Where there was a contract for furnishing a steam engine, the
following guaranty was made:
"For value received, I hereby guaranty the performance of the
within contract, on the part of Hopkins & Leach, and in case of
nonperformance thereof to refund to Messrs. Hillard & Mordecai
all sums of money they may pay or advance thereon, with interest
from the time the same is paid."
This contract is not in the alternative, but consists of two
terms -- one, that the principals shall perform their engagement,
not merely by the delivery of some machinery, but of such machinery
as the contract includes; the other that if there be a
nonperformance, whether excusable or not, the money advanced on the
contract shall be secured to the plaintiffs to the extent to which
the principals are liable.
An acquiescence of both parties in the prolongation of the time
within which the contract was to be fulfilled will not operate to
discharge the guarantor. There was no change in the essential
features of the contract, and if the parties choose mutually to
accommodate each other so as better to arrive at their end, the
surety cannot complain.
So where the machinery delivered was imperfect and the two
contracting parties had exchanged receipts, but the imperfection
was afterwards discovered and the recipients of the machinery had
to expend money upon it, the guarantor is responsible for it.
The defects in the machinery were latent, and could only be
ascertained by its use. The settlement between the parties did not
embrace the subject to which the warranty applied nor contain any
release or extinguishment of the covenants concerning it.
The damages to be found should be such as would enable the
plaintiffs to supply the deficiency, and the jury were not required
to assume the contract price as the full value of such
machinery.
Hillard & Mordecai, the plaintiffs below, of Wilkes Barre,
in Pennsylvania, made a contract with Hopkins & Leach, of
Elmira, New York, dated September 11, 1847, under seal. Benjamin
guaranteed the performance of this contract as follows:
"For value received, I hereby guaranty the performance of the
within contract on the part of Hopkins & Leach, and in case of
nonperformance thereof, to refund to Messrs. Hillard & Mordecai
all sums of money they may pay or advance thereon, with interest
from the time the same is paid."
The action was brought upon this guaranty, which resulted in a
verdict for the plaintiffs, damages six thousand dollars, and
$1,869.15 costs. A motion was made for a nonsuit, which was
overruled. The particulars of the case are stated in the opinion of
the Court.
Page 64 U. S. 162
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
In September, 1847, Hillard & Mordecai employed the firm of
Hopkins & Leach to make at Elmira, in New York, and deliver to
them at Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, a steam engine, and apparatus
necessary to put the same in complete operation, of the best
materials and in the most substantial and workmanlike manner,
according to specifications, and warranted to be of sufficient
capacity and strength to drive six run of stones, and the gearing
and machinery necessary for flouring and gristing purposes. Also,
to make and deliver the cast-iron, wrought-iron, steel, and
composition work for driving six run of stones, and the machinery
attached, of the best materials and workmanship. These they were to
erect and put up on a foundation prepared by Hillard &
Mordecai, who were to afford the proper aid for that purpose. The
machinery was to be completed and delivered at Wilkes Barre upon
the first safe and navigable rise in the water of the River Chemung
in the ensuing spring, and Hopkins & Leach were to give a
responsible individual for security for the money paid on the
contract, and for its fulfillment Hillard & Mordecai agreed to
pay two thousand dollars the first of December, 1847; two thousand
dollars the first of February, 1848; and the remainder upon the
completion of the work, for which payments they were to be allowed
interest. Before the first payment, the defendant subscribed an
agreement, endorsed on the contract, as follows:
"For value received, I hereby guaranty the performance of the
within contract on the part of Hopkins & Leach, and in case of
nonperformance thereof
Page 64 U. S. 163
to refund to Messrs. Hillard & Mordecai and sums of money
they may pay or advance thereon, with interest from the time the
same is paid."
