Lowe & Co. v. Beckwith

53 Ky. 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 5, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Ky. 184 (Lowe & Co. v. Beckwith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe & Co. v. Beckwith, 53 Ky. 184 (Ky. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

Judge Simpson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is founded upon a guaranty given by Jacob Beckwith, in • favor of J. B. Maynard, by the following instrument of writing:

“Louisville, April 28th 1849.
“ Mr. J. B. Maynard being about to commence the retailing of dry goods at Cannelton, Indiana, and desiring to open a credit with the -firm of James Lowe & Co., of the city of Louisville, I hereby undertake and contract with said Lowe & Co. to become responsible to them for the amount of any bill or bills of merchandise sold by them to said Maynard, agreeably to the terms of sale agreed upon by the parties, without requiring said Lowe & Co. to prosecute suit against said Maynard therefor.
Jacob Beckwith.”

The plaintiffs averred in their petition, and proved upon the trial, that they accepted the defendant’s guaranty on the day it was given, and notified him that they would sell merchandise to Maynard on credit, looking to the guaranty he had given them for indemnity. They also averred and proved, that on the faith of said guaranty they .had sold merchandise to Maynard from time to time, between its acceptance and the 19th of May, 1851, inclusive, amounting in the aggregate to sevefal thousand dollars, and that the sum of $448 still remained due to them on account of said sales, which Maynard had failed and refused to pay, although the payment had been demanded of him, of which the defendant had been duly notified.-

[186]*186The defendant admitted the execution of the writing relied on by the plaintiffs, but insisted that ac ■ cording to ite tfexuas he was only liable for the first purchases made by Maynard, which had been fully paid for, as appeared by the account of sales and credits, which, they exhibited. He also denied that he had been duly notified that Maynard was in default in paying for the. goods sold to him by the plaintiffs, or that '’'ey looked to the defendants, on his guaranty, for the payment of the balance due them.

It appeared upon the trial that the first bill of merchandise was sold to Maynard by the plaintiffs on the 26th of April, 1849, and amounted to $536,; other sales were made to him in each of the following-months during the same year, and at various times during the ensuing year, and were continued to be made from time to time until the month cf May, 1851. The sales were oh a credit of either four or six months. Partial payments were occasionally made by Maynard, whose purchases amounted in the aggregate during the whole time to $4,470 28, and the payments made by him to $4,027 28. His payments on the 11th September, 1849, which had been made at different times, amounted to $536. — .the exact amount of the first bill of merchandise sold to him by the plaintiffs; but the account, although balanced about the end of each year, had never been closed at any time, and the balance, thus ascertained to be due, paid or settled. This action was commenced in October, 1852, and it did not appear that the defendant was notified until within a few days before its commencement, and. after Maynard had become insolvent, that he was in default in paying for the merchandise he had purchased of the plaintiffs, or that they considered the defendant liable for the balance due, although the last sales were made in May, 1851; nor did it appear that, the guarantor had been informed, at any time during the period within which the sales were made, that the plaintiffs were continuing to make sales of merchandise to Maynard on the faith’of his guaranty, although [187]*187lie was notified at the time it was given that it was accepted, and would be acted oh by them.

I. Tho Serins of a guaranty, ■‘J. B. M. being about to commence retailing dry goods, X hereby undertake and contract with L. & Go. to become responsible to them for the amount of any bill or bills of merchandise sold by them to said M. agreeably to the terms of sale agreed upon by^ the parties, without requiring said Jj. & Co. to prosecute suit against said M. therefor.” Held, that this guaranty was not a limited guaranty confined to the first bill of merchandise bought by M. of L. & Go., but was a continuing guaranty embracing ail the purchases.

[187]*187Upon this state of case the court instructed the jury to find for the defendant, as in the case of a non-suit, which instruction the court gave, and its correctness is the question now presented for our determination.

This instruction is attempted to be sustained on three distinct grounds — 1. The writing upon which the action is based is not a continuing guaranty, unlimited in amount and as to time, but a guaranty only of such goods as plaintiffs should sell Maynard, to aid him in commencing business. 2. If the guaranty did not expire with the first sale of §536, still the guarantor is discharged from responsibility, because he was not informed of the subsequent sales, as they were successively made. 3. That no notice of the extent of the sales, or of the amount for which the guarantor was held responsible, was communicated to him within a reasonable time after the expiration of the credit upon which the last sales were made, nor was he informed of the default of Maynard until he had become insolvent, and until a year or more had expired after the debt became due, and by this negligence of the plaintiffs he is discharged from all liability on his guaranty.

1. Neither the language nor the object of the letter of credit in this case will authorize the conclusion that it was intended, and understood by the parties, as a limited guaranty. The aid required was not merely to enable Maynard to “commence business,” but he being about to commence business desired to open a credit with the plaintiffs, and the guarantor agreed to become responsible for the amount of any bill or bills of merchandise sold by them to him. The object contemplated was to enable Maynard to open a credit with the plaintiffs, and to purchase from- them, from time to time, any bill or bills of merchandise that he thought necessai'y to the business in which he was about to embark. This object could only be accomplished by giving to the guaranty a continuing operation. It [188]*188contains no limitation either as to amount or time. The language used fairly admits of the construction, that it was unlimited in duration, and it was no doubt so understood and acted upon by the plaintiffs.

2. Each letter of guaranty must be construed by its own terms, and courts are inclined to give such instruments a liberal and not a restricted construction. (7 Peters, 113; 12 East. 227; 2 Campbell,. 413; 8 John. 119,)

We think the authorities are decidedly in favor of this interpretation. It is true that in these cases, the' construction of each instrument must depend on the language used in it, and consequently the decision upon one cannot be an authority for the construction of another, unless the language used in each be exactly similar; but still the manner in which courts have construed such instruments shows that they have been inclined to give them a liberal and not a restricted interpretation, and thus have furnished a rule which gives some aid in their construction.

In the case of Douglass v. Reynolds, &c., 7 Peters, 113, the letter of credit was in the following language; “ Gentlemen:

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Bluebook (online)
53 Ky. 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-co-v-beckwith-kyctapp-1853.