Oppenheim v. Waterbury

33 N.Y.S. 183, 86 Hun 122, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 122, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 18
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 N.Y.S. 183 (Oppenheim v. Waterbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oppenheim v. Waterbury, 33 N.Y.S. 183, 86 Hun 122, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 122, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 18 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

O’BRIEN, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs, who, under the firm name of E. L. Oppenheim & Co., were engaged in business as stock brokers in the city of New York, against the defendants Waterbury and Loper, as alleged guarantors, and one Matthew Griffin, as principal debtor. The latter, though named as a party, was never served with the summons and complaint, and has not appeared. On the trial it appeared that on April 3, 1893, Griffin asked the plaintiff E. L. Oppenheim whether he was willing to buy and carry for him 500 shares of Cordage stock under the guaranty of the defendants Waterbury and Loper. Though at first expressing an unwillingness, upon the statement of Griffin that the proposed guarantors were perfectly responsible, Oppenheim finally consented. Griffin thereupon handed him a slip of paper, showing the report of a broker of the purchase of 200 shares of Cordage stock, which Griffin had given an order to another broker to buy, and said to Oppenheim, “When will you compare those 200 shares?” Oppenheim testified that “comparing stock” meant stepping into the shoes of the first broker that had made the purchase. ■ “In other words, if the party wishing to buy stock gives a broker the direction to buy for E. L. Oppenheim & Co., that broker still stands the risk of it until I confirm it by comparing the stock. Then it becomes my purchase.” Oppenheim took this paper, and Griffin said he was going to buy the other 300 shares in the same way. Oppenheim then said: “You bring me a memorandum of 300 shares, and I will make out "a notice, and you take it to Waterbury and Loper, and have it indorsed, and then it will be all right.” The plaintiffs communicated with a broker named Prentice, who had purchased for Griffin on the 3d of April, about comparing the stock, and then prepared the written guaranty sued upon, which is as follows:

“Office of E. L. Oppenheim & Co., 35 New St. & 4 Exchange Court.
“New York, Apl. 3rd, 1893.
“Mr. Matthew Griffin: We have bought for your account ana risk:
No. Shares. Description. Price. Time. Firm Name.
200 N. C. O. Com. 6S% Reg. A. T¿. Norris.
200 68% *♦ Haight & Jewett.
100 68% Beebe & Van S.
“New York, April 3d.
“For value received, we hereby guaranty this account.
“J. M. Waterbury.
“G. Weaver Loper.
“Stocks or bonds sold ‘short’ will be borrowed for your account and risk.
“E. L. Oppenheim & Co.,
“Per A. H.”

[185]*185It thus appears that on April 3d Prentice purchased 500 shares of Cordage stock by the order of Griffin. In the course of the day the, purchases were compared by the clerk of the plaintiffs whose busi-' ness it was to do so, and the next day, April 4th, the stock was delivered and paid for. The guaranty was not actually delivered until April 5th, when Griffin brought it to the plaintiffs, signed by the defendants Waterbury and Loper. In explanation of the delay, Oppenheim testified that Griffin had informed him that he obtained the guaranty on the 3d, and had gone to plaintiffs’ office after 3 o’clock, but, finding that Oppenheim had gone home, he did not care to give the guaranty to anybody but him, so took it away again; and that on the 4th, when this conversation was had, he then claimed that he had not the guaranty with him, having changed his coat, and left it in another, but that he would bring it down the next morning, which he accordingly did, and delivered it to Oppenheim. That a loss occurred, and that plaintiffs called on Griffin to take up the stock, and subsequently on the defendants Waterbury and Loper for additional margin, and that upon their refusal to do anything in regard to the stock it was sold, and a loss resulted, are not disputed. The propriety and regularity of the sale of the stock being conceded, and the jury having disposed of the question as to whether the plaintiffs were interested with Griffin in the purchase, these matters are no longer the subject of contention; the questions arising upon this appeal being ones of law, as to the validity of the guaranty itself, and the admissibility of certain testimony. It is contended that there was no consideration for the alleged contract of guaranty. This is sought to be supported by the argument that, at the time the paper was signed by Waterbury and Loper, the plaintiffs had already purchased the stock, and, as they made no agreement with Griffin to carry it for any definite period of time, there was no consideration for the guaranty as between plaintiffs and the guarantors; that there could be but two possible considerations, either an actual purchase of the stock on the faith of the guaranty, or a binding agreement to carry the stock for a definite time on the faith of the guaranty; and that neither of these was in fact shown to exist. This argument is claimed to be upheld by several cases cited, which go to the extent of holding that, if the debt or obligation be first incurred or completed, there must be a new consideration for the promise to guaranty that debt; and appellant refers to the rule as laid down in Brandt, Sur. § 17, that:

“Where the consideration between the principal and creditor has past and become executed before the contract of the surety or guarantor is made, and such contract was no part of the inducement to the creation of the original debt, such consideration is not sufficient to sustain such contract.”

This section is but a corrollary of what is expressed in section 15 of the same work, which reads:

“Where a promise that a surety or guarantor will become liable is part of the inducement on which the creditor acts in creating the original debt, this is sufficient consideration to support the contract of the surety or guarantor who subsequently signs.”

[186]*186To sustain this last proposition of law, we are referred to many cases, but we think that of McNaught v. McClaughry, 42 N. Y. 22, which is cited with approval in Bank v. Coit, 104 N. Y. 537, 11 N. E. 54, sufficiently evidences the law of this state. There a principal executed and delh'ered a note to a creditor, which specified no time of payment, and at the same time agreed that he would procure B. to sign 'as surety if at any time the creditor should deem himself insecure. Afterwards the creditor returned the note to the principal, with the request that he would get B. to sign it, which he did, and B. was held liable. As said in the course of the opinion in that case:

“The authorities are clear upon the"two propositions involved in the question:" (1) If Abram had given his note to the plaintiff, and the same had been accepted in performance of the contract, without further condition, and the note was yet unmatured, the obtaining an additional indorser would have been a gratuitous act on the part, of Abram, and the indorser would not be bound. He would not be bound, not because there was no direct consideration moving to himself, but because there was no sufficient consideration moving to his principal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.Y.S. 183, 86 Hun 122, 93 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 122, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oppenheim-v-waterbury-nysupct-1895.