Sather Banking Co. v. Arthur R. Briggs Co.

72 P. 352, 138 Cal. 724, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 756
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1903
DocketSac. No. 926.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 72 P. 352 (Sather Banking Co. v. Arthur R. Briggs Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sather Banking Co. v. Arthur R. Briggs Co., 72 P. 352, 138 Cal. 724, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 756 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant F. M. Butler, and from an order denying its motion for a new trial. Our attention has been invited by appellant to a consideration of its bill of exceptions both on the appeal from the judgment and from the order, but we cannot consider it for either purpose. The appeal was taken more than sixty days after the entry of the judgment, hence it cannot be used on appeal from the judgment. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 939.) Neither can it be considered on the appeal from the order, because it contains no specifications of insufficiency of evidence to justify the findings, no assignments of error in any particular, and none appear on the face of the bill. (Leonard v. Shaw, 114 Cal. 69; Sprigg v. Barber, 122 Cal. 573.)

We are thus limited to the sole question, whether the judgment of the lower court is sustained by the findings. The facts found are, that on December 11, 1889, the defendant, *727 the Arthur R. Briggs Company, was a corporation, having among its directors and stockholders the other defendants, Arthur R. Briggs, F. M. Butler, and C. E. Knapp. On that day the defendant Butler delivered to the plaintiff bank an instrument in writing duly executed in its favor in the form of a deed, containing this recital as indicative of the purpose of the conveyance: “This conveyance is made for the purpose of securing to the Sather Banking Company of San Francisco, all amounts which shall hereafter become due from Briggs, Ferguson & Co. and the Arthur R. Briggs Company, and on the payment of all of said amounts, the second party shall reconvey said premises, free and clear of any encumbrance imposed thereon by said second party herein, to said first party.” At the same time, and as part of the same transaction, the defendant Briggs delivered to the plaintiff a deed duly executed in its favor, conveying certain lands in San Luis Obispo and Shasta counties, and at the same time transferred to plaintiff, as a pledge, certain shares of capital stock in two land companies. The defendant Knapp also delivered to plaintiff, as a pledge, certain contracts for the purchase of land. The deed of Briggs contained a provision similar to that in the Butler deed, and the pledges were given upon the same express terms.

Upon the delivery of these deeds and pledges the plaintiff advanced to the Briggs Company five thousand dollars, taking as evidence of the debt the promissory note of the company, payable May 12, 1890, indorsed by the defendants Briggs, Butler, and Knapp, and by one W. W. Boughton. On January 4, 1890, plaintiff loaned the company an additional five thousand dollars, taking the note of the company, indorsed by the same persons. These were the only amounts advanced. When these notes became due they were renewed by other notes executed by the Briggs Company to plaintiff, but without indorsement by any person. These were also repeatedly renewed by the company, the last renewal being made on February 25, 1895, and is the note sued on herein. The payment of this last note was guaranteed in writing by the defendants Briggs and Knapp. Out of the securities deposited by Briggs certain moneys were realized by plaintiff and were applied to the original debt, reducing it to $8,346.74, and for *728 this balance the note sued on was given. Butler ceased to be a director or stockholder of the Briggs Company before June 30, 1891, and the various renewals of the original notes were made without his knowledge or consent.

The plaintiff sued to recover a personal judgment on the note against all the defendants except Butler, and as to him sought in the same' action, by foreclosure, to subject the land described in his deed to the payment of this debt.

The other defendants made default and plaintiff recovered judgment against them.

The defendant Butler, however, contested the action, and under appropriate pleadings in that behalf, and upon" the recited findings the lower court held that by granting extensions of time to the Briggs Company upon the two notes éxeeuted by the company and indorsed by Butler, Briggs, Knapp, and Boughton and accepting renewals of this note from the Briggs Company, without the original or any indorsements, thus relieving the indorsers from liability, the right of plaintiff to enforce its claim against Butler’s land as security was lost, and the land relieved and exonerated from liability.

The accuracy of this conclusion from the findings plaintiff challenges on this appeal, and this is the only question to be considered.

.Whether this conclusion is correct or not must be determined by considering what the legal nature of the original instrument delivered by Butler to the. plaintiff bank was, and how, if at all, it was affected by the execution of the indorsed notes, the extensions óf time and renewals without reindorsement. In other words, whether the conveyance by Butler and the indorsed notes were joint, mutual, and dependent securities affecting each other, or separate and independent instruments having no relation to each other, and governed by distinct rules of law.

This question whether a particular instrument or given contract is in the nature of a surety is not to be solved by considering and applying to the instrument, or contract, all the many rules of law which apply to suretyship generically’ but by considering those principles of °law which apply to the specific relation in question, whether it be that of mort *729 gagor, surety, guarantor, indorser, or any other of the various relations which may exist under the general term “surety-ship.”

In this general relationship there are important distinctions to he observed, lest a principle exclusively applicable to-•one be perverted and applied to another.

At this point, and before discussing the main question, we wish to dispose of appellant’s claim, extensively argued, that the effect of the Butler conveyance was to create a continuing guaranty. (Civ. Code, sec. 2814.)

The matter of guaranty, continuing or otherwise, has no place in the case. A guaranty imports a personal liability ■exclusively. Butler under his conveyance assumed no personal liability, but simply conveyed his land as security.

Epitomizing that section of the code defining such relationship, a surety is one who, on request of another, to secure him .a benefit, becomes responsible for some act of his, in favor of another, or hypothecates property as security for another. Under this general provision many relations of suretyship may be created, and by the last clause the special relation ■of mortgagor or pledgor may be assumed, and it was the relation of mortgagor which, under his conveyance, Butler assumed, and his responsibility, and the plaintiff’s rights as mortgagee, are to be determined by a consideration of that relationship, and the construction of the terms of the instrument as they appear on its face with the circumstances accompanying its delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
72 P. 352, 138 Cal. 724, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sather-banking-co-v-arthur-r-briggs-co-cal-1903.