Robertson v. . Sully

52 N.E. 668, 157 N.Y. 624, 11 E.H. Smith 624, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 883
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 52 N.E. 668 (Robertson v. . Sully) 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
Robertson v. . Sully, 52 N.E. 668, 157 N.Y. 624, 11 E.H. Smith 624, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 883 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This action was brought to enforce the written guaranty of the defendant to pay the plaintiffs a debt of seven thousand pounds and interest, due them from the Clarendon Land Investment and Agency Company, Limited.

Two defenses were interposed, among others: First, that the written contract between the principal parties, of which the contract of guaranty is a part, was materially changed without the knowledge or consent of the defendant; second, that there was no offer, before action brought, to return to the defendant certain debentures of the company, deposited by him under the contract as collateral security for his guaranty.

The plaintiffs reside in England, and the company is an English corporation ; the defendant is a resident of this state.

The plaintiff Robertson and the defendant were holders of the debentures and stock of the company, and the former was a director at the time the agreement was executed, to enforce which thisc‘action is brought.

The agreement bears date the 29th day of October, 1889, and is between the company of the first part, the defendant of the second part, and the plaintiffs of the third part.

It recites that on the 29th day of July, 1886, an agreement was made between the defendant and the plaintiff Robertson, *626 whereby the defendant guaranteed the payment by the company of the principal sum of seven thousand pounds and interest, in accordance with the tenor of a coupon debenture of the company held by Bobertson, and that fourteen thousand pounds of certain mortgage debentures of the company, then about to be issued to the defendant, should stand charged by way of collateral security with the payment of the principal sum and interest.

It further recites that all of the plaintiffs, at the request of the company and defendant, had agreed that the date of payment of the principal sum should be enlarged to the 12th day of August, 1892, upon the terms and conditions of the new agreement, which was in consideration of the premises and of the former agreement.

The debentures to be charged as collateral were to be deposited with-Lloyd’s Bank, Limited, at JSTo. 72 Lombard street, in the city of London, so long as any part of the sum of seven thousand pounds, or any interest thereon, should remain unpaid, or until it should be necessary to enforce the charge by sale or otherwise. Upon repayment of the said surii and interest the debentures were to be transferred and delivered to the defendant or his nominees.

Some other provisions material to this controversy will be referred to later.

It appears that the company having executed the agreement, sent it to the defendant at the city of New York, and he signed and ¡returned it to the company, its execution by Bobertson and its delivery being somewhat delayed by Bobertson’s absence in Australia, caused by ill-health. When this agreement was delivered to Mr. Bobertson to execute, it seems to have contained an addition thereto which never came to the defendant’s knowledge until after the commencement of this action.

The agreement when executed by the defendant contained a fifth subdivision which provided that so long as any part of the seven thousand pounds remained unpaid the defendant was at all times to exercise his power and influence toward *627 keeping the plaintiff Robertson in the position as a director of the company. If Robertson from any cause ceased to be a director, before payment of the principal sum, the defendant obligated himself to purchase at par the shares of the company then owned by him.

This subdivision of the original agreement was changed as follows, by a supplemental memorandum dated December 31st, 1889 : “ Memorandum supplemental to the within indenture :■ Whereas it was part of the arrangement under which the within written indenture was entered into that the company should enter into the agreement on its part hereinafter contained, but such provision was inadvertently omitted from the said within written indenture, and it is accordingly desired to vary the said indenture in manner hereinafter appearing.

“ Row, it is hereby agreed as follows:

“ I. There shall be added at the end of clause five of the said indenture the words following, that is to say: Provided always that if the said Alfred Sully, his executors or administrators, shall make default in purchasing the said shares, and having the same duly transferred to him or them, or if the company shall refuse to register such transfer, then, and in either of such cases, the company will, within seven days after such default or refusal, as the case may be, procure the said shares to be purchased at their par value by and transferred to some responsible transferee.”

The original agreement as thus altered was in the possession of Robertson at the time of the trial and produced by him, Ro evidence was offered to show that this memorandum was attached after delivery to Robertson of the original agreement, and the presumption stands that it was varied by the company before final delivery by adding the memorandum, based upon the same consideration.

The defendant swears that he had no knowledge of the alteration until after this suit was instituted, and no effort was made by the plaintiffs to prove the contrary.

The learned Appellate Division, in considering the effect of this added memorandum upon the rights of the parties, con *628 ceded that if this agreement in any way changed the relations of the parties and at all injuriously affected the surety, he was undoubtedly discharged, whether the supplemental agreement is to be considered as part of the original contract or as an independent agreement.

It, however, reached the conclusion that there was no alteration in the contract which the defendant had guaranteed to perform, but that there were additional stipulations in respect of what the company would do in case the defendant failed to comply with his contract of guaranty as to the indebtedness mentioned in the agreement; defendant was to do nothing more; his obligation was not changed. It was an additional contract upon the part of the company in case the defendant failed to perform his agreement.

If this be the correct construction of the contract, then this judgment should be affirmed, but we are of opinion that the supplemental or independent contract wrought a change in the agreement guaranteed, as well as in the contract relations existing between the company and Robertson.

It becomes necessary at this point to look into the articles of association of the company and ascertain the precise relations which existed between the company and its creditor Robertson at the time of the execution of the agreement of October 29th, 1889.

Section 9 provides : The directors may, from time to time,, make such calls upon the members in respect of all moneys-unpaid on their shares as they think fit.”

This record discloses that the capital stock of the company had not been fully paid in.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E. 668, 157 N.Y. 624, 11 E.H. Smith 624, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-sully-ny-1899.