Marchant v. Hughlett

84 A. 380, 118 Md. 229, 1912 Md. LEXIS 20
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 10, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 A. 380 (Marchant v. Hughlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marchant v. Hughlett, 84 A. 380, 118 Md. 229, 1912 Md. LEXIS 20 (Md. 1912).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Oourt.

This suit was brought by the plaintiff, as payee, against the defendants, as endorsers before delivery, of a promissory note made by the S. M. Johnson & Son Goal Company, a body corporate, for the sum of $3,500.00, dated June 17, 1907, and payable one year after date, with interest at six per cent. At the trial it was proven that the note was given in renewal of a pre-existing one for $4,000.00 in pursuance of the terms of an agreement in writing executed on June 12, 1906, by the corporation just mentioned and by the defendants, Addison E. Mullikin and Poland P. Marchanit, and their co-partners, William E. Applegarth, Jr., as parties of the first part, and by the plaintiff, Madie T. Hughlett, and her husband, Edward W. Hughlett, as parties of the second part. The agreemnet recited that Mrs. Hughlett had1 contracted to purchase fifty shares of the capital stock of the Goal Company from the parties of the first part, and that they had agreed to guarantee the value of the stock and to elect Mr. Hughlett vice-president of the company. It then *235 provided that in consideration of the premises the parties of the first part “guarantee the assets of the S. M. Johnson & Son Goal Company to he equal in amount to $22,500.00 according to the items and valuations of the statement of the said company made as of the first of June, 1906, and to indemnify the said parties of 'the second part for any loss arising from any discrepancies in said statement.” It was further stipulated that “as a collateral guaranty to the value of the fifty shares of stock purchased” by the plaintiff, the Coal Company should give to the plaintiff its promissory note for $4,000.00 payable one year after date,” and renewable from year to year upon the semi-annual payment of the interest on said note at the rate of six per centum and annual reductions of $500.00 from the principal amount of said note, provided the said Madie T. Hughlett shall so elect; any reduction so made and interest paid on said note as aforesaid to be charged against the earnings of the stock of the said Madie T. Hughlett;” and it was agreed that the defendants and their co-partner, individually and as a firm, should endorse the note at each renewal and that the plaintiff should “agree to the several renewals of the said promissory note in the manner and on the conditions hereinbefore set forth.” There was a provision for the election of Mr. Hughlett as vice-president of the company and for the performance by him of certain duties and for the payment to him of a salary of $1,200 a year, with the right on his part to draw $300.00 additional per annum, the latter amount, however, to he charged against the earnings of the stock held by his wife.

The financial statement mentioned in the agreement showed assets of the company amounting in the aggregate to $69,-304.98, including a pier property valued at $39,150.86, two scows at $2,000.00, and accounts receivable to the amount of $27,902.07. The liabilities, apart from the capital stock, included a mortgage of $25,000.00 on the pier property and $23,865.67 of accounts payable, making a total of $48,-865.67. It appeared, therefore, from this statement that the *236 assets of the company amounted to $20,439.31 over and above its liabilities. The capital stock of the company authorized and issued at $25,000.00 was thus shown to be worth eighty per cent, of its par value, and it was upon this basis that the sale to 'the plaintiff was effected. Of the fifty shares included in the plaintiff’s purchase twenty-five belonged to W. W. Johnson, president of the company, and twenty-five to the firm of 'which the defendant were members. The proceeds were paid to 'the company on account of debts due it by W. W. Johnson and the defendants’ firm. After this transaction the partnership still owned one hundred1 shares of the company’s stock. It was agreed that these shares and those acquired by the palintiff should not be sold except by mutual consent of the respective owners.

In April, 1908, a receiver was appointed for the company upon the ground of insolvency. The total amount realized from its assets was $4,742.06, and there remained for distribution to creditors, whose claims, including the note of the plaintiff, aggregated $27,550.66, a fund which produced a dividend of only ten per cent. Having thus sustained a loss on her stock, the plaintiff brought this action on the renewal note given under the agreement in orden to secure the benefit of the indemnity for which it provided. The case was heard by the Court below sitting as a jury, and a verdict was rendered in the plaintiff’s favor. There was evidence showing certain payments by the company to the plaintiff on account of the note, and various withdrawals by her husband beyond the amount of his salary, and these reduced the recovery to $1,755.57. The defendants excepted to 'the refusal of ten of the eleven prayers offered by them at the close of the case, while the plaintiff noted an exception to the granting of one of the defendants’ prayers. The questions thus raised are before us on appeal by both the plaintiff and defendants from the judgment entered upon the verdict.

The principal theory of the defendants is that the agreement providing for' the note in suit was intended only to *237 indemnify the plaintiff against any errors in the statement upon the faith of which her stock was purchased, and that the defendants could not he held liable in the absence of evidence showing that the statement was incorrect. It is contended that there is no evidence in the record to that effect, and that on the contrary the testimony of one of the defendants as to the accuracy of the valuations then made and submitted to the plaintiff stands without contradiction. It is accordingly insisted that the defendant’s first and second prayers proposing that a verdict he entered in their favor on this ground should have been granted.

While the agreemeniti in question uses the term “guarantee” in the indemnity clauses with which we are concerned, it is clear that the obligation imposed upon the defendants was essentially direct and not collateral. It does not present, the elements of an ordinary guaranty, because it is not an undertaking to perform a duty with respect to which another is primarily responsible. 20 Cyc. 1397. The plain purpose • of the agreement was to render the vendors of the stock liable to the purchaser for any loss arising frota a possible over-valuation at the time of the sale. The promissory note for which the agreement provided was evidently designed merely as a medium for the enforcement of this liability. It was not intended that the note should represent any additional obligation. This is apparent not only from the fact that it is described as. a collateral indemnity, but also from the provision that the interest payments and annual reductions should be chargeable to the earnings of the stock. It is perfectly clear, upon a reasonable construction of the agreement as a whole, that the plaintiff was to be entitled to demand payment of the note only in the event that the stock valuation warranted by the defendants proved to be excessive. There can be no doubt also that the liability of the defendants must, be determined with reference to the value of the assets of the company at, the time the plaintiff’s purchase was consummated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 A. 380, 118 Md. 229, 1912 Md. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marchant-v-hughlett-md-1912.