Mosaic Tile Co. v. Jones

168 A. 629, 111 N.J.L. 385, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 366
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedSeptember 27, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 168 A. 629 (Mosaic Tile Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosaic Tile Co. v. Jones, 168 A. 629, 111 N.J.L. 385, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 366 (N.J. 1933).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Perskie, J.

This appeal brings up for review a judgment of $3,070.11 entered on December 29th, 1932, on a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff-respondent and against the defendant-appellant. The plaintiff-respondent sued on a guarantee which was in the following form:

“Whereas the Beach Construction Company is erecting a building on Second Avenue, Bradley Beach, New Jersey, and the Mosaic Tile Company has been requested to furnish tile to Harry Nelson for said Beach Construction Company, said tile to be used in the furnishing and erection of said building, and

“Whereas in order that the work of completing said building may be started and proceeded with, the creditors of said Beach Construction Company have entered into an agreement that they will receive payment of their claims from the proceeds of a certain mortgage of one hundred thirty thousand dollars, said sum of money to be paid to the creditors pro rata, in the event that money paid from the proceeds of said mortgage to the Mosaic Tile Company shall be insufficient to pay the full amount due for supplying said tile to Harry Nelson as aforesaid and in consideration of the Mosaic Tile Company ■joining with other creditors in signing said agreement with the trustees covering payment on said job, this will guarantee the payment to the said Mosaic Tile Company of any balance *387 of its account that may remain unpaid after distribution of the balance of the proceeds of the mortgage as aforesaid. Witness as to J. Wm. Jones,

Donald S. Bowie.

J. William Jones.”

The Beach Construction Company owned lands at Bradley Beach, and was engaged in constructing an apartment house thereon. Plaintiff-respondent was to furnish tile and had already supplied tile to the extent of $410.26 when the Beach Construction Company became financially involved or embarrassed, as a result of which it was unable to complete the undertaking. As a result of various conferences between the owners, material men and others in interest, a trust agreement was prepared on July 6th, 1929, in which John W. Davis and J. William Jones and J. William .Jones, individually, were designated as trustees. The trust agreement provided that the building was to be completed, and moneys disbursed out of a proposed $130,000 building and loan association mortgage which had apparently been secured. All parties in interest executed this trust agreement with the exception of the plaintiff-respondent, who was to furnish additional tile to the amount of $2,500. The plaintiff-respondent refused to execute the agreement unless it was guaranteed the payment of the tile yet to be furnished. In order to induce the plaintiff-respondent to supply this tile and execute the trust agreement the defendant-appellant signed the guaranty aforesaid. Whereupon plaintiff-respondent delivered tile to the amount of $2,502.77. The trustees proceeded with the completion of the building. It, however, developed that the building and loan association which had agreed to advance the sum of $130,000 (all necessary instruments having been executed, delivered and recorded) found itself unable to do so. It further appears that, if the proceeds of the $130,000 mortage had been received it would not have been sufficient to meet the disbursements necessary to complete the undertaking, and that the creditors would have received nothing. Thereupon the trustees, without notice to the plaintiff-respondent and without its consent, negotiated a new mortgage loan *388 in the sum of $150,000. The proceeds of this mortgage were also insufficient to meet the necessary disbursements and accordingly the creditors received nothing. Whereupon this suit was brought upon the guaranty. Motion for nonsuit as well as motions for directed verdicts were made by each party and were refused. This we think was proper. The testimony adduced presented a jury question. The defendant-appellant in limine, contends that the guaranty was conditional, i. e., if the proceeds of the $130,000 mortgage were insufficient then defendant-appellant could be made to respond to his guaranty. It further contends that the placing of a new mortgage of $150,000, though without notice to or consent of the plaintiff-respondent, released the guarantor of liability. With this contention we do not agree. “The rule that a guarantor is entitled to have his undertaking strictly construed does not mean that there should be any strict, technical accuracy — but the guarantee should receive a liberal, fair and reasonable interpretation in furtherance of its spirit and in order to attain the object designed.” 28 G. J., p. 936, § 81, 4. As we read the guarantee it appears to us that the clear intent thereof was simply that if the proceeds of the mortgage were insufficient, he, the • defendant-appellant, would pay. Obviously, the proceeds of the $130,000 mortgage was insufficient as were likewise the proceeds of the $150,000 mortgage. To permit the defendant-appellant to avoid liability after the plaintiff-respondent had furnished title, by changing the amount of the mortgage to a higher figure, without its knowledge or consent, would not only defeat the fair, reasonable and clear intent of the spirit and object designed to be attained but would defeat and destroy the fixed and vested rights of the plaintiff-respondent in the premises. We are of the opinion that the guarantee in the instant case was one of payment and not merely a guarantee of collection as pointed out by Mr. Justice Parker in the case of Pfeiffer v. Crossley, 91 N. J. L. 433; affirmed, 92 Id. 638. Just as soon as the plaintiff-respondent ascertained that the proceeds of the mortgage of $130,000 or that of the $150,000 were insufficient, its rights became fixed. Again in the ease of Pfeiffer v. Crosley, supra, it was held that the “plaintiff was under no legal obli *389 gation to foreclose the mortgage, but was entitled to hold the guarantor immediately upon a default. Her foreclosure was simply a favor to the defendant, and a fortiori, she was under no obligation to follow it up by a suit on the bond. It was for the defendant to pay, to take up the bond and mortgage and pursue the remedies thereon himself.”

In other words the guarantor was not permitted to avoid liability because the person guaranteed favored the guarantor at his request. In the instant case the guarantor seeks to avoid liability because of the change made by himself in the mortgage without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff-respondent. He was pecuniarily interested. He had advanced a large sum of money to help complete the undertaking.

Nor is this case in anywise similar to the case of Lyon & Co. v. Plum, 75 Id. 883, wherein Mr. Justice Parker held:

“A guaranty to a firm of a customer’s running account is not operative as to credit extended after the admission into such firm of a new member, in the absence of anything to show that such change in the firm was originally contemplated by the guarantor.”

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168 A. 629, 111 N.J.L. 385, 1933 N.J. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosaic-tile-co-v-jones-nj-1933.