The following letter of guarantee:
"Baltimore, 17 Nov., 1803"
"Captain Charles Drummond, Dear sir,"
"My son William having mentioned to men that in consequence of
your esteem and friendship for him, you had caused and placed
property of yours and your brother's in his hands for sale, and
that it is probable, from time to time, you may have considerable
transactions together, on my part I think proper to guarantee to
you the conduct of my son, and shall hold myself liable, and do
hold myself liable, for the faithful discharge of all his
engagements to you, both now and in future."
"GEO. PRESTMAN"
will extend to a partnership debt incurred by William P. to
Charles Drummond, and Richard his brother, it being proved that the
transactions to which the letter related were with them as
partners, and that no other brother of the said Charles was
interested therein.
In such a case, the record of a judgment confessed by the
principal, William P. to Richand D., as surviving partner of
Charles and Richard D., for the amount of the debt due by William
P. to the partnership firm was held to be admissible in evidence,
inter alia, to charge the guarantor, George P., under his
letter of guarantee.
Page 25 U. S. 516
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case arises on the following state of facts:
Richard and Charles Drummond, being engaged in some joint
mercantile adventures, which appear to have been carried on chiefly
by Charles, made consignments in the year 1803 to William Prestman,
then doing business as a commission merchant in Baltimore. George
Prestman, the father of William, thereupon addressed to Charles
Drummond a letter of guarantee in these terms:
"Baltimore, 17 Nov. 1803"
"CAPT. CHARLES DRUMMOND,"
"Dear Sir: My son William having mentioned to me, that, in
consequence of your esteem and friendship for him, you have caused
and placed property of yours and your brother's in his hands for
sale, and that it is probable, from time to time, you may have
considerable transactions together; on my part, I think proper, by
this, to guarantee to you the conduct of my son, and shall hold
myself liable, and do hold myself liable, for the faithful
discharge of all his engagements to you, both now and in future.
"
Page 25 U. S. 517
The connection in business was kept up between the Drummonds and
William Prestman until Charles' death, after which Richard, who
resided in Norfolk, came up to Baltimore to adjust the accounts of
the concern with William, and then received from him an account
stated as between him and Charles Drummond, on which, after some
corrections, which appear on the face of the account, the balance
is struck, for which this suit is instituted.
This account commences with an acknowledgment of a balance due
the Drummonds in November, 1804, and brings down their transactions
to December 20, 1805.
Upon this account a suit was instituted against William Prestman
in 1806 in the name of Richard, survivor of Richard and Charles
Drummond, and a judgment confessed William Prestman was dead at the
time of the trial of this cause.
This suit is now instituted upon the letter of guarantee, and
the declaration, after setting out the letter and the subsequent
transactions with William, demands the sum acknowledged due upon
the account stated.
Upon the trial, the plaintiff gave in evidence the letter of
guarantee, the account stated by William, parol evidence of
subsequent acknowledgments of its correctness, and the record of
recovery upon that account, in which he confesses judgment to
Richard as survivor of Richard and Charles Drummond; also parol
evidence conducing to prove the joint dealings of the
Drummonds.
In the progress of the trial, the defendants took exception to
the admission in evidence of the record of recovery against
William: the court overruled the exception, and it went to the
jury, but the court refused to grant a prayer of the plaintiff,
that they would instruct the jury that, upon the whole evidence, he
was entitled to a verdict. And to this refusal the bill of
exceptions is taken, upon which the principal question in this
cause arises.
As evidence was permitted to go to the jury, conducing to prove,
as well the co-partnership between Richard and Charles Drummond, as
the balance due by William Prestman, and the interest of Richard in
that balance, it follows that the refusal of the court to give that
instruction could
Page 25 U. S. 518
only have been upon the ground that the guarantee did not cover
this demand, and this accordingly has been the principal question
made in argument.
It is contended that the correct construction of this guarantee
will exclude a co-partnership debt; that in its language and
import, it is confined to liabilities to be incurred by William to
Charles of Richard severally, or to Charles individually, and
cannot be extended to a co-partnership interest under a trade
ostensibly carried on as between Charles solely, and William.
