London & San Francisco Bank, Ltd. v. Parrott

58 P. 164, 125 Cal. 472, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 885
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1899
DocketS. F. No. 1167
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 58 P. 164 (London & San Francisco Bank, Ltd. v. Parrott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
London & San Francisco Bank, Ltd. v. Parrott, 58 P. 164, 125 Cal. 472, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 885 (Cal. 1899).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

The defendants in the above-entitled cause (with others) executed and delivered to the plaintiff, September 30, 1891, the following instrument:

“To the London and San Francisco Bank, Lt’d, San Francisco, California:
“You will please give credit to.the Capitol Packing Company for a sum of money in United States gold coin not exceeding the amount of one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars; and as said packing company contemplates a course of future dealing with you, you will please continue the said credit, or, if it should be reduced or satisfied by payments made by said packing company, renew the same from time to time for said amount, or any less sum, or otherwise keep the said credit permanently up to the limit as aforesaid, or any less amount.
“And these presents shall be deemed to be, and shall constitute to jum, a continuing guaranty by each of us in the several proportions stated below, in reference to, and embracing, the original credit hereby authorized and all future liabilities of said packing company to you under said original credit, and under such successive transactions with you as shall either continue its liability or from time to time renew it; and such guaranty shall remain and be operative until all present or future credit or credits given by you as aforesaid, not exceeding the said limited amount, shall be fully paid, subject to our legal right to revoke the same in writing at any time as to any transactions occurring after such revocation.
“The subscribers hereto do hereby severally guarantee the said credits to the amount of one hundred thousand (100,000) dollars, in the following proportions, namely: .... Thomas Cole, for another twenty-five six-hundredths (25-600) part thereof; Abby M. Parrott, for another one hundred and sixty-five six-hundredths (165-600) part thereof.
“This guaranty shall bind each subscriber for his said proportion of said total credit (until after such revocation by him), notwithstanding some part of said total credit shall not be hereby guaranteed.
“Dated San Francisco, September 30, 1891.”

[480]*480October 5, 1891, the Capitol Packing Company opened an account with the plaintiff, and thereafter, until August 30, 1894, made deposits of moneys for its said account, drew checks against the same, and received advances by way of loans from said bank, which said advances were, by the said packing company’s agreement with said bank, to draw interest, - payable monthly, at the rate of seven per cent per annum. In July, 1893, the San Francisco Clearing House, of which the plaintiff was a member, promulgated a rule for the government -of its members, that they should not allow overdrafts on the part of their customers; and for the purpose of complying with this rule the Capitol Packing Company, at the request of the plaintiff, delivered to it on the sixth day of September, its promissory note for the sum of $73,000, bearing date August 31, 1893, and payable one day after date. At that time the books of the bank showed an indebtedness on the part of the packing company of $72,899-.61. This note was not accepted by the bank as payment, but its amount was placed upon the credit side of the packing company’s account, and was so entered for the purpose of closing on its books the overdraft of the packing company, under the aforesaid rule of the clearing house. A balance was struck in the account, and the difference, viz., $100.39, was carried to the credit column of the account, the account was continued upon the books, and the packing company continued to make deposits and draw checks against the same until August 30, 1894, when it was finally closed. On July 31, 1895, the total amount due to the bank, as shown by the accounts upon its books, was $78,110, being the aforesaid sum of $73,000 and interest thereon for one year. An agreed case containing the above facts and others hereinafter named was submitted to' the superior court for its determination, the plaintiff claiming therefrom a right of recovery against the defendants, and they claiming to be under no liability by reason thereof. The superior court rendered its judgment in favor of the plaintiff, from which the present appeal has been taken.

1. The instrument of September 30, 1891, is both a letter of credit and a guaranty. The first portion thereof is a written instrument addressed by the appellants to the respondent, [481]*481requesting the latter to give credit to the Capitol Packing Company, and thus falls directly within the terms of section 2858 of the Civil Code; and in the subsequent portion thereof they guarantee the said credit to the amount of $100,000, in certain specific proportions, and declare that the same shall be a continuing guaranty by each of them in these proportions, until the credit that may be given shall be fully paid. Regarded as a letter of credit, the terms of the instrument do not require any notice of the credit thereafter given, nor can the necessity of giving such notice be implied from its terms; and under section 2865 they became liable for such credit without notice to them. Their guaranty of the credits that might be given thereafter contains no limitation and is unconditional. It is not an offer to guarantee—its language being that they “do hereby severally guarantee the said credits”—but is an absolute guaranty, and, under section 2795 of the Civil Code, became binding upon them without any notice of acceptance. The provisions of section 1565 of the Civil Code, cited by the appellants, requiring the consent of parties to a contract to be “communicated by each to the other,” has no application to a contract by which one person makes an absolute guaranty to another of the debt or default of a third person. It is a cardinal rule of statutory construction that specific provisions upon a particular subject control general provisions for the class to which that subject belongs. (Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, sec. 399.) Section 1565 of the Civil Code refers to contracts in general, and is found in title I, of part II of that code, while the sections relating to "Guaranty” are contained in title XIII, of part III of the same code. Section 4481 of the Political Code declares: "If the provisions of any title conflict with or contravene the provisions of another title, the provisions of each title must prevail as to all matters and questions arising out of the subject matter of such title.”

It is claimed by the appellants that the acceptance by the bank of the promissory note for $73,000 was such an alteration of the relation between it and the packing company as to discharge the guarantors, and in support thereof they invoke the oft-cited rule that a surety or a guarantor is entitled to stand upon the strict terms of his contract. When it is said that a [482]*482guarantor is entitled to stand upon the strict terms of his guaranty, nothing more is intended than that he is not to be held liable for anything that is not within'the express terms of the instrument in which his guaranty is contained; that his liability is not to be extended by implication beyond these limits, or to other subjects than those expressed in the instrument of guaranty. But for the purpose of ascertaining the meaning of the language which he has used, and thus determining the extent of his guaranty, the same rules of construction are to be applied as are applied in the construction of other written instruments.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P. 164, 125 Cal. 472, 1899 Cal. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/london-san-francisco-bank-ltd-v-parrott-cal-1899.