Case ID: ad_154/html/0442-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Scott, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Metropolitan Trust Company of the City of New York, Respondent, v. Alice Hawley Truax, as Administratrix, etc., of Chauncey S. Truax, Deceased, Appellant.
    First Department,
    January 3, 1913.
    Guaranty and suretyship—variance between contract of guaranty and terms of loan guaranteed — renewal agreement — estoppel — authority of administratrix to bind estate by signing renewal agreement • when original guaranty is void.
    Where in an action against an administratrix upon a guaranty agreement signed by the deceased and others in which the subscribers severally guaranteed to the lender the repayment of pro rata proportions of a loan made upon the borrower’s note secured by the deposit of certain bonds, it appears that there were certain material variances between the terms of the loan as contemplated by the guaranty and the terms of the loan as made; that an extension or renewal agreement was signed by the defendant as administratrix and by the other guarantors, and that the defendant was not allowed to prove upon the trial that the deceased when he signed the guaranty agreement and she when she signed the ■ renewal agreement had no knowledge of the variances, a judgment in favor of the plaintiff should be reversed.
    The variances were sufficient to release the guarantors from liability until they executed the renewal agreement which operated as to those who signed it as an estoppel.
    As the deceased was not liable upon the original contract of guaranty, his administratrix could not render his estate liable by agreeing to continue the contract. " '
    Appeal-by the defendant, Alice Hawley Truax, as administratrix, etc., from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 8th day of July, 1910, upon the verdict of a jury, and also from an order entered in said clerk’s office on the 24th day of June, 1910, denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial made upon the minutes.
    
      Lloyd Stryker, for the appellant.
    
      Austen G. Fox, for the respondent.
   Scott, J.:

The defendant is sued, as administratrix of the estate of Chauncey S. Truax, deceased, upon a guaranty agreement signed by the said Truax.

On March 1, 1906, one Charles E. Ertz was desirous of borrowing the sum of $4,000 from the plaintiff, and in consideration of such loan and as an inducement to make it the above-mentioned Chauncey S. Truax (and a number of others) executed an agreement of guaranty, a copy of which is annexed to the amended answer.

The agreement was a tripartite one whereby the lender (not therein specified) agreed to loan to said Ertz, designated as the borrower, “ upon his note for one year with interest at six per cent, payable semi-annually, the sum of Four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000)> to be secured by the deposit as "collateral security of Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), par value of first mortgage six per cent ten-year gold bonds of the Bulls Head Oil Works (a California corporation hereinafter called the ‘Company’), secured by mortgage to the Central Trust Company of California, Trustee, and upon the further security of the agreement of the Subscribers herein contained.”

The subscribers, including said Truax, severally, but not jointly, guaranteed to the lender the repayment of pro rata proportions of said loan with interest, but it was provided that no subscriber should be called upon to pay, in the aggregate, any more than the amount set opposite his signature, with interest. In case the subscribers were called upon to pay any part of the principal they were to be respectively entitled to receive from the lender a proportionate amount of the collateral security given for the loan in the ratio of $1,000 face value of bonds for each $800 so paid. The lender was authorized from time to time to detach and collect coupons from the bonds deposited as collateral, applying the coupon interest so collected •to the payment of the interest due or to grow due upon the loan.

The loan was made to Ertz upon his promissory note dated May 14, 1906. The terms of the loan, as recited in the note, varied in material particulars from the terms of the loan set forth in the guaranty agreement.

First. The note provided for the payment of interest “quarterly in advance.” The guaranty agreement provided for the payment of interest “ semi-annually,” without any stipulation that it should be paid in advance.

Second. .The guaranty agreement provided that the loan was to be made to Ertz “upon his note for one year.”

The note provided that in case the securities pledged should decline in market value or for any reason become unsatisfactory to the lender, the borrower agreed to deposit with the lender additional securities “to the satisfaction of the said Company [lender], and in case of failure so to do forthwith this note shall become at once due and payable without demand of payment thereof, and the said Company may immediately sell and apply the said securities in the manner and with the effect as hereinafter provided.”

It seems to require no argument to demonstrate that a note' made under such conditions was not a note “for one year” such as Truax and the others agreed to guarantee.

Third. The note further provided that “in the event of the insolvency of the undersigned [Ertz] all the said obligations and liabilities shall at the option of the said Company, become and be immediately due and payable without demand of payment.” Again it is apparent without argument that a note with this provision is not a “note for one year ” such as the subscribers agreed to guarantee.

Fourth. The guarantors bound themselves only for the payment of the $400,000 loan to be made to Ertz, and it was a part of their agreement that, in case they were required to pay the loan or any part of it, they were to receive -the whole or a proportionate part of the collateral deposited.

