W. T. Rawleigh v. Sherwood

278 P. 565, 40 Wyo. 488, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 50
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1929
Docket1562
StatusPublished

This text of 278 P. 565 (W. T. Rawleigh v. Sherwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. T. Rawleigh v. Sherwood, 278 P. 565, 40 Wyo. 488, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 50 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

*489 RiNER, Justice.

This is a proceeding by direct appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Weston County denying appellant, the W. T. Rawleigh Company, any right of recovery against the respondents, L. McSweeney, W. J. Lawrence and W. A. Scott.

The action in which this judgment was entered was one brought by the W. T. Rawleigh Company, as plaintiff, against the respondents above named and one G- L. Sherwood, as defendants, to recover a balance of $518.38 claimed to be due for goods and merchandise sold to Sherwood under a printed form of contract entered into between him and the plaintiff. The other defendants were sued as guarantors, they having signed and authorized the delivery to the plaintiff of an agreement of guaranty printed on the same sheet as the aforesaid contract but just below it, promising payment to plaintiff of any in *490 debtedness which might become due or owing under said contract between Sherwood and the W. T. Rawleigh Company. He filed an answer in the case, his guarantors joining in and filing a separate answer in their behalf. So far as the question involved in this appeal is concerned, it fairly arises upon the issues made by the petition and that part of the answer of respondents McSweeney, Lawrence and Scott, constituting a general denial of the allegations of plaintiff’s pleading.

Upon a trial to the court, there was a general finding in favor of plaintiff against Sherwood, on the account set forth in its petition, in the sum of $627.23, and a judgment conforming to the finding was made and entered. In this result he has acquiesced, as no appearance has been entered for him in this court. The District Court further found that in so far as the defendants McSweeney, Lawrence and Scott were concerned, no liability on their part “to plaintiff under the contract set out in the petition has been shown,” and the issues were accordingly found in their favor and a judgment dismissing plaintiff’s action as to them was entered, with costs. From this judgment of dismissal this appeal is prosecuted by the W. T. Raw-leigh Company, as has been said.

The portions of the contract between the plaintiff and Sherwood material to the proper understanding of the single question before us for disposition, read:

“THIS CONTRACT made and entered into at the City of Freeport, State of Illinois, by and between THE W. T. RAWLEIGH COMPANY, an Illinois Corporation, hereinafter called the SELLER, and G. L. Sherwood of Upton, in the State of Wyoming, hereinafter called the BUYER:
“WITNESSETH: Whereas said Buyer desires to purchase of the Seller, at wholesale, its manufactured Products, the Seller hereby agrees to sell and deliver to the Buyer, f. o. b. Freeport, Illinois, or at its option f. o. b. its branch houses, or at any point agreed upon, such quantities of its Products as the Seller may deem reasonable, *491 at current wholesale prices as shown on Invoice, unless prevented by strikes, fires, accidents, or other causes beyond its control; the said Buyer to furnish signed orders for such goods as he desires to buy.
“The Buyer agrees to pay said Seller at said Invoice price for all Products so purchased under this agreement by cash, or by installment payments satisfactory to the Seller, subject to the discounts as shown in current Discount Sheets and subject to paragraph 5 hereof.”

Paragraph “5” referred to in the last sentence above quoted deals simply with the termination of the contract, and is not of interest to us in this litigation.

That part of the agreement of guaranty signed by each of the respondents MeSweeney, Lawrence and Scott and material to be considered here, is in the following language:

“For and in consideration of The W. T. Rawleigh Company, the above named Seller, extending credit to the above named Buyer, we, the undersigned, do hereby jointly and severally, enter ourselves as sureties, and do hereby unconditionally promise and guarantee the full and complete payment to the said Company of any and all indebtedness, which may become due or owing under the terms of the foregoing Contract between the Buyer and Seller named as such therein; and to all of the terms, conditions, provisions and agreements we hereby fully agree and assent; hereby expressly waiving notice of acceptance of this Contract of surety by the Seller, and waive all notice of any nature whatsoever, and agree that the written acknowledgment by the said Buyer of the amount due or owing on his account, or that any Judgment rendered against him for moneys due the Seller shall in every and all respects bind and be conclusive jointly and severally against the undersigned. And we further agree that in any suit brought on this Contract of surety by the Seller, no other or further proof shall be required of it than to establish the amount or sums of money due and owing to it from the said Buyer under the foregoing Contract, and when so proven shall be conclusive and binding upon the undersigned jointly and severally and *492 that it shall not be necessary for the said Seller in order to enforce this Contract, and this Contract of surety to first institute suit or exhaust its legal remedies against the above named Buyer, and agree that any extension of time of payment or payments shall not release us from liability under this Contract of suretyship.”

The provisions of the several instruments quoted above are to be interpreted in the light of the testimony by deposition of the plaintiff’s general secretary, J. R. Jackson, who testified, in substance, that the W. T. Rawleigh Company was an Illinois corporation, with a charter granted in 1895; that its business is that of manufacturing and selling at wholesale its manufactured products, which consist chiefly of family remedies, flavoring extracts, toilet preparations, spices, polishes, dips and disinfectants, poultry and veterinary supplies etc.; that plaintiff has conducted its manufacturing business in Illinois continuously since the date of its incorporation and also at Memphis, Tennessee, since September, 1912; that the W. T. Rawleigh Company sold G-. L. Sherwood a quantity of the company’s goods upon his written signed orders therefor, under a contract (the one from which the excerpt above is taken) the plaintiff had with him; that the goods were placed f. o. b. ears at Freeport, Illinois, where they became the sole property of Sherwood, and he could sell or dispose of them in any manner he saw fit; that he made an application satisfactory to the plaintiff and thereupon the latter sent him a contract to be signed by himself and responsible men as guarantors; that he sent this contract back by mail with his signature affixed as principal, and the signatures of respondents Mc-Sweeney, Lawrence and Scott as sureties; that there is still due and unpaid plaintiff on Sherwood’s account $518.38 with interest since the termination of the contract on July 31, 1925; that the goods were sold Sherwood by plaintiff relying upon the guaranty signed by respondents Mc-Sweeney, Lawrence and Scott. This testimony stands in the record practically uneontroverted.

*493

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Bluebook (online)
278 P. 565, 40 Wyo. 488, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-rawleigh-v-sherwood-wyo-1929.