Action upon the following letter of guarantee, written by the
defendants and delivered to the plaintiffs;
"Port Gibson, December, 1827"
"Messrs. REYNOLDS, BYRNE & CO."
"Gentlemen: Our friend, Mr. Chester Haring, to assist him in
business, may require your aid from time to time, either by
acceptance or endorsement of his paper or advances in cash; in
order to save you from harm by so doing, we do hereby bind
ourselves, severally and jointly, to be responsible to you at any
time for a sum not exceeding $8,000, should the said Chester Haring
fail to do so. Your obedient servants,"
"JAMES S. DOUGLASS"
"JOHN G. SINGLETON"
"THOMAS GOING"
One count in the declaration was for money lent and money had
and received.
Held that upon a collateral undertaking of
this sort, no such suit is maintainable.
The depositions of several witnesses, clerks in the counting
house of the plaintiffs, were admitted on the trial of the cause,
in which the witnesses stated that they knew that the letter of
credit was considered by the plaintiffs as covering any balance due
by C.H. to them for advances from time to time to the amount of
$8,000; that advances were made and moneys paid by them on account
of C.H. from the time of receiving the said letter, predicated on
the letter's always protecting the plaintiffs to the amount of
$8,000, and that it was considered in the counting house as a
continuing letter of credit, and so acted upon by the plaintiffs.
Held that this evidence was rightly admitted to establish
that credit had been given to C.H. on the faith of it from time to
time, and that it was treated by the plaintiffs as a continuing
guarantee, so that if in point of law it was entitled to that
character, the plaintiffs clam might not be open to the suggestion
that no such advances, acceptances, or
endorsements bad been made upon the credit of it. The evidence
was not open to the objection that it was an attempt by parol
evidence to explain a written contract.
Nothing can be clearer upon principle than that if a letter of
credit is given but in fact no advances are made upon the faith of
it, the party is not entitled to recover for any debts due by him
from the debtor in whose favor it was given which have been
incurred subsequently to the guarantee and without any reference to
it.
The guarantee given by the defendants covered successive
advances, acceptances, and endorsements made by the plaintiffs to
the amount of $8,000
Page 32 U. S. 114
at any subsequent times,
toties quoties, whenever the
antecedent transactions were discharged. It was a continuing
guarantee.
Every instrument of this sort ought to receive a fair and
reasonable interpretation according to the true import of its
terms. It being an engagement for the debt of another, there is
certainly no reason for giving it an expanded signification or
liberal construction beyond the fair import of its terms.
The cases of
Russell v. Clarke's
Executors, 7 Cranch 69, and
Drummond
v. Prestman, 12 Wheat. 515, cited.
A party giving a letter of guarantee has a right to know whether
it is accepted and whether the person to whom it is addressed means
to give credit on the footing of it or not. It may be most material
not only as to his responsibility, but as to future rights and
proceedings. It may regulate in a great measure his course of
conduct and his exercise of vigilance in regard to the party in
whose favor it is given. Especially it is important in the case of
a continuing guarantee, since it may guide his judgment in
recalling or suspending it.
If this had been the case of a guarantee limited to a single
transaction, it would have been the duty of the plaintiffs to have
given notice of the advances, acceptances, or endorsements made
under it within a reasonable time after they were made. But this
being a continuing guarantee, in which the parties contemplate a
series of transactions, and as soon as the defendants had received
notice of the acceptance, they must necessarily have understood
that there would be successive advances, acceptances, and
endorsements which would be renewed and discharged from time to
time; there is no general principle upon which to rest that notice
of each successive transaction, as it arose, should be given. All
that could be required would be that when all the transactions
under the guarantee were closed, notice of the amount for which the
guarantors were responsible should, within a reasonable time
afterwards, he communicated to them.
A demand of payment of the sum advanced under the guarantee
should be made of the person to whom the same was made, and in case
of nonpayment by him, notice of such demand and nonpayment should
have been given in a reasonable time to the guarantors; otherwise
they would be discharged from the guarantee. By the very terms of
this guarantee as well as by the general principles of law, the
guarantors are only collaterally liable upon the failure of the
principal debtor to pay the debt. A demand upon him and a failure
on his part to perform his engagements are indispensable to
constitute a
casus foederis. The creditors are not bound
to institute legal proceedings against the debtor, but they are
bound to use reasonable diligence to make demand and to give notice
of nonpayment.