The note pledged the collateral not only as security for the particular loan covered by the guaranty,- but also for “any other liability or liabilities ” of Ertz, and authorized the sale of the collateral not only upon the non-payment of the $400,000, but as well upon the non-payment of any other liability of said Ertz.-

These discrepancies between the terms of the loan actually made to Ertz and the terms to that which the subscribers agreed to guarantee are manifest.

In addition it appeared that plaintiff exacted an usurious rate of interest upon the loan, under the guise of commissions, and that this, was done after the agreement of guaranty had been signed by Truax and the others.

Furthermore, the guaranty agreement provided that the interest coupons upon the bonds deposited as collateral should be detached and collected, the amount so collected being applied to payment of interest upon the loan. In violation of this provision it was shown that the plaintiff detached coupons to a large amount from the bonds so deposited, and instead of collecting them-delivered them to Ertz or the company who had issued the bonds.

The loan was not paid at maturity and thereupon all of the subscribers or guarantors, except Chauncey S. Truax, who had died meanwhile, signed an extension agreement whereby it was recited that said Ertz had applied for an extension of the loan until November 14, 1907, and in consideration thereof each of said subscribers consented to the extension of the time of payment and agreed that, if so extended, his obligations under said agreement should remain in full force and effect. This agreement was signed by defendant as follows: “Estate of Chauncey S. Truax, by Alice Hawley Truax as Administratrix.”

The defendant offered upon the trial in every conceivable way to show that Chauncey S. Truax when he signed the guaranty agreement, and she herself when she signed the renewal agreement, had no knowledge of the transactions between plaintiff and Ertz, and had no knowledge of the actual terms on which the loan was made to Ertz or of the variances between these terms and the terms of the loan which Truax agreed to guarantee. This proof was rejected and all necessary exceptions taken by defendant. We must assume for the purposes of this appeal that the defendant, if permitted, would have been able to prove what she offered to prove.

We think that there can be no doubt that the variances between the terms of the loan as contemplated by the guaranty and the terms of the loan as made were quite sufficient to destroy the efficiency of the underwriting agreement as a guaranty and that the guarantors never became liable thereon to plaintiff until they had executed the renewal agreement, which doubtless operated, as to those who signed it, as an estoppel in pais. It is familiar law that the contract of a surety or guarantor is strictissimi juris and that .he cannot be held beyond the terms of his contract, or for an obligation differing .from that which he undertook to guarantee, and it is wholly immaterial whether the deviation harms him or adds to the burden of his obligation if he has not assented to it. . (Grant v. Smith, 46 N. Y. 97; Barns v. Barrow, 61 id. 39; Paine v. Jones, 76 id. 278; Evansville Nat. Bank v. Kaufmann, 93 id. 273; Creamer v. Mitchell, 162 id. 477, 486; Shipman v. Kelley, 9 App. Div. 321; Guardian Trust Co. v. Peabody, 122 id. 648; affd., 195 N. Y. 544.)

We think it quite clear, therefore, upon the evidence in the case, and upon that which we must assume, that defendant could have produced if permitted,, that Chauncey S. Truax,' defendant’s decedent, never became liable to plaintiff upon the guaranty agreement, and that his estate was not so liable when his coguarantors and this defendant signed the extension agreement. Indeed, that conclusion is compelled as the evidence stands, without regard to the excluded testimony, because the documents show on their face that the note was made some time after the guaranty agreement was executed, and' that the variances above referred to existed. Upon those facts alone the presumption would be that the guarantors did not consent to the variances and the burden to show the contrary would rest upon plaintiff.

Having arrived at the conclusion that the estate of Chauncey S. Truax was not liable upon the guaranty when the original loan matured, it follows that it was not competent for his administratrix to create a liability on the part of the estate by agreeing to continue what she doubtless assumed to be a liability, but»which in fact was not. The case is similar to those in which a claim against a decedent has been barred by the

Statute of Limitations. In such cases it is the well-settled rule that executors or administrators have no power to use the funds of the estate to pay claims so barred, and that, if they do so, the claim paid will not he allowed upon an accounting. (Butler v. Johnson, 111 N. Y. 204; Spicer v. Raplee, 4 App. Div. 471; Hamlin v. Smith, 72 id. 601.) If an executor or administrator cannot lawfully pay such a claim out of the funds of the estate, he certainly cannot validly create an obligation so to pay it.

The plaintiff relies entirely upon Metropolitan Trust Company v. Skitt (139 App. Div. 928; affd., 205 N. Y. 561), a case which arose under the same guaranty and extension agreements. It is to be distinguished from the present case, however, by the circumstance that the defendant Skitt was alive when the original loan became due and personally executed the extension agreement.

The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Dowling, JJ., concurred.

Judgment .and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.