We have considered this question attentively, and are unanimous
in the opinion that the guarantee may well be construed to cover
the joint trade of Charles and Richard. An interest of Richard is
expressly contemplated by the guarantee, and the language of the
letter seems more naturally adapted to a joint, than a several
interest. For, a concern being represented in the person of anyone
of its members, the use of the pronoun of the second person is
naturally suggested, and familiarly resorted to when we address
ourselves to an individual of the concern. This Court is not called
upon to decide whether the words might not also be correctly
applied to an individual interest as well as a joint concern; it is
enough, for the purposes of this action, if they will cover the
latter.
It is a rule in expounding instruments of this character "that
the words of the guarantee are to be taken as strongly against him
as the sense will admit." But it is not necessary to test this
letter by any canon of the law of guarantee more rigid than the
first and most general, to-wit, "that no party shall be bound
beyond the extent of the engagement which shall appear from the
expression of the guarantee, and the nature of the transaction."
There is nothing on the face of the letter which holds out the idea
of a connection between William and the Drummonds, exclusively in
their individual capacity. The object is to throw business into the
hands of the guarantee's son, and it could not have been
inconsistent with this idea to guarantee a joint trade, as well as
an individual trade. The grammatical construction of the language
will sanction this idea, and the nature and object of the guarantee
favors it. If it be
Page 25 U. S. 519
conceded that there is a latent ambiguity on the face of the
instrument, that ambiguity might well be explained by the objects
of the instrument and the circumstances attending its origin. We
are therefore of opinion that the court erred in refusing the
instruction as prayed, and for that reason the judgment must be
reversed, and a
venire facias de novo awarded.
But, as is the practice of this Court, where questions present
themselves on the record, and are argued, upon which the same cause
may possibly be brought back here, the court has also considered
the question whether the record of the judgment between this
plaintiff and William was properly admitted in evidence.
On this subject it is necessary to observe that it was not set
up as a plea in bar, nor as a decision conclusive of the right of
the party to recover in this action. There was evidence in the
cause to establish the defendant's guarantee, and the balance
acknowledged by William; also, evidence conducing to prove the
joint trade carried on by Charles and Richard Drummond, through the
hands of Charles, with William. This record was certainly competent
to prove a fact which every judgment is competent to prove between
any parties, to-wit, that such a judgment was obtained between
certain parties in a certain cause of action. It was also evidence
to prove that the cause of action was identically the same with the
one on which this action was instituted, and that in that suit
William Prestman solemnly acknowledges that the statement made by
him in favor of Charles Drummond was of a debt really due on a
joint trade between Charles and Richard Drummond. And why should
not this be evidence against George, the guarantee, who had
tendered himself as security to these individuals in these very
transactions?
We are perfectly aware of the rule that he who cannot profit by
a judgment between other parties should not be damnified by it. But
here the application of the rule is in favor of the admission of
this record. Suppose the suit against William Prestman had gone to
a jury, and a verdict obtained against this plaintiff, can there be
a doubt
Page 25 U. S. 520
that the record would have been admissible in evidence in favor
of this defendant?
The material fact on this subject is that the liability of the
guarantee is dependent upon the liability of the principal; the
case therefore is not widely different from that of accessory and
principal, in which the record of the conviction of the principal
is
prima facie evidence against the accessory.
Nor is it unlike the case of
Green v. New River
Company, 4 Term 590, in which it was held that a judgment
against a master for damage from the negligence of his servant was
good evidence against the servant in an action against him by the
master for the same negligence, the recovery in the one case being
dependant upon that in the other.
See also Stark Ev. 188,
189. There the case is presented of a master suing the servant for
damage sustained by the negligence of the servant; the questions
are whether the master has been damnified by the negligence of the
servant and to what amount, and the record of a judgment against
the master is admitted in evidence against the servant. The present
case, however, is a much stronger one; it seems unique in its
principle, since the object of introducing the record seems not so
much to prove that a judgment was obtained as that a judgment was
confessed. Now the proof of William Prestman's liability to
Drummond was indispensable to Drummond's recovery against the
guarantee. But this liability might have been proved by a
confession in writing, or even by parol, after his death, if not
before; then why not by the more solemn act of confessing it of
record?
It is worthy of remark in this case that the guarantee purports,
by its terms, to be something more than a mere suretyship for a
debt. The words are, I guarantee to you "the conduct of my son." It
partakes, therefore, of the nature of a bond given by a surety for
the faithful discharge of a duty, and it cannot be doubted that, in
proving the fact of a breach of the condition of such a bond, the
confessions of the principal after his death would be evidence. It
would be difficult to assign a reason why his confessions
Page 25 U. S. 521
should lose that character by increasing in their solemnity.