This suit was brought on this guaranty by Hillard & Mordecai
for the insufficiency of the work done by Hopkins & Leach. On
the trial, they adduced testimony to show that the engine and
apparatus set up by Hopkins & Leach were not of the best
material, nor of substantial and workmanlike construction, and had
not strength to drive six run of stones, and in improving them they
had sustained expense and loss; that from the middle of December,
1847, till December, 1858, the time when the work was finished,
they had advanced fifty-five hundred dollars, and that only a
trifling balance existed at that date, which was paid before the
work had been tested by use; that afterwards, and in that month,
defects were discovered of which Hopkins & Leach had notice. In
consequence of which they made efforts to improve their work, but
in June, 1849, the plaintiffs procured an examination to be made by
three machinists and engineers, whose report upon the imperfection
of the machinery was communicated to Hopkins & Leach and to the
defendant, and who were required to amend their work. This notice
and report were read to the jury, the defendant excepting to their
competency. The defendant, after the case of the plaintiff was
submitted to the jury, insisted to the court that his contract was
merely a guaranty either of the performance of the agreement by
Hopkins & Leach by the delivery of the machinery or the
refunding of the moneys that might be paid before that event, and
that the advances of the plaintiffs being in drafts or notes, and
not within the time limited by the contract, the defendant was not
liable at all, or if liable, only to the extent of the payment of
$4,000, until they had fully performed their contract, and the
plaintiffs having fully paid off Hopkins & Leach, and receipts
being given, the defendant had a right to consider his guaranty as
at an end.
The court overruled a motion to nonsuit the plaintiff and
instructed the jury that the defendant was responsible on his
contract not only for the nonpayment of the money advanced to
Hopkins & Leach in case they failed to make and deliver
Page 64 U. S. 164
the engine and machinery, but also for the full and faithful
performance of all of the agreement of Hopkins & Leach. The
general rule is to attribute to the obligation of a surety the same
extent as that of the principal. Unless from the terms of the
contract an intention appears to reduce his liability within more
narrow bounds, a restriction will not be imposed by construction
contrary to the nature of the engagement. If the terms of his
engagement are general and unrestricted and embrace the entire
subject,
omnem causam, his liability will be measured by
that of the principal and embrace the same accessories and
consequences,
connexorum et dependentium. It will be
presumed that he had in view the guaranty of the obligations his
principal had assumed. Poth. on Ob. 404; 3 M. & S., 502;
Boyd v. Moyle, 2 C.B. 644.
In the case before us, the contract of the surety is not in the
alternative, but consists of two terms: one, that the principals
shall perform their engagement not merely by the delivery of some
machinery, but of such machinery as the contract includes; the
other that if there be a nonperformance, whether excusable or not,
the money advanced on the contract shall be secured to the
plaintiffs to the extent for which their principals are liable.
The defendant, to sustain his defense that the plaintiffs had
varied their agreement with Hopkins & Leach, adduced testimony
to the effect that the letter had informed them of their inability
to complete the work "by the first safe and navigable rise in the
river," and that they assented to the delay proposed by them till
another rise; that a portion of the work was sent in April, and a
portion in June, and a portion in October, and that the plaintiffs
were not ready to receive it until October, and it was not erected
until December, 1848, at which time a settlement took place, and
the plaintiffs paid the small balance then due.
The circuit court instructed the jury that the waiver by the
plaintiffs of the punctual delivery of the engine and machinery did
not constitute such a change in the contract as to discharge the
guarantor. That a mutual alteration of the contract by the
principal parties would operate to discharge the
Page 64 U. S. 165
defendant as a guarantor, but an acquiescence on the part of the
plaintiffs in a longer time than was specified in the contract for
fulfillment, especially as the time of fulfillment was somewhat
indefinite, would not, as matter of law, operate to discharge the
defendant, and the court declined to charge the jury
"that if they believed that the performance of the contract was
essentially altered or varied, or the time of the delivery of the
machinery at Wilkes Barre extended upon good consideration, without
the knowledge or consent of the defendant, the plaintiffs were not
entitled to recover."
The agreement of Hopkins & Leach comprised the manufacture
of complicated machinery of distinct parts and different degrees of
importance, and these were to be transported to a distance, there
to be set up in connection with other works about which other
persons were employed. That such a contract should not be fulfilled
to the letter by either party is not a matter of surprise. The
covenants are independent, and there is nothing that indicates that
a failure on either part to perform one of these covenants would
authorize its dissolution or that the breach could not be
compensated in damages.