An account was stated between the plaintiffs and Chester Haring
showing an apparent balance against Haring of $22,573,
Page 32 U. S. 115
and at the foot of the account the plaintiffs gave a receipt for
several promissory notes, payable at distant periods, dated on the
same day with the account. The notes were drawn by C. Haring, and
endorsed by Daniel Greenleaf. The receipt stated that "the notes,
when discounted, the proceeds to go to the credit of this account."
The notes were discounted and the proceeds received by the
plaintiffs, but, being unpaid, they were protested; notice of their
nonpayment was given to the endorsers, and they were afterwards
taken up by the plaintiffs as endorsers thereof.
Held: if
the plaintiffs below, by their endorsements were compellable to pay
and did afterwards pay the notes upon their dishonor by the maker,
and these notes fell within the scope of the guarantee, they might
without question recover the amount from the guarantors.
He who receives any note upon which third persons are
responsible as a conditional payment of a debt due to himself is
bound to use due diligence to collect it of the parties thereto at
maturity, otherwise by his laches the debt will be discharged.
This was an action on the case, instituted in the district court
by Reynolds, Byrne & Company against the defendants on a letter
of credit or guarantee, signed by them and addressed to the
plaintiffs in the following terms:
"Port Gibson, December, 1827"
"Messrs. REYNOLDS, BYRNE & Co."
"Gentlemen: Our friend, Mr. Chester Haring, to assist him in
business, may require your aid from time to time, either by
acceptance or endorsement of his paper or advances in cash. In
order to save you from harm by so doing, we do hereby bind
ourselves severally and jointly to be responsible to you at any
time for a sum not exceeding $8,000 should the said Chester Haring
fail to do so. Your obedient servants,"
"JAMES S. DOUGLASS"
"JOHN G. SINGLETON"
"THOMAS GOING"
This letter of credit was delivered to the plaintiffs, and upon
the faith of it they were in the habit of accepting and endorsing
bills and making advances for Chester Haring, and they from time to
time received partial payments and consignments of cotton, to be
sold by them and the proceeds placed to his credit.
Page 32 U. S. 116
The transactions between Chester Haring and the plaintiffs
commenced after the receipt of the letter of guarantee, and
continued until March or April, 1829.
The first count in the declaration, after setting out the letter
of credit, charged, that the plaintiffs did, on the faith of that
letter,
"accept and endorse the drafts or paper of said C. Haring, to a
large amount, to-wit, the sum of $8,000, upon certain terms, and
payable at the times expressed in said drafts and paper of the said
C. Haring, which said drafts and paper of the said C. Haring, so
accepted and endorsed by the plaintiffs as aforesaid, they, the
plaintiffs, became liable to pay, and in consequence of their said
acceptances and endorsements, did take up, pay and discharge the
same, at the maturity thereof."
The count then charged the failure of Haring to discharge or pay
the paper so endorsed and accepted by the plaintiffs, &c., and
concluded with a general breach of the guarantee of the defendants,
&c. The second count was
indebitatus assumpsit for
money lent, had and received, &c., and the defendants pleaded
the general issue.
The evidence upon which the questions of law arose and which
were decided by the court is fully stated in the opinion.
Page 32 U. S. 117
MR. JUSTICE STORY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes before us upon a writ of error to a judgment of
the District Court of the District of Mississippi, in which the
plaintiffs in error are defendants in the court below. The original
action is founded upon a guarantee, given by Douglass and others in
favor of one Chester Haring, by the following letter:
"Port Gibson, December, 1827"
"Messrs. REYNOLDS, BYRNE & Co."
"Gentlemen: Our friend, Mr. Chester Haring, to assist him in
business, may require your aid from time to time, either by
acceptance or endorsement of his paper or advances in cash. In
order to save you from harm by so doing, we do hereby bind
ourselves severally and jointly to be responsible to you at any
time for a sum not exceeding $8,000 should the said Chester Haring
fail to do so. Your obedient servants,"
"JAMES S. DOUGLASS"
"JOHN G. SINGLETON"
"THOMAS GOING"
The declaration contains two counts. The first alleges that upon
the faith of the letter, the original plaintiffs accepted and
endorsed drafts or paper of Haring to the amount of $8,000, which
they were obliged to pay and did pay, at
Page 32 U. S. 118
the maturity thereof, and of which they gave due notice to the
defendants. The second count is for money lent and money had and
received. But this may be laid entirely out of the case, since it
is very clear that upon a collateral undertaking of this sort, no
such suit is maintainable.
