Nabb v. Koontz

17 Md. 283, 1861 Md. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 3, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 17 Md. 283 (Nabb v. Koontz) 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
Nabb v. Koontz, 17 Md. 283, 1861 Md. LEXIS 38 (Md. 1861).

Opinion

Tuck, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

There is no question, on this appeal, arising from the supposed failure of consideration for Mrs. Nabb’snofe to Koontz. The court, by granting the first prayer of the defendant, submitted that inquiry to the jury, who found the issue against him.

The second and fourth prayers present, substantially, one ground of defence, to wit: whether there was such a consideration in writing for the defendant’s undertaking to pay his mother’s note, as gratifies the statute of frauds?

ft is well settled in England and in Maryland, and most of the States, though a different construction has been adopted in others, that the consideration for a promise or agreement to pay the debt of another, must be expressed in, or gathered from, the writing. Wyman vs. Gray, 7 H. & J., 409. Elliott vs. Giese, Ibid., 457.

The appellee’s counsel, conceding this position, insists, that where the written promise of the principal debtor sets forth or imports a consideration, and the undertaking of the grantor refers to the original indebtedness, and is made and delivered to the creditor at the same time, this objection does not apply. As there is evidence of the matters relied on to support this view of the case, the decision must depend on the legal soundness of the distinction here taken.

Elementary works of the highest character assert, in the plainest terms, the doctrine now advanced on the part of the appeilee, and we have examined all the cases referred t.o by them, t.o which access could be bad, to ascertain how far it has been sanctioned by jurists, whose decisions have been received with great consideration, if not accepted as authority, by the courts of this State.

[288]*288In 1 Parsons on Cont., 496, it is said: “The rule of law is this, if the original debt, or obligation is already incurred or undertaken, previous to the collateral undertaking, then there must be a new and distinct consideration to sustain the guaranty. But if the original debt or obligation be founded upon a good consideration, and at the time when it is incurred or undertaken, or before that time, the guaranty is given and received, and enters into the inducement for giving credit or supplying goods, then the consideration for which the original debt is incurred, is regarded as a consideration, also, for the guaranty.” See, to the same effect. Smith’s Merc. Law, 447, note, and cases cited, (Ed. of 1847;) also, Chitty on Cont., 448, note, (Ed. of 1855.) Story on Prom. Notes, secs. 458, 459. 2 Robinson’s Pr., 285. Many cases are referred to in support of this position, from which we select the following.

In Leonard vs. Vredenburg, 8 Johns., 23, it was proved, that one Johnson applied to the plaintiff for credit, which was refused, unless security could be offered. Upon which he made his promissory note, for value received, on which the defendant wrote and signed, “I guaranty the above,” and the same being presented to the plaintiff he delivered the goods. Kent, Ch. J., said, “The promise (of the defendant) was made at the time of the original negotiation between the plaintiff and Johnson. It was incorporated with that contract, and became an essential branch of it. The whole was one single bargain, and the want of consideration, as between the plaintiff and defendant, cannot be alleged. If there was a consideration for the entire agreement, (and Johnson’s note purporting to be given for value received, was evidence of it,) that consideration was the aliment for the defendant’s promise.”

. In Manrow vs. Durham, 3 Hill, 584, Nelson, Ch. J., said, “Where the guaranty and note are cotemporaneous, you may resort to the note to sustain the consideration of the guaranty.” And Bronson, J., in the same case, “Where, at the time a note is made, and as part of the same transaction, a third person endorses an absolute guaranty upon the [289]*289note, he will be liable in some form for tiie payment of the money Both instruments taken together make but one contract, and the consideration which upholds the one will support the other.” See, also, Bailey vs. Freeman, 11 Johns., 221. Nelson vs. Dubois, 13 Johns., 175. Wheelwright vs. Moore, 1 Hall, 201, 648, and 2 Hall, 143. There are several other cases in New York affirming the principle. And so in 20 Maine, 28, Huntress vs. Patten. 29 Maine, 79, Gillighan vs. Boardman. How vs. Kemball, 2 McLean, 110. 14 Ill., 237, Klein vs. Cussier.

The same law prevails in Massachusetts. In Bickford vs. Gibbs, 8 Cush., 154, where the defendants had signed the following on a promissory note: “We guaranty the payment of the within, waiving demand and notice;” Shaw, Ch. J said, “The exception is also taken, that as the guaranty was a contract, collateral to the note, a distinct consideration should be proved. There would be force in this objection had the guaranty been made after the note was made and delivered, and received as a complete contract. But where the guaranty is made on the note, before its delivery by the maker to the promisee, it must be deemed to be done for the benefit of the maker, and to add to the strength of the note, and to induce the promisee to take it, and advance his money on it, and no other consideration is necessary than the credit thus given to tiie maker.” In the case of Oxford Bank vs. Haynes, 8 Pick., 423, where the words, “I guaranty the payment of the within note,” were written on ihe note, signed and delivered to the bank before the same was discounted,Parker, Ch. J., had‘hold that the defendant made himself liable as guarantor, though the laches of the holder had discharged him. See, also, Nelson vs. Boynton, 3 Metcalf, 396.

The decisions in Pennsylvania differ from those cited, in this, that there the party charged is regarded as a joint maker and not as guarantor, but it is upon the ground that the consideration for the note supports the promise sued on, as fully as if the party had signed the note. Amsbaugh vs. Gearhart, 1 Jones, 482. Campbell vs. Knapp, 15 Penn. State Rep., 29. Snevily vs. Johnston, 1 Watts & Sergt., 307. The last is' [290]*290a case of collateral undertaking, and was decided expressly on the principle now under consideration.

This branch of the law was very fully presented in argument, and considered by the Supreme Court in DeWolf vs. Rabaud, 1 Peters, 476, where the statute of frauds was relied upon, and the main question arose on the charge of Mr. Justice Thompson, as to the effect of the undertaking of the defendant, if found by the jury to have been entered into at the time of the original agreement between the plaintiff and another person. The opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Story, affirming the defendant’s liability, and the case is referred to in his work on Prom. Notes, sec. 459, in support of the proposition that, “if the original contract and the guaranty are cotemporaneous, no other consideration need be shown than that which belongs to, or is found in, the original contract.” See, also, Caballero vs. Slater, 25 Eng. Law & Eq. Rep., 285.

But it is insisted on the part of the appellant, that the case of Aldridge, et al., vs. Turner, 1 G. & J.,

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17 Md. 283, 1861 Md. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nabb-v-koontz-md-1861.