the fundamental basis of the present action it is. proper to state that the instrument accorn *377 panying each note is identical with the others or substantially so, and in order to get a clear view of the legal scope and effect of the paper, it should be set out in full.

May Ztth, 1887.
“ This contract witnesseth, that the undersigned have this day sold to M. J. Smith the following described loan, viz.: One Certain note signed by Thomas D. Henderson for $1,000, dated May 1st, 1887, payable to the order of A. 0. Wilcox five years after date, with seven per cent, interest from date, and secured by Trust Deed of same date with said note to E. Heliker, Trustee, upon lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, Section 6, Township 21, Range 10, in Rice County, Kansas, executed by Thomas D. Henderson. That in- consideration of said sale the undersigned guarantee the collection in full of said note, with 7 per cent, interest on same, upon the following conditions:
In case of a default in the payment of said note or interest due on same, or a failure to comply with the requirements named in the Trust Deed securing said note the holder of said note shall, at the request of the undersigned, at once forward said note and Trust Deed for collection.
Said Trust Deed shall be foreclosed in the usual course provided by law and the land sold. In case there is no bid sufficient to cover the debt and costs the land described in the Trust Deed may, at the option of the undersigned, be bid in in the name of the holder of this note.
In case the land is so purchased the undersigned hereby bind themselves to take full charge of said land and sell same within two years after the above described note matures, and in case said land does not sell for a sufficient amount to pay the debt in full, to make good and pay any deficiency.”

If this instrument contains any ambiguous words or expressions it is to Be construed against the surety and not against the plaintiffs. (Smith v. Molleson, 148 N. Y. 241.)

If the paper is carefully examined it will, we think, be found to contain much more than a mere guaranty of collection. *378 All the provisions and conditions contained in it are equally binding upon the defendants as upon the plaintiffs.

First. “ In case of a default in the payment of said note or interest due on same, or a failure to comply, with the requirements named in the Trust Deed securing said note, the holder of said note shall, at the request of the undersigned, at once forward said note and Trust Deed for collection.” The undersigned, or, in other -words, the defendant, retained upon the transfer of the notes the right and the power to collect them and to enforce the security given for their payment. To what place was the holder of the note to send the notes for collection ? Obviously, to such place as the undersigned should designate in the request, and the holder could not know where to send them until the request was made. ,The time within Avhicli the undersigned might make the request was not limited. They could make it at any time and until the request Avas made or the right of the defendants to collect in some way Avaived or relinquished, the holder of the note could not know what to do in the premises. It is obvious from this provision of the instrument that the defendants retained the right to control the collection of the notes and the enforcement of the security. • They could do that in their own way and at such time as suited their convenience or pleasure.

Second. The next provision of the instrument is equally significant. It provides that “ said Trust Deed shall be foreclosed in the usual course provided by law and the land sold. In case there is no bid sufficient to cover the debt and costs, the land described in the Trust Deed may, at the option of the undersigned, be bid in in the name of the holder of this note.” .It is clear from this language that the defendants retained the right to bid in the property when sold at foreclosure. They could bid it in in the name of the holder of the note, although he might not have been a party to the proceeding. The defendants’ object in retaining this right over the collection of the debt and the securities is obvious. It Avas not intended that the holder of the note himself should *379 foreclose the mortgage and bid in the land, since he might then make a nominal bid and hold the defendants for any deficiency, and to avoid this the defendants retained the right to bid in the land themselves.

Third.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.E. 226, 182 N.Y. 373, 20 Bedell 373, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-swart-ny-1905.