Rindge v. . Judson

24 N.Y. 64
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 24 N.Y. 64 (Rindge v. . Judson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rindge v. . Judson, 24 N.Y. 64 (N.Y. 1861).

Opinion

James, J.

The principal question for adjudication is whether the instrument sued on is or is not a continuing guaranty. As was said by Justice Dehio in Gates v. McKee (3 Kern., 232), “ if this were the first time that an instrument of this character had come before the courts, and we were called upon to construe it without reference to adjudged cases, we would find no difficulty in holding that the limit of fifty dollars had reference to the amount of the defendant’s liability rather than the amount of dealing between Butler and Rindge.”

Had the guarantor desired or intended to limit his responsibility to a single transaction, or to several transactions not exceeding that sum in all, it was so easy to have said it in *66 | plain and unmistakable terms, that if he -has failed • to do so, • and by equivocal language induced the guarantee to part with , goods, he should be held to abide the consequences..

Except to demonstrate principles, not much aid can be obtained from adjudged cases in determining questions of this-kind; because each case must depend mainly upon the terms of the instrument, and it is scarcely possible that two instruments should be precisely alike. The cases upon this question do not all agree upon the principle by which such agreements should,be construed; and I think this case must turn mainly upon the question whether the contract is to be strictly con strued, or whether it is to be construed like other instruments I had supposed the question disposed of by this court in Gates v. McKee (supra), but as the Supreme Court has seen fit to ' question the correctness of that decision, it may not be inappropriate to refer- again to the cases bearing upon that subject.

The leading English case is Mason v. Pritchard (12 East., 227), where it was laid down by the court that “the words .were to be taken as strongly against the party giving the guaranty as the sense of them would admit.” That ease was followed by Hargrave v. Smee (6 Bing., 244), where Chief Justice Tindal said: “ The question is, what is the fair import to be collected from the language, used in this guaranty ? The words employed are the words Of the defendant, and there is no reason for putting on a guaranty a construction different from that which the court puts upon any other instrument.' With regard to other instruments the rule is, that if the party exe- ■ outing them leaves anything ambiguous in his expressions, such ambiguity must be taken most strongly against’ himself.” Park, J., said' “the only question of principle which has been agitated on the present occasion is whether these instruments are to be construéd strictly;. and I am not disposed to hold the doctrine which has been imputed to Lord Wyneoed, that a guaranty ought to receive a strict construction.' That ' was not the principle adopted in Mason v. Pritchard by Mr. Baron Wood, who. tried the cause, and the very le,arned persons who decided it.”

*67 In Brooks v. Haigh (10 Adol. & Ellis, 323), in the Exchequer Chamber, Lord Abikger said: “ It is the opinion of all the court that there was in the guaranty an ambiguity that might be explained by evidence, so as to make it a valid contract.” So again in Mayer v. Isaac (6 Mees. & Weis., 629), upon citation by counsel of the case of Nicholson v. Paget (5 C. & P., 395), holding that a party furnishing goods on the faith of a guaranty was bound to see that it was couched in such words as that the guarantor might distinctly understand to what he was binding himself. Baron Parke interrupted counsel, and inquired: “ Do you find any other authority to support the rule of construction there laid down ? It is certainly at variance with the general rule of the common law, which is that the words of an instrument are to be taken most strongly against the party using them. A guaranty is one of that class of obligations which is binding only on one of the parties, until the other chooses .by his own act to maxe it binding on him also. This instrument does not contain the words of both parties, but of one only, the defendant; the plaintiff agrees to nothing on the face of it,” and in pronouncing the judgment of the court, Baron Aldebson said, “the generally received principle of law is, that the party who makes any instrument should take care so to express the amount of his own liability as that he may not be bound beyond what it was his intention that he should be; and, on. the other hand, that the party who receives the instrument, and parts with his goods on the faith of it, should rather have a construction put upon it in his favor, because the words of the instrument are not his, but those of the other party; and, therefore, if I were obliged to choose between the two conflicting principles which have been laid down on this subject, I should rather be disposed to agree with that given in Mason v. Pritchard, than with the opinion of Bagley, B., in Nicholson v. Paget."

The principle of these cases was recognized in Bainbridge v. Wade (1 Eng. L. & Eq. R., 236), and in Broom v. Batchelor (37 id., 572, 1856).

*68 I have not been able to find that the case of Ma$on,v. Pritchard has ever'been questioned of late years, and never directly, except by the case of Nicholson v. Paget; which latter case, as is shown, has been often .repudiated. -This principle, certainly was not questioned in Melville v. Hayden (3 Barn. & Aid., 593). That case only questioned the construction given .to ..the guaranty, and not the rule by which it was to-be construed. But if it were otherwise, the later decisions.of the same court have disregarded it, and followed the principle of Mason v. Pritchard'.

The decisions in the United.States Supreme Court .upon this question are equally, emphatic and conclusive. To, take them up in their.inverse order .of .time, I will - refer, first, to the case of Laurence v. McCalmont (2 How., 426, 449), where Stoev, J., said: “Some remarks have been made, on the argument here, upon the point, in what manner letters of guaranty are to be construed; whether they are to receive .a strict or a liberal interpretation. We have no difficulty whatever in saying that instruments of this, sort ought to receive a liberal interpretation. By a liberal interpretation, we do not mean that the words should be forced out pf their natural meaning, but simply that the words should receive a fair and reasonable interpretation, so as to attain the objects for which the instrument is designed, and the purposes to which it is applied.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.Y. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rindge-v-judson-ny-1861.