At the trial upon the general issue and the plea of payment, the
plaintiffs, who are resident merchants at New Orleans, offered
evidence to prove the payment of five promissory notes, dated 1
May, 1829, payable to Daniel Greenleaf or order and endorsed by
him,
viz., one note due on 20 November, 1829, for $4,000;
one due on 20 December, 1829, for $4,500; one due on 20 January,
1830, for $5,500; one due on 20 February, 1830, for $5,500; and one
due on 20 March, 1830, for $5,500, in the whole amounting to
$25,000, and that the notes had been discounted, with the
plaintiffs' endorsement thereon, and were taken up by them at
maturity.
It also appeared in evidence that soon after the letter of
guarantee had been received, acceptance had been made of the drafts
of Haring by the plaintiffs to the amount of $8,000, and that other
large transactions of debt and credit took place between them upon
which, on 1 May, 1829, there was a balance of principal of
$22,573.23, besides interest due to the plaintiffs and credits to a
larger amount than $8,000 had come into possession of the
plaintiffs. And on that day the foregoing notes were received, and
the following receipt written on the account containing the
balance.
"Received, Port Gibson, May 1, 1829, in part and on account of
the above account and interest that may be due thereon, the
following notes, to-wit [enumerating them], amounting in all to
$25,000, which notes, when discounted, the proceeds to go to the
credit of this account."
"REYNOLDS, BYRNE & CO."
There was a good deal of other evidence in the cause, but it
Page 32 U. S. 119
does not seem necessary to state it at large, since no part of
it becomes important to a just understanding of the merits of the
controversy as it now stands before us.
In the progress of the trial, the depositions of several
witnesses who were clerks in the countinghouse of the plaintiffs
were read in which they stated that they knew that the letter of
credit was considered by the plaintiffs as covering any balance due
by Chester Haring to the plaintiffs for advances from that time to
the extent of $8,000, and that advances were made and moneys paid
by them on account of Haring from the time of receiving the said
letter of credit predicated on the said letter's always protecting
the plaintiffs to the amount of $8,000 whenever the said amount or
less might be uncovered, and that it was considered in the said
countinghouse of the plaintiffs as a continuing letter of credit,
and so acted upon by the plaintiffs. To the admission of this part
of the depositions the defendants objected, but the court overruled
the objection and permitted the evidence to be read to the jury as
evidence
of the reliance of the plaintiffs upon the letter of
credit to the amount of the $8,000 for acceptances, payments,
advances and endorsements made to Haring. The defendants excepted
to this admission of the evidence, and the propriety of this ruling
of the court constitutes the first question in the case.
We are of opinion that the evidence was rightly admitted in the
view and for the purposes stated by the court below. It was not
offered to explain or establish the construction of the letter of
credit (
See Russell v.
Clarke, 3 Dall. 415,
S.C. 11
U. S. 7 Cranch 69), whether it constituted a limited or
a continuing guarantee, and was not thus open to the objection,
which has been relied on at the bar, that it was an attempt by
parol evidence to explain a written contract. It was admitted
simply to establish that credit had been given to Haring upon the
faith of it from time to time, and that it was treated by the
plaintiffs as a continuing guarantee, so that if in point of law it
was entitled to that character, the plaintiffs' claim might not be
open to the suggestion that no such advances, acceptances, or
endorsements had in fact been made upon the credit of it -- an
objection which, if founded in fact, might have been fatal
Page 32 U. S. 120
to their claim. Nothing can be clearer upon principle than that
if a letter of credit be given but in fact no advances are made
upon the faith of it, the party is not entitled to recover for any
debts due to him from the debtor in whose favor it was given which
have been incurred subsequently to the guarantee, and without any
reference to it.