We are aware that there are cases which have been thought to
maintain principles inconsistent with these doctrines. They are
chiefly collected together in the 2d vol. of Mr. Metcalf's edition
of Starkie's Treatise on Evidence, title Surety.
We have examined those cases and find some of them of very
little authority, others inapplicable to the circumstances of the
present case, and generally in support of our opinion.
The case of
Davis v. Shed, 15 Mass. 6, has no
application. It was a suit against the surety of an executor by a
creditor of the deceased who had obtained judgment against the
executor and received payments of interest upon the debt. The
question was whether this precluded the surety from his plea of the
act of limitations of that state made in favor of executors. The
court decided that it did not preclude him. In that case, the
record was pleaded in bar, and the decision given that it was not
conclusive.
In the case of
Respublica v. Davis, 3 Yeates 128, an
attempt appears to have been made to introduce a record for the
purpose of proving an admission of counsel in evidence; we cannot
understand on what principle it was rejected, but the suit being on
a recognizance that one Cobbett should keep the peace, and the
breach proposed to be established being the publication of a libel,
parol evidence of the confession of Cobbett was admitted to prove,
against the surety, that he had published a libel. So that this
authority would seem in favor of our doctrine.
So, in
Sheriffs of London v. Tindall, 1 Esp.Cases 394,
which was a suit against the surety of a bailiff, a receipt
endorsed on a warrant in the handwriting of the principal was
admitted in evidence which amounted to nothing less than a
confession that the bailiff had received a sum of money and ordered
the prisoner discharged. It was objected that the bailiff himself
should be sworn, but the judge refused, and admitted the evidence
declaring that the bailiff
Page 25 U. S. 522
was in fact the defendant in the action. This would go far to
prove that even in William Prestman's life, the stated account
would have been evidence against George, and the fact of a judgment
being entered upon it by confession could not have been immaterial
to corroborate it.
The case of
Evans v. Beatie, 5 Esp.Cas. 26, seems
contra, for there, in a suit against the guarantee of one
Copper for "any woolens that should be furnished him by plaintiff,"
evidence was offered to prove Copper's parol acknowledgment of
certain goods delivered, but refused on the ground that he might be
sworn, and it was not the best evidence the nature of the case
would admit of.
Here it will be observed that the principal was living, but we
must not be thought to concur without further consideration in the
doctrine that he could have been equally sworn for the one party or
compelled to give evidence for the other. With the surety he had a
direct interest, and against the plaintiff it was equally direct.
In the present case, the principal was dead. This case is loosely
reported, and attributes some observations to Lord Ellenborough
which we doubt much the authenticity of.
In the case of
Higham v. Ridgway, 10 East 122, the
doctrine on these subjects is laid down with so much good sense as
to speak its own correctness. It is to this effect -- that the
principle to be drawn from all the cases is that if a person have
peculiar means of knowing a fact and make a declaration of that
fact which is against his interest, it is clearly evidence after
his death if he could have been examined to it in his lifetime. On
this principle it is that entries in receivers' accounts are
admitted; so also an acknowledgment by a witness of a debt to
another, or of an acquittance of a debt to himself, because the
individual who makes the acknowledgment has no interest of his own
to subserve, but does it to his own prejudice. In all such cases,
however, the evidence is received with due caution, and its weight
must rest with the jury.
The most stubborn case on this subject that we have considered
is that of
Beal v. Beck, reported in 3 Harris &
McHenry.
Page 25 U. S. 523
This was debt upon a sheriff's bond brought against a surety in
Maryland. The same plaintiff had brought suit and recovered
judgment against the sheriff for the same cause of action, and the
court refused to received the record of that judgment in evidence
as against the surety. In the inferior court it was rejected on a
division of opinion, but in the court of the last resort, we are
told, the judgment was affirmed.
On this decision we can only remark that the report of it is
very brief and unsatisfactory; there is no argument of counsel or
other means of determining on what the decision turned. If the
attempt was made to introduce the record as final and conclusive
against the surety, it was properly rejected, and, in the absence
of anything to prove the contrary, we cannot but suspect that such
was the true import of that decision. In any other view, we should
not feel satisfied to recognize its authority.
Judgment reversed and a venire facias de novo
awarded.