Williams v. Crusader Discount Corp.

334 P.2d 843, 75 Nev. 67, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 189
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1959
Docket4121
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 334 P.2d 843 (Williams v. Crusader Discount Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Crusader Discount Corp., 334 P.2d 843, 75 Nev. 67, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 189 (Neb. 1959).

Opinion

*68 OPINION

By the Court,

McNamee, J.:

This case involves four agreements, consisting of two loan agreements and two guaranty agreements.

The parties will be referred to as follows: Katheleen Williams, plaintiff and appellant, as Mrs. Williams; John H. Williams, her husband, one of the cross-defendants, as Mr. Williams; Crusader Discount Corp., a defendant, cross-complainant, and respondent, as Crusader; Jamboree, Inc., a defendant and respondent, as Jamboree; K. H. Yitt and Karsten T. Bronkin, defendants and respondents, as Bronkin and Vitt.

On June 28, 1955 Crusader and Jamboree entered into an agreement under the terms of which Crusader loaned *69 Jamboree $68,500 and Jamboree gave Crusader a note for $12,000 due October 1, 1955, and a further note for $56,500 due on March 27, 1957, with interest on both notes due and payable quarterly. This agreement which hereafter shall be referred to as the first loan agreement, further provided that in the event of nonpayment of any installment of principal or interest on its due date, the entire unpaid balance would immediately become due and payable.

Concurrently with the execution of this first loan agreement Mr. and Mrs. Williams entered into a guaranty agreement of same date with Crusader wherein they guaranteed its said loan of $68,500 to Jamboree to the extent of $59,280 and as collateral security for their guaranty they transferred and assigned to Crusader a certain note secured by deed of trust from Bronkin and Vitt to them as joint tenants in the principal sum of $59,280. This guaranty agreement is hereinafter referred to as the first guaranty agreement.

Jamboree failed to pay the installments of principal and interest due October 1, 1955 to Crusader.

On April 10, 1956 Crusader and Jamboree entered into a new loan agreement, hereinafter referred to as second loan agreement, wherein Crusader reduced the original debt of $68,500 to $59,280, extended the times of payment of the first installment of interest and principal, and otherwise substantially changed the first agreement.

This second loan agreement was executed by Jamboree through John H. Williams as its president and Robert E. Jones as its secretary, and by Crusader through its president and assistant secretary and recited: “It is understood and agreed that this instrument constitutes the full and complete understanding between the parties and the provisions herein contained may only be amended by an instrument in writing executed by all of the parties hereto.”

The second loan agreement provides further that: “Concurrently with the execution of this agreement, John H. Williams, a stockholder of Jamboree, has executed an agreement whereby the said John H. Williams guarantees the said loan. In such guaranty agreement *70 the said John H. Williams warrants that there are no liens prior to the Deed of Trust securing the debt of $59,280 due from Bronkin and Vitt to the said Williams.”

The guaranty agreement referred to in said second loan agreement was also dated April 10, 1956, and will be referred to as the second guaranty agreement and although it recites it to be the agreement of Crusader with Mr. and Mrs. Williams as guarantors, it is executed only by Crusader and Mr. Williams. In this second guaranty agreement Mr. Williams guarantees the loan contained in the second loan agreement, and it recites that he transfers and assigns to Crusader the said Bronkin and Vitt note and trust deed as collateral security for the loan in the second loan agreement.

No issue is made as to Mrs. Williams’ ownership of a half interest in the Bronkin and Vitt note and trust deed at the time the first guaranty agreement was executed; the primary question before this court is what effect have these four agreements had on her said interest in the Bronkin and Vitt note and deed of trust.

The parties to the first and second loan agreements were the same, and it is clear from the terms of the second loan agreement that they intended to substitute the second loan agreement for the first.

This substitution of a new obligation for an existing one effects a novation, which thereby discharges the parties from all of their obligations under the former agreement inasmuch as such obligations are extinguished by the novation. 66 C.J.S., Novation, sec. 1, p. 681; 39 Am.Jur., Novation, sec. 2, p. 254.

It is settled law that the novation of a contract, the performance of which is guaranteed by sureties who do not consent to the novation absolves them of their liability, which disappears with the debt to which it was collateral. 66 C.J.S., Novation, sec. 22, 39 Am.Jur., Novation, sec. 27.

“Guarantors and sureties are exonerated if the creditor, by any act done without their consent, alters the *71 obligation of the principal in any respect, or impairs or suspends the remedy for its enforcement. Where after breach of contract, the performance of which is guaranteed, the creditor and principal debtor enter into a new contract by which the amount of damages then due is made payable on a future day, and upon terms different from those imposed by the original agreement, such new contract presumptively merges the old. In such a case the new obligation * * * becomes the exclusive medium by which the rights of the parties in respect to the payment of damages are to be ascertained. Such a contract is not collateral to the original, but, in respect to the subject to which it appertains, it merges and supersedes the other.” Weed S.M. Co. v. Winchell, 107 Ind. 260, 7 N.E. 881, 884.

“[A] surety is discharged by the novation of the debt; for he can no longer be bound for the first debt for which he was a surety, since it no longer subsists, having been extinguished by the novation; neither can he be bound for the new debt, into which the first has been converted, since this new debt was not the debt to which he acceded.” Frost v. Harbert, 20 Idaho 336, 118 P. 1095, 1096, 38 L.R.A. (NS) 875.

The rule of law that a novation substituting a new obligation for an old releases the guarantor of the old when the transaction is accomplished without his consent, has been carried over into the law of suretyship, 72 C.J.S., Principal and Surety, sec. 155, p. 643; See Restatement, Security, sec. 128, 129. Under the rules governing sureties it is sometimes known as the rescission theory and can be stated as follows: Any change in the contract between the creditor and principal which creates a different duty of performance on the part of the principal than that which the surety guaranteed, discharges the surety. The alteration of the original contract between the creditor and the assenting debtor has the legal effect of discharging it by mutual rescission, and substitutes therefor a new and different contract. The surety cannot be held for performance of the old contract so discharged; nor can he be held for the sub *72 stituted contract the performance of which he never guaranteed. See Simpson, Suretyship, pp. 330, 331, 354.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
334 P.2d 843, 75 Nev. 67, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-crusader-discount-corp-nev-1959.