The other exceptions are to certain instructions prayed by the
defendants, and refused by the court. They are as follows:
"1. That the said letter of credit sued on is not a continuing
guarantee, but it is a limited one, and that when an advance or
advances, acceptance or acceptances, endorsement or endorsements
had been made by the plaintiffs on the faith of said letter of
credit to the amount of $8,000, the guarantee became
functus
officio and ceased to operate upon any future advances,
acceptances, or endorsements made by said plaintiffs for Chester
Haring. And that if the said plaintiffs received from said Haring,
in payment of their advances, acceptances, or endorsements made on
account of said guarantee the amount of $8,000, it was a discharge
of said letter of guarantee, and that any future advances,
acceptances, or endorsements cannot be charged against and
recovered from the defendants by virtue of said letter of
credit."
"2. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letter of
guarantee, they must prove that notice had been given, in a
reasonable time after said letter of guarantee had been accepted by
them, to the defendants that the same had been accepted."
"3. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letter of
credit, they must prove, that in a reasonable time after they had
made advances, acceptances, or endorsements for said Haring on the
faith of said letters of guarantee, they gave notice to said
defendants of the amount and extent thereof."
"4. That to entitle the plaintiffs to recover on said letter of
credit, they must prove that a demand of payment had been made of
Chester Haring, the principal debtor, of the debt sued for, and in
case of nonpayment by him, that notice of such demand and
nonpayment should have been given in a reasonable time to the
defendants, and on failure of such proof, the defendants are in law
discharged. "
Page 32 U. S. 121
"5. That the promissory notes made by C. Haring, the principal
debtor, and endorsed by Daniel Greenleaf and received by the
plaintiffs on 1 May, 1829, as expressed in the said receipt of that
date at the end of their said account, and the discounting the same
in New Orleans, by the plaintiffs, after they had endorsed the same
for that purpose, the same being discounted before they fell due,
and the receipt of the net proceeds arising from the discounting,
carried to the credit of Chester Haring's account on the books of
the plaintiffs, was a discharge of the guarantors on said
guarantee, provided the debt now sued for was included in the sum
total of said account on account of which said promissory notes
were taken and receipted for."
"6. That if the said notes, mentioned in said receipt, were
received as conditional payments of said debt, the defendants are
discharged unless it be proved that due diligence has been used to
recover the amount called for by said notes from the individuals
responsible thereon, and that the same could not be obtained."
"7. That the plaintiffs, by accepting said notes on account of
said debt from C. Haring, the principal debtor, with D. Greenleaf
as endorser, on account of said debt, the same being at that time
due, and receiving the money on the same, by discounting them, and
the passing said notes away by endorsement, could not have sued
Haring for the original debt before said notes fell due,
dishonored, and returned to the plaintiffs, and that therefore
they, by their own act, placed it out of their power to proceed
against said Haring to recover said debt before said notes fell due
and were returned to the plaintiffs, which in law discharged the
guarantors."
There was another exception, but it was withdrawn from the cause
by the defendants, and that, as well as another respecting the
refusal of the court to sign the bill of exceptions without
incorporating in it the evidence given at the trial, may be
dismissed without comment. It is proper to add, however, that the
conduct of the court in relation to the bill of exceptions
constitutes no just matter of error revisable in this form of
proceeding, and if it did, we see no reason to question the
propriety of its conduct upon the present occasion. It is
Page 32 U. S. 122
manifestly proper for the court to require that all the evidence
which is explanatory of the true points of the exceptions should be
brought before the appellate court to assist it in forming a
correct judgment.
The question involved in the first instruction is whether the
guarantee contained in the letter is a limited or a continuing
guarantee -- or in other words whether is covered advances,
acceptances, and endorsements in the first instance, to the amount
of $8,000, and terminated when these were discharged, or whether it
covered successive advances, acceptances, and endorsements made, to
the same amount, at any future times,
toties quoties,
whenever the antecedent transactions were discharged. Upon
deliberate consideration, we are of opinion that it is a continuing
guarantee, and we found ourselves upon the language and the
apparent intent and object of the letter. Every instrument of this
sort ought to receive a fair and reasonable interpretation
according to the true import of its terms. It being an engagement
for the debt of another, there is certainly no reason for giving it
an expanded signification or liberal construction beyond the fair
import of the terms. It was observed by this Court in
Russell v. Clarke's
Executors, 7 Cranch 69, that
"The law will subject a man having no interest in the
transaction to pay the debt of another only when his undertaking
manifests a clear intention to bind himself for the debt. Words of
doubtful import ought not, it is conceived, to receive that
construction."
