Shively v. Globe Manufacturing Co.

219 N.W. 266, 205 Iowa 1233
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 266 (Shively v. Globe Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shively v. Globe Manufacturing Co., 219 N.W. 266, 205 Iowa 1233 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Faville, J.

— The Globe Manufacturing Company was a corporation engaged in the manufacture of washing machines at Perry, Iowa. It became heavily involved. The exact amount of its indebtedness does not clearly appear in the record. In April, 1922, said corporation was adjudged a bankrupt, and it appears that approximately $175,000 of claims were filed against it in the bankruptcy court. In December, 1922, the bankrupt made an offer of composition of its indebtedness, on the basis of *1235 the payment of 20 per cent of the claims of creditors. On January 19, 1923, an order was entered in the bankruptcy court, approving of said composition. Among the claimants were five banks, interveners herein, which at said time held claims against the bankrupt aggregating the principal sum of more than $33,000. None of said claims were secured. Negotiations were entered into between representatives of said banks and B. C. Dilenbeck and S. S. Dilenbeck, who were the sole stockholders in ■said bankrupt corporation. A plan was finally arranged between all of said parties to issue bonds of the said company in the sum of $75,000, to be purchased by the banks, the proceeds of which were to be used for the purpose of paying the said 20 per cent to the creditors of said company, and the banks were to retain the said bonds, or the proceeds thereof, if sold, to satisfy the balance of their claims against the bankrupt, and pay the balance to the company. This arrangement was reduced to a written contract’between the parties. Said contract provided that it was conditioned upon the settlement with the creditors of said corporation upon a 20 per cent basis of their claims; and in the event that this was done, the said S. S. Dilenbeck agreed to transfer the title to certain real estate to the said manufacturing company, and the banks were to pay him the sum of $2,750. This contract also provided that the banks were to accept settlement of their claims against the corporation on the basis of 20 per cent of their claims; and in consideration of the purchase of the bonds and advancing the necessary sum for settlement with the creditors upon a 20 per cent basis, and upon other valuable consideration, each of the banks “shall receive as their own property a portion of said bond issue equaling 80 per cent of their respective claim,” this to be in addition to the 20 per cent composition settlement. This contract also provided for the guaranty of the payment of said bonds by said S. S. Dilenbeck to the amount of $37,500, and by B. C. Dilenbeck for the full amount thereof.

Pursuant to this contract, the trust mortgage and bonds were issued, and the contracts of guaranty were duly executed. It also appears from the record that the banks advanced the necessary money to pay the 20 per cent agreed upon in the composition settlement with the various claimants of the said bankrupt, including said banks, and also that all of the banks exeept *1236 one paid the athount required under said contract. The scheme, however, did not work out in such a way as to rehabilitate the corporation successfully. For about three years, the corporation paid the interest on said bonds, but finally defaulted thereon; and this action was brought to foreclose the trust mortgage and for personal judgment against the guarantors on said contracts of guaranty.

I~ We first consider the question.. of the individual, liability of the Dilenbecks under their contracts of guaranty. Briefly stated, appellants' contention at this point is, in substance, that the banks did not perform the contraCt in question on their part, and hence the appellants are not liable on their contracts of guaranty therein. Estoppel and waiver are pleaded against the claim of appellants. Appellants' contention is that the contract by which the banks agreed to purchase the bonds was a joint and several obligation, and that each bank a party thereto was liable for full performance of the agreement, and that a default on the part of one of the banks operated to discharge appellants under their contracts of guaranty. It is contended that the contract is joint, and not several, and that one bank, a party thereto, failed to pay its quota, as provided in the contract, and that the other banks failed to male up the amount so in default, and hence the guarantors are discharged under their separate c~ntracts of guaranty. The bankrupt corporation was owing the five banks involved various sums, ranging from $1,000 to $10,585. Included among the banks was the First National of Perry, to which the corporation was indebted in the sum of $6,493; and the appellants' contention is that said bank failed to pay its proportionate share of the bonds, or to furnish cash under said agreement, and that the other banks failed to dO so. In the contract, the five banks are described as "parties of the first part," and the contract recites:

It is therefore agreed between the parties hereto that the first parties will purchase a bond issue of seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000.00) to be issued by the Globe Manufacturing Company, the same to be secured by a first mortgage upon all the' property of the, Globe Manufacturing ~Jompany."

The contract further provides that, if a settlement is made with- the creditors of the corporation on a 20 per cent basis, *1237 “then the first parties will advance within sixty days from the time said agreements of the creditors are secured the funds necessary for the payment of the claims of all the creditors on the said twenty per cent basis, which said payment, advanced in cash to the creditors, will be in full settlement of their demands and claims against the Globe Manufacturing Company and B. C. Dilenheck.”

It is further provided that, in consideration of the purchase of the bonds and the advancement of the necessary funds for the settlement with the creditors:

“ It is agreed that .each of the parties of the first part shall receive as their own property a portion of said bond issue, here-inbefore referred to, equaling eighty per cent of their respective claims against the Globe Manufacturing Company, the sanie to be in addition to the twenty per cent payment in cash herein-before mentioned.”

The concluding paragraph of the contract is as follows:

“After the first parties shall have paid the creditor's as hereinbefore stipulated, and shall have paid S. S. Dilenbeck, as provided herein, and the expenses of preparing and carrying-out this agreement, the balance due on the purchase of said bonds shall be paid to the Globe Manufacturing Company by the first parties upon a pro-rata basis according- to the amount now owing to the first parties by the Globe Manufacturing Company.” ■

We must construe this contract in the light of all the cir-eumstances surrounding- the parties at the time, and also in view of their purpose and intention, and also the practical struction of the same by the parties.

The claims of the five banks were very different in amounts, and there is nothing in the contract specifically indicating that any one or more banks was to be liable for the purchase of the entire issue of bonds. Under the circumstances, it is clearly apparent that such was not the evident intention of the parties. The concluding- portion of the contract, supra, clearly negatives the idea that the banks were severally liable for the full amount of the purchase price of the bonds.

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219 N.W. 266, 205 Iowa 1233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shively-v-globe-manufacturing-co-iowa-1928.