Wolthausen v. Trimpert

105 A. 687, 93 Conn. 260, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 19, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 105 A. 687 (Wolthausen v. Trimpert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wolthausen v. Trimpert, 105 A. 687, 93 Conn. 260, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 11 (Colo. 1919).

Opinion

Gager, J.

The principal question upon the" foregoing statement, of facts relates to the construction to be given to the- contract between the plaintiff and the defendant. The operative part of the contract reads as follows: “that said parties shall bear an equal share of any loss that may be incurred by the said Wolthausen on the balance of $5,000 which under the terms of said agreement of February 7, 1914, it is provided may remain to the credit of the said M. Oppenheim Hat Company for a period of ninety days after the indebtedness of the said M. Oppenheim Hat Company has been reduced to said sum of $5,000, provided the said Wolthausen does not extend said credit beyond said period of ninety days.”

The plaintiff contends that this was a contract of indemnity or an absolute guaranty. The defendant contends that the contract was one of conditional guaranty. Very many of the cases in which the distinc *265 tion between contracts of guaranty and contracts of indemnity is drawn, arise with reference to the applicability of the statute of frauds. No such question arises here, for the defendant signed the contract in qúestion. The distinction, however, remains the same. A contract of guaranty is a collateral undertaking and presupposes some contract or transaction to which it is collateral. The definition adopted in Ball Electric Light Co. v. Child, 68 Conn. 522, 525, 37 Atl, 391, is: “A guaranty is a collateral undertaking to pay a debt or perform a duty, in case of the failure of another person, who is in the first instance liable to such payment or performance.” Indemnity contracts are of great variety, but so far as a situation like that now before us is concerned, it may be said that the contract to indemnify is an original undertaking to save the indemnitee harmless against loss or damage of a specified character which may happen in the future. Bouvier’s Law Dictionary. If the contract before us is a contract to indemnify, then the distinction between absolute and conditional guaranties and the characteristics of each become of no importance in the decision of this action.

Our own cases are sufficiently clear in point to control the construction of the contract between the plaintiff and defendant. The trial court correctly decided the character of this contract upon the authority of Reed v. Holcomb, 31 Conn. 360. In that case, in which the primary question was whether the undertaking was within the statute of frauds, the court, after quoting from New York and Massachusetts cases, said (p. 364): “If the promise is on a sufficient consideration moving between the immediate parties to it, and from which the promisor is to derive a benefit, in view of which the promise is made, it then becomes a new and independent contract existing entirely between the *266 immediate parties to it. The benefit which the original debtor may derive from it is incidental, and in no respect the object of the parties, and ought not therefore to affect the validity of their contract.” Reed v. Holcomb was reëxamined, in connection with Clement’s Appeal, 52 Conn. 464, in Smith v. Delaney, 64 Conn. 264, 29 Atl. 496, in which latter case the doctrine was stated in the following language (p. 275): “Where the inducement is a benefit to the promisor which he did not before or would not otherwise enjoy, and the act is done upon his request and credit, such promise is an original undertaking and not within the statute” of frauds. Again, in McCormick v. Boylan, 83 Conn. 686, 78 Atl. 335, the court, citing and affirming Reed v. Holcomb and Smith v. Delaney, said: “Where a benefit, legal or pecuniary, to the promisor is the inducement for a promise of indemnity, such promise is not within the statute of frauds as being a special promise to answer for the debt or default of another, but is an original promise binding upon the promisor.” See Davis v. Patrick, 141 U. S. 479, 487, 12 Sup. Ct. 58, 35 L. Ed. 826.

Both the letter of the contract in question and the situation of the parties bring the present case within the rule as stated in Reed v. Holcomb. The contract is to “bear an equal share of any loss that may be incurred by the said Wolthausen on the balance” of the Oppenheim account. While not perhaps conclusive, yet this is not the natural language of a collateral undertaking. The recitals of the contract and the finding as to how it came to be given, leave no doubt as to the existence of the idea of indemnity. The plaintiff, under the terms of his sale of stock to the Rough Hat Company, was to receive $18,000 cash. The finding states that before the contract was carried out the plaintiff, “at the request of the attorney of the defend *267 ant, agreed to accept the Oppenheim account in lieu of an equal amount of cash, and in consideration thereof the defendant and the plaintiff entered into the written agreement”; and the finding further states that “the acceptance of the Oppenheim account by the plaintiff in lieu óf cash was of material benefit to the defendant, who was one of the principal stockholders of the Wolthausen Rough Hat Company.” The defendant’s contract was not made at the request of or for the benefit of the Oppenheim Company. Because of the defendant’s request and for his benefit through his position as principal stockholder in the Rough .Hat Company, the plaintiff accepted the assignment of the account as the equivalent of so much cash in payment from the Rough Hat Company. The plaintiff parted with his stock. If this account which he had accepted in part payment was not paid, he would suffer a loss. The defendant agreed to divide the loss if any was incurred. The situation of the parties is exactly within the language of our own cases cited above.

We may admit, as stated in Reed v. Holcomb, 31 Conn. 360, 363, that “it is often difficult from the mere words in which a promise is made to determine whether any credit was given to a third person, and the undertaking therefore collateral to the engagement or liability of such person, or whether it was a wholly independent and original undertaking. In such cases courts must rely upon the circumstances of each particular case, and its general features, in order to ascertain the intention of the parties, and how they viewed it, where it is doubtful whether it was a contract of suretyship or guaranty, or an original undertaking.” If there is any doubt upon the face of the contract before us, the situation resolves the doubt and makes the contract, under the doctrine in force in this State, a contract to indemnify. Such a contract can be made subject to *268 such restrictions and limitations as the parties may agree upon. In the present case they did agree that the loss should be borne equally. There was a provision that when the account was reduced to $5,000 the Oppenheim Company should have a credit of ninety days.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 687, 93 Conn. 260, 1919 Conn. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolthausen-v-trimpert-conn-1919.