On the other hand, as these instruments are of extensive use in
the commercial world, upon the faith of which large credits and
advances are made, care should be taken to hold the party bound to
the full extent of what appears to be his engagement, and for this
purpose it was recognized by this Court in
Drummond
v. Prestman, 12 Wheat. 515, as a rule in expounding
them, that the words of the guarantee are to be taken as strongly
against the guarantor as the sense will admit, Fell on Guarantee,
ch. 5, 129 &c., and the same rule was adopted in the King's
Bench in
Mason v. Pritchard, 12 East 227.
If we examine the language or object of the present letter, we
think it is difficult to escape from the conclusion that it
Page 32 U. S. 123
was intended and was understood by all the parties as a
continuing guarantee; there is no doubt, that it was so interpreted
by the plaintiffs. The object is to assist Haring in business --
"our friend, Mr. Chester Haring," to assist him "in business, may
require your aid." It was not contemplated to be a single
transaction or an unbroken series of transactions for a limited
period.
The aid required was to be "from time to time, either by
acceptance or endorsement of his paper or advances in cash." The
very nature of such negotiations with reference to the business of
the party, unless other controlling words accompanied them, would
seem to indicate a succession of acts at different periods, having
no definite termination or necessary connection with each other.
The language of the letter then proceeds:
"In order to save you from harm in so doing, we do hereby bind
ourselves, &c., to be responsible to you at any time for a sum
not exceeding either thousand dollars should the said Chester
Haring fail so to do."
It is difficult to satisfy this language without giving to the
guarantee a continuing operation. The parties agree to be
responsible
at any time for a sum not exceeding $8,000,
and if so, is not the natural -- nay, necessary -- import that the
acceptances, endorsements, and advances are not limited in
duration; but that whenever made, and at whatever future times, the
same responsibility shall attach upon them, not exceeding $8,000?
We think that it would be difficult to give any other
interpretation to the language, without subjecting mercantile
papers to refinements and subtleties, which would betray innocent
men into the most severe losses, by an unsuspecting confidence in
them. That the language fairly admits of, if it does not absolutely
require, this construction, cannot be doubted. If it does so, it is
but common justice that it should receive this construction, in
favor of innocent parties, who have made acceptances, endorsements,
and advances upon the faith of it, according to the rule already
stated, that the words shall be taken as strongly against the party
using them as the sense will admit.
It is rare that in cases of guarantee, the language of the
instruments is such as to make the decision upon one, an exact
authority for that of another. The whole words and clauses
Page 32 U. S. 124
are to be construed together, and that sense is to be given to
each, which best comports with the general scope and intent of the
whole. So far as authorities go, however, we think they are
decidedly in favor of the interpretation which we have adopted. In
Mason v. Pritchard, 12 East 227,
s.c. 2 Camp.
436, the words of the guarantee were, "to be responsible for any
goods he hath or may supply my brother with, to the amount of one
hundred pounds," and the court were of opinion that it was a
continuing or standing guarantee, to the extent of one hundred
pounds, which might at any time become due for goods supplied,
until the credit was recalled. That case was certainly founded upon
words less expressive and cogent than those of the case before us.
In
Merle v. Wells, 2 Camp. 413, the guarantee was, "I
consider myself bound to you for
any debt he (my brother)
may contract for his business as a jeweler, not exceeding one
hundred pounds, after this date." Lord Ellenborough held it a
continuing guarantee for any debt not exceeding one hundred pounds,
which the brother might, from time to time, contract with the
plaintiffs in the way of his business, and that the guarantee was
not confined to one instance, but applied to debts successively
renewed. The case of
Sansom v. Bell, 2 Camp. 39, before
the same learned judge, is to the same effect. The case of
Barton v. Bennet, 3
id. 220, was upon words far
less stringent. There, the guarantee was,
"I hereby undertake and engage to be answerable, to the extent
of three hundred pounds, for
any tallow or soap supplied
by B. to F. & B., provided they shall neglect to pay in due
time."
Lord Ellenborough held it a continuing guarantee, principally
upon the force of the word "any," but the case went off upon
another point.