The evidence does not allow us to conclude that there was any
intention to change the object or the means essential to attain the
object of the original agreement. In its execution, there were
departures from its stipulations, but these seem to have been made
on grounds of mutual convenience, and did not increase the risk to
the surety. He was fully indemnified by his principals until after
the settlement between the plaintiffs and Hopkins & Leach.
It is clear that the mere prolongation of the term of payment of
the principal debtor, or of the time for the performance of his
duty, will not discharge a surety or guarantor. There must be
another contract substituted for the original contract or some
alteration in a point so material as in effect to make a new
contract without the surety's consent to produce that result. But
when the essential features of the contract and its objects are
preserved, and the parties, without objection from the surety and
without any legal constraint on themselves, mutually accommodate
each other so as better to
Page 64 U. S. 166
arrive at their end, we can find no ground for the surety to
complain. The circuit court presented the question fairly to the
jury, and the exceptions to the charge cannot be supported. Trop.
de Caution 575;
Beaubien v. Stoney, Spear So.Ca.Ch. 508;
11 Wend. 312.
The defendant adduced testimony to show that the plaintiffs
accepted the engine and machinery; that an account was stated
between the plaintiffs and Hopkins & Leach of the work done and
money paid, and an acknowledgment of its settlement entered upon
it, and signed by the parties; that Hopkins & Leach exhibited
this account to the defendant and demanded a return of the
securities they had deposited with him for his indemnity, and that
they were yielded on the credit given to that acknowledgment. He
requested the court to instruct the jury that if they believed that
the defendant, relying upon the receipt given by the plaintiffs,
settled with Hopkins & Leach and surrendered to them securities
he held to indemnity him against the liability he assumed by his
guaranty, and such surrender and discharge were made after the
settlement between Hopkins & Leach and the plaintiffs and upon
the faith of it, the plaintiffs are bound by such settlement and
receipt so far as the same relates to the defendant, they having
put it in the power of Hopkins & Leach to procure the surrender
of such securities for the defendant. This prayer finds its answer
in the agreement of Hopkins & Leach and the guaranty of the
defendant.
The material of which the machinery was to be composed, and the
workmanship and capacity of the manufacture, were warranted. The
defects in the machinery were latent, and could only be ascertained
by its use. The settlement between the parties did not embrace the
subject to which the warranty applied, nor contain any release or
extinguishment of the covenants concerning it. The cause of the
present suit is not the same as that included in the stated account
or acknowledgment entered upon it.
The present suit originates in the contract between Hopkins
& Leach and the plaintiffs. The former could not plead that
settlement in bar of a similar suit against them, and
consequently
Page 64 U. S. 167
their guarantor cannot. They have misconceived the import of
that settlement without the agency of the plaintiffs, and are not
entitled to charge them with the consequent loss.
The circuit court instructed the jury that if they found the
engine, boilers, and apparatus for steam power were sufficient to
drive six run of stones suitable for grinding, the damages to be
found should be such as would enable the plaintiffs to supply the
deficiency, and that they were not required to assume the contract
price as the full value of such machinery.
The principle thus laid down coincides with that in
Alder v.
Keightly, 15 M. & W 117. "No doubt," say the court in that
case,
"all questions of damages are, strictly speaking, for the jury,
and however clear and plain may be the rule of law on which the
damages are to be found, the act of finding them is for them. But
there are certain established rules according to which they ought
to find, and here is a clear rule: that the amount that would have
been received if the contract had been kept is the measure of
damages if the contract is broken."
This rule was reaffirmed in
Hadley v. Baxendale, 10
Exch. 341. The exception to the introduction of the notice to the
defendant and the report accompanying it cannot be sustained. It
was proper for the plaintiffs to notify the principals and their
surety of the defects in their work and to call upon them to amend
it. The report was not introduced as testimony of the defects, nor
can we assume that it was used for that purpose. Upon the whole
record, our conclusion is there is no error, and the
Judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.