Klatte v. Franklin State Bank

248 N.W. 158, 211 Wis. 613, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 248
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 158 (Klatte v. Franklin State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klatte v. Franklin State Bank, 248 N.W. 158, 211 Wis. 613, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 248 (Wis. 1933).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed April 11, 1933 :

Fowler, J.

There is no dispute that the bond in suit originally bound all the parties to it to payment of the checks drawn by Mr. Klatte against his deposits. The issues may best be treated by taking up successively the points relied on by the defendant sureties to relieve them of this obligation.

(1) Mr. W. B. Rubin contends, and the circuit court ruled in his favor, that his notice of withdrawal effected his dis[618]*618charge. That his notice had such effect is ruled by Bremer v. Rufener, 186 Wis. 195, 202 N. W. 206. The agreement there involved was in effect like the instant bond. A principal and two sureties signed a bond conditioned that the principal should within a stated period after the expiration of each month pay all the patrons of a cheese factory for all milk delivered during the previous month. The court ruled that the bond was a continuous contract, /involving a series of transactions, and that the sureties might terminate their future liability by giving definite notice that they would not be bound after a definite future date reasonable in point of time. Rubin’s notice was given in 1926 and was a notice of absolute withdrawal. It was sufficient under the rule declared by the case cited to terminate his liability after a reasonable lapse of time. It cannot be contended that such period had not elapsed long prior to the commencement of this suit.

Guaranties for payment of purchases of goods to be made in the future are construed as continuing offers to guarantee payment of each purchase as a separate transaction, accepted when the sale is made. So construed, the offer, like an offer of guaranty on a single contract, may be withdrawn at any time before it is accepted. So of guaranties to banks to procure credit for future loans. Gay v. Ward, 67 Conn. 147, 34 Atl. 1025, 32 L. R. A. 818. The latter follows, by implication, from First Nat. Bank v. Wunderlich, 145 Wis. 193, 130 N. W. 98. The contract in suit is of the same nature. The offer continues as to each deposit until revoked, and the making of the deposit constitutes an acceptance of the offer as to that deposit, and binds the sureties who have not withdrawn their offer to repayment of that deposit.

(2) The sureties other than Mr. Rubin all contend that his release discharged them, and the trial court decided in their favor upon the theory that the contract was a joint contract and that the rule at common law was that the release of [619]*619one surety (by the creditor) discharged all the others. We are of opinion that this theory is not tenable, irrespective of whether their contention as to the common-law rule is correct or not.

This is a several contract as well as joint. The withdrawal of Mr. Rubin did not destroy the several nature of the contract. Each surety had the option to remain on the contract or withdraw from it as he saw fit. The sureties all received notice of Mr. Rubin’s withdrawal. Notwithstanding their right to withdraw, none of them, after receiving notice of Mr. Rubin’s withdrawal, saw fit to exercise it. By their conduct in not withdrawing, the sureties acquiesced in remaining on the contract notwithstanding Mr. Rubin’s withdrawal. By not withdrawing they lulled the plaintiff into believing that they elected to remain on the bond and prevented the procuring of a new bond, as he doubtless would have done had they all or several of them exercised their right of withdrawal. In this situation the sureties are es-topped from claiming that they are not bound by the bond.

The contention of the respondents that the withdrawal of Mr. Rubin discharged them from the bond is based on cases of executed, not continuing, contracts of guaranty. If one guarantees a particular obligation of another, as the payment of a note, he has no right to withdraw his guaranty. He is absolutely bound by his executed contract. His obligation is complete. In case of a continuing guaranty, there is no reason for holding that the withdrawal of one surety shall operate as a withdrawal of the other. What the one has done the other may do. Why should one surety’s withdrawal be construed, as matter of law, as doing for another what the other may do for himself if he so wishes ? There is no call for the law to grant relief from an obligation to one who has in his hands the means of effecting his own relief. Why should the law do for one what he may do for himself ? The reason for the rule that effects the release of a co-surety, [620]*620either whqlly according to the ancient common-law rule applied in actions at law or in proportion to the released co-surety’s obligation to contribution as between co-sureties according to the common-law rule applied in suits in equity, from a debt that he is irrevocably bound to pay, whether that reason be good or bad, does not apply where the co-surety may at will revoke his contract. Although we find no adjudicated cases upon the point, we conclude upon reason that the co-sureties were not released by the release of Mr. Rubin, and that his release did not at all affect'their several obligations.

This conclusion is contrary to that of the Minnesota court relied on by the trial judge, in Stone-Ordean-Wells Co. v. Taylor, 139 Minn. 432, 166 N. W. 1069, L. R. A. 1918 E, 93. It is, however, in full accord with that of the Idaho court in Washington County v. Wieser Nat. Bank, 43 Idaho, 600, 255 Pac. 310. In the latter case a statutory bond was involved, but the withdrawal of the surety was effected by notice as here, and we do not see that the distinction stated affords reason for rejecting the case as supporting authority. The Minnesota case applied the rule applicable to executed contracts imposing absolute liability to payment, which, as above pointed out, we consider not applicable to a case of continuing as distinguished from executed guaranties.

(3) The heirs of Mr. Reichert, the deceased surety, contend that his death revoked his contract. There is conflict of authorities on this point. A good part of the seeming conflict is due to a failure to distinguish between the nature of a completed or absolute guaranty and a guaranty that is continuing. Thus contracts guaranteeing the conduct of an agent, in case he is appointed by a principal pursuant to an offer of guaranty made by a surety, have been held to be completed or executed contracts of guaranty. This is the theory on which the following cases hold that such a contract binds the estate of a deceased surety for defaults of the agent [621]*621made after the surety’s death: Lloyd’s v. Harper, L. R. 16 Ch. Div. 290; Shackamaxon Bank v. Yard, 143 Pa. St. 129, 22 Atl. 908, 24 Am. St. Rep. 521; Elam v. Commercial Bank, 86 Va. 92, 9 S. E. 498; Estate of Rapp v. Phœnix Ins. Co. 113 Ill. 390, 55 Am. Rep. 427; Royal Life Ins. Co. v. Davies, 40 Iowa, 469; Saint v. Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co. 95 Ala. 371, 10 South. 539. The principle on which these decisions are based does not apply on the theory that each transaction constitutes a separate contract of offer and acceptance, applied in Bremer v. Rufener, supra. To the contrary are the following cases involving continuing guaranties like the one in suit: Jordan v. Dobbins, 122 Mass. 168; Hyland v. Habich, 150 Mass. 112, 22 N. E. 765; Gay v. Ward, supra; Aitkin v. Lang’s Adm’r, 106 Ky. 652, 51 S. W. 154; National Eagle Bank v. Hunt, 16 R. I. 151, 13 Atl. 115; In re Kelley's Estate, 173 Mich. 493, 139 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 N.W. 158, 211 Wis. 613, 1933 Wisc. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klatte-v-franklin-state-bank-wis-1933.