The cases cited on the other side are all distinguishable.
Kirby v. Duke of Marlborough, 2 Maule & Selw. 18,
turned upon the ground that the whole recital of the bond showed
that a limited guarantee, for advances to a definite amount, when
they were made, the guarantee became
functus officio. In
Melville v. Hayden, 3 Barn. & Ald. 593, the guarantee
was
"I engage to guarantee the payment of A. to the extent of sixty
pounds, at quarterly account, bill two months,"
Page 32 U. S. 125
for goods to be purchased by him of B,
and the court held that it was not a continuing guarantees, as
the words "quarterly account" imported only the first quarterly
account, and relied on the word "any" in
Mason v.
Pritchard, as distinguishing that case from the one before
them. The case of
Rogers v. Warner, 8 Johns. 119, was on a
guarantee in these words: "If A. and B., our sons, wish to take
goods of you on credit, we are willing to lend our names, as
security for any amount they may wish," and the court held it to be
a limited guarantee for a single credit. It is observable that here
no words of continuing credit, such as "from time to time," or "at
any time" are used, so that the whole language is satisfied by one
transaction. It is therefore strongly distinguishable from that
before this Court.
We cannot admit, therefore, as has been contended at the bar,
that the courts have inclined to vary the rule of construction of
instruments of this nature and to hold them to be
strictissimi
juris as to their interpretation. And we are well satisfied
that the authorities in no degree interfere with the construction
which we have given to the terms of the present letter. The court
below was, then, right in refusing the first instruction.
The second instruction insists that to entitle the plaintiffs to
recover on the guarantee, they must prove that notice had been
given to the defendants of that fact in a reasonable time after the
guarantee had been accepted. Whether there was not evidence before
the jury sufficient to have justified them in drawing the
conclusion that there was such notice, we do not inquire. It is
sufficient for us to declare that in point of law the instruction
asked was correct, and ought to have been given. A party giving a
letter of guarantee has a right to know whether it is accepted and
whether the person to whom it is addressed means to give credit on
the footing of it or not. It may be most material not only as to
his responsibility, but as to his future rights and proceedings. It
may regulate in a great measure his course of conduct and his
exercise of vigilance in regard to the party in whose favor it is
given. Especially is it important in the case of a continuing
guarantee, since it may guide his judgment in recalling on
suspending it.
Page 32 U. S. 126
The third instruction insists that to entitle the plaintiffs to
recover on the guarantee, they must prove that in a reasonable time
after they had made advances, acceptances, or endorsements for
Haring on the faith of the guarantee, they gave notice to the
defendants of the amount and extent thereof. If this had been the
case of a guarantee limited to a single transaction, there is no
doubt that it would have been the duty of the plaintiffs to have
given notice of the advances, acceptances, or endorsements made to
Haring within a reasonable time after they were made. But this
being a continuing guarantee in which the parties contemplated a
series of transactions, and as soon as the defendants had received
notice of the acceptance, they must necessarily have understood
that there would be successive advances, acceptances and
endorsements which would be renewed and discharged, from time to
time, we cannot perceive any ground of principle or policy upon
which to rest the doctrine that notice of each successive
transaction, as it arose, should be given. All that could be
required would be that when all the transactions between the
plaintiff and Haring under the guarantee were closed, notice of the
amount for which the guarantors were held responsible, should,
within a reasonable time afterwards, be communicated to them. And
if the instruction had asked nothing more than this, we are of
opinion, upon principle as well as upon the authority of
Russell v. Clarke's
Executors, 7 Cranch 69, and
Edmonston
v. Drake, 5 Pet. 624, that it ought to have been
given.
See Oxley v. Young, 2 H.Bl. 613;
Peel v.
Tatlock, 1 Bos. & Pul. 419. But it goes much further, and
requires, in the case of a continuing guarantee, that every
successive transaction under it should be communicated from time to
time. No case has been cited which justifies such a doctrine, and
we can perceive no principle of law which requires it. The
instruction was therefore properly refused.
The fourth instruction insists that a demand of payment should
have been made of Haring, and in case of nonpayment by him, that
notice of such demand and nonpayment should have been given, in a
reasonable time, to the defendants; otherwise the defendants would
be discharged from their guarantee.
