Slingluff v. Andrew Volk Builders' Supply Co.

43 A. 759, 89 Md. 557, 1899 Md. LEXIS 37
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 43 A. 759 (Slingluff v. Andrew Volk Builders' Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slingluff v. Andrew Volk Builders' Supply Co., 43 A. 759, 89 Md. 557, 1899 Md. LEXIS 37 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, as plaintiffs in the Court below, sued the appellant upon his written undertaking to guarantee the payment of a then existing indebtedness to them by one Clarence F. Gettier. There is but one count in the declaration and that sets out at length the terms of the guaranty and avers that the appellant refused to pay the debt the payment of which he had guaranteed.

The guaranty appeared upon a paper signed by a number of persons and firms, including the appellee, which set forth that the signers agreed to accept 90 per cent, of their respective claims against Gettier in full satisfaction thereof, “ payment to be made upon completion of the three houses on Walbrook avenue, and to be guaranteed by Horace Siingluff," and that upon the payment Gettier and the three houses would be released from all claims of the signers. At the foot of this paper was written, “ I guarantee the payment of the go per cent, as above ; provided the said compromise is effected with all of the creditors of Gettier as against the three dwellings and lots of ground as above set forth f which was signed by the appellant. The signers of this paper, *560 other than the appellant, constituted all of 'the dealers who had sold to Gettier the materials used in constructing the three houses.

There was testimony, which went in without exception in the Court below, as to the transactions which preceded and led up to the making of the written contract on which the suit was brought. This evidence tended to show that in November, 1897, Gettier offered to lease three lots on Walbrook avenue from the appellant and to erect a dwelling on each lot if the latter would pay him a bonus of $ 1,000 per lot and also lend him $1,250 on mortgage on each lot when the houses were completed. The appellant, upon being shown written proposals from the appellees and the other material men to sell to Gettier the requisite material for the erection of the houses, accepted his offer and executed to him a lease for 99 years of the three lots. Gettier, in pursuance of a promise made by him to the material men to induce them to sell him the materials, gave to each of them an order on the appellant to pay him the price of his materials when the buildings were completed. The appellant endorsed on each of these orders an acceptance as follows : “Accepted and payable when the. three houses are fully completed and ready for occupancy and free and clear of all liens."

All parties to this transaction evidently understood that the orders and their acceptance constituted an appropriation in advance by Gettier to the claims of the material men of the money which was to be loaned to him by the appellant on mortgage of the houses when they should be finished and free from all liens. The appellant was not asked or expected to lend the money on the houses before they were finished and freed from all liens, so as to furnish him a marketable mortgage security for the loan, and therefore he made his acceptance of the orders conditional, and the appellees and the other material men were willing to receive them in that form.

Gettier began building the houses and all went well until *561 about April 14th, 1898, when he called the material men together and informed them that he would be unable to finish the houses unless he received some aid or concessions, and further said that if they would accept 90 per cent, of their claims in full, the appellant would guarantee the payment of the 90 per cent, and would also furnish him with money to complete the houses. The creditors assented and thereupon the agreement to compromise and the guaranty sued on were made.

These transactions were conducted and the papers were drawn by the parties themselves without the aid of counsel, and none of them took the precaution to examine the public records to ascertain whether there were any judgments against Gettier, the lien of which, if there were any, would of course attach to the three lots when they were leased to Gettier, and would prevent him from mortgaging them with a clear title to the appellant. When the houses were finished and the appellant was called on to pay the plaintiff’s claim, he for the first time ascertained that there were about $2,000 of judgments of record against Gettier, who, for that reason, was unable to mortgage the houses to him free of all liens. The appellant thereupon refused to pay the claim of the appellees, who brought suit on the guaranty.

At the trial of the case the Court, on the motion of the plaintiff, struck out the evidence of the existence of the judgments against Gettier, which had been let in subject to objection, and the appellant excepted to the Court’s action. The appellees, as plaintiffs, offered two prayers, both of which were granted, and the appellant offered one prayer, which was rejected, and he excepted to the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers and the rejection of his prayer.

The plaintiff’s first prayer, in substance, asserted that if the Court, sitting as a jury, found the execution by the plaintiffs of the agreement to compromise with Gettier at go %, and that the defendant executed the guaranty at the foot of the agreement, and should further find that the persons who signed the agreement to compromise were “ all *562 of the creditors of the said Gettier, trading as aforesaid within the meaning of the said agreement,” who were such at the time of its execution, &c., &c., the verdict should be for the plaintiffs. The guaranty sued on in this case is plainly an undertaking to pay an existing debt of a third party, which the Statute of Frauds requires to be entirely in writing, and does not permit to be established partly by parol and partly b}r written evidence. Frank v. Miller, 38 Md. 460; Moale v. Buchanan, 11 G. & J. 314; Lazear v. Union Bank, 52 Md. 121. A guaranty of this kind belongs to the class of instruments in reference to which the rule of evidence excluding parol testimony is rigidly enforced.

If the appellant had excepted in the Court below to the introduction of the evidence of the transactions which preceded and led up to the written guaranty sued on, it would have been excluded, except in so far as it was necessary to prove the respective amounts due from Gettier to the appellees, and the construction of the terms of the guaranty would then have been a question for the Court, sitting as a Court and not as a jury, as it is well settled that the construction of all written documents is a question of law for the Court. When, however, the evidence had been permitted to go into the case without exception the Court was bound,.under the rulings of this Court in the cases of Lamb v. Taylor, 67 Md. 93, and Sentman v. Gamble, 69 Md. 304-5, to deal with it as properly in the case, whether legally admissible or not, and give it the same effect as if it had in fact been legally admissible.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 759, 89 Md. 557, 1899 Md. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slingluff-v-andrew-volk-builders-supply-co-md-1899.