Page 32 U. S. 127
We are of opinion that this instruction ought to have been
given. By the very terms of this guarantee, as well as by the
general principles of law, the guarantors are only collaterally
liable, upon the failure of the principal debtor to pay the debt. A
demand upon him and a failure on his part to perform his
engagements are indispensable to constitute a
casus
foederis. The creditors are not, indeed, bound to institute
any legal proceedings against the debtor, but they are required to
use reasonable diligence to make demand and to give notice of the
nonpayment. The guarantors are not to be held to any length of
indulgence of credit which the creditors may choose, but have a
right to insist that the risk of their responsibility shall be
fixed, and terminated within a reasonable time after the debt has
become due. The case of
Allen v. Rightmere, 20 Johns. 365,
is distinguishable. There, the note was payable to the defendant
himself or order at a future day, and he endorsed it with a special
guarantee of its due payment, and the court held his engagement
absolute, and not conditional.
The fifth instruction insists that the promissory notes
mentioned in the receipt of 1 May, 1829, when discounted, and the
proceeds carried to the account of Haring, operated a discharge of
the guarantors, provided the debt sued for was included in the sum
total of the account for which those notes were received. We think
that the court was not bound, under the circumstances, to give this
instruction. It proceeds upon the ground that the notes were
necessarily received as an absolute payment, a fact which the court
had no right to assume, and that, by endorsing the notes and
procuring the same to be discounted and credited in the account,
the guarantee was
per se discharged. This is not correct
in point of law, for if the plaintiffs, by their endorsements, were
compellable to pay and did afterwards pay the notes, upon their
dishonor by the maker, and these notes fell within the scope of the
guarantee, they might without question recover the amount from the
guarantors.
Page 32 U. S. 128
The sixth instruction asserts that if the notes mentioned in the
receipt were received as conditional payments of the said debt, the
defendants are discharged unless it is proved that due diligence
had been used to recover the amount of them from the individuals
responsible thereon and that the same could not be obtained. If by
the word "recover" were here intended a recovery by a suit at law,
the proposition could not be maintained. But if, as we suppose, it
is used in the sense of collect or obtain, its correctness as a
general proposition in cases of conditional payments of debts by
notes is admitted. He who receives any note upon which third
persons are responsible as a conditional payment of a debt due to
himself is bound to use due diligence to collect it of the parties
thereto at maturity; otherwise by his laches the debt will be
discharged. The difficulty is in applying the doctrine to the
circumstances of the present case in the actual form in which it is
propounded in the instruction. It assumes as matter of fact what
the court cannot intend, that the notes were received as
conditional payment. It does not assert what the debt is to which
it alludes, though it probably refers to the debt stated in the
account connected with the receipt. Now that account is not in
terms sued for, but certain drafts amounting to $8,000, accepted
and endorsed, and paid by the plaintiffs, and whether they were
included in the account or not, was matter of evidence, and not
matter of law. Although then the instruction asserted a
proposition, generally true in point of law, it is not clear that
in the very terms in which it is propounded, with reference to the
case in judgment, the court was bound to give it, since it involved
matters of fact.
The seventh instruction is open to a similar objection. It
manifestly assumes as its basis several questions of fact upon
which the court had no right to pronounce judgment. It also
supposes that the debt sued for is wholly confined to the account,
and that the notes referred to were not within the scope or the
guarantee, and, if paid by the plaintiffs, could not be recovered
by the defendants, which is far from being admitted. Indeed this
and several of the preceding instructions proceed upon the ground,
that the guarantee was a limited
Page 32 U. S. 129
and not a continuing guarantee, which construction has been
already overturned.
Upon the whole we are of opinion that the court below erred in
refusing the second and fourth instructions prayed by the
defendants, and that for these errors the judgment must be
Reversed and the cause remanded to the District Court of
Mississippi with directions to award a venire facias de
novo.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the District Court of the United States for the District of
Mississippi, and was argued by counsel, on consideration whereof it
is the opinion of this Court that the court below erred in refusing
the second and fourth instructions prayed by defendants, and that
for these errors, the judgment must be reversed, whereupon it is
adjudged and ordered by this Court that the judgment of the said
district court in this cause be and the same is hereby reversed,
and that this cause be and the same is hereby remanded to the said
district court, with directions to award a
venire facias de
novo.