Mortgage & Contract Co. v. Linenberg

I am in accord with the opinion of Mr. Justice WIEST except that portion wherein he holds that Mrs. Obenauer's guaranty of payment does not apply to the amount due plaintiff under the acceleration clause of the contract being foreclosed. In that holding I cannot concur. While a former notice of the vendee's default had been given to Mrs. Obenauer by plaintiff, the record does not show that she was given notice of the defaults which led to this foreclosure. My Brother's decision is based, as he states, upon the proposition that:

"Defendant Obenauer was entitled to notice of default before the suit against her." Citing Palmer v. Schrage, 258 Mich. 560.

There is no provision in this land contract for notice of default before suit or before acceleration, nor is there any such provision in Mrs. Obenauer's guaranty of payment. And I find no authority for holding that in such case either the vendee or the vendee's guarantor is entitled to notice as a condition precedent to instituting foreclosure proceedings. The case of Palmer v. Schrage, cited in my Brother's opinion, does not so hold. Instead, we there held, quoting syllabus:

"Guarantors of payments on land contract are liable notwithstanding want of prompt notice of vendee's default, in absence of showing that they were damaged by delay in giving said notice."

In the instant case Mrs. Obenauer does not make the claim, nor could she do so under this record, that she was damaged in consequence of plaintiff not having given her notice of the vendee's default in making the monthly payments between May 10, 1929, and March 1, 1930, when the bill of complaint herein was filed, or May 19, 1930, when the bill was amended, or even as late as May 26, 1930, when *Page 149 process was served on Mrs. Obenauer. There is no persuasive testimony in this record as to the extent, if at all, that this property depreciated in value during that period, or that Mrs. Obenauer could have saved herself from loss had she been notified of the vendee's default more promptly than she was by the bringing of this suit against her. The burden was on Mrs. Obenauer to show her loss, if any, was caused by lack of notice.

"In action on contract guaranteeing vendees' payments on land contract, defense of delay in giving defendants notice of vendees' default is affirmative defense, and therefore burden of establishing their damage, if any, is upon defendants."Palmer v. Schrage (syllabus), supra.

It scarcely seems necessary to refer again to our recent decision in the Palmer Case, where the authorities are cited holding that failure to give a guarantor timely notice does not wholly vitiate the contract of guaranty, but only releases a guarantor who has been damaged by lack of notice pro tanto. In the instant case it is not claimed in behalf of Mrs. Obenauer that since there was lack of notice she should be released protanto because of proof of resultant damage to her; and no authority is cited in her brief, nor have I found any elsewhere, holding that (in the absence of an express provision therefor) notice of default is a prerequisite to a suit to enforce a contract of guaranty. Instead, the law in guaranty cases seems to be that notice is not a prerequisite to bringing suit; instead, it is a requisite to keeping the guaranty in full force in those cases where failure to give notice results in loss or damage to the guarantor. Surely starting a foreclosure suit and service of process on the guarantor as a party defendant is sufficient notice of the vendee's default to obviate necessity of a further notice. *Page 150

My Brother's quotation from Douglass v. Reynolds, 7 Pet. (32 U.S.) 113, is not relevant. It is not at all to the point that notice to a guarantor of his principal's default is a prerequisite to bringing suit against the guarantor, which is the controlling proposition in Justice WIEST'S opinion. Instead, the quotation is to the effect that "guarantors are only collaterally liable," and that a demand upon the guarantor's principal (in this case the vendee) and his failure to perform his contract engagements, "was indispensable to constitute a casus fœderis." Neither of these statements is in conflict with the proposition to which we are writing, namely, that under the facts in this case it was not a condition precedent to bringing suit that plaintiff should notify the guarantor of her principal's default.

Further, casual reference to this contract discloses that it could not be held that notice of default was a condition precedent to acceleration by the vendor. Instead, it is provided in the contract that the payments thereunder are accelerated "if proceedings are taken to enforce the contract in equity after default by the purchaser." Giving notice of default would not have accelerated the payments, because, as appears from the above-quoted portion of the contract, it is provided that "proceedings * * * in equity" are the means by which acceleration is effected. Mrs. Obenauer bound herself by this provision of the contract when in her guaranty of payment, which was a part of her assignment of the contract to plaintiff, she stipulated:

"And I hereby guarantee that the vendee therein named or her assignees will faithfully perform said contract and make all the payments which fall due therein." *Page 151

It would seem rather illogical to hold, as does my Brother's opinion, that, notwithstanding she was not given notice before suit of the vendee's defaults, Mrs. Obenauer is liable to plaintiff under the above-quoted guaranty of payment for the amounts past due and unpaid under the provisions of the contract for payment of monthly instalments and for payment of taxes; and at the same time to hold that because of failure to give such notice she is not liable to plaintiff for the payment due under the acceleration clause of the same contract. If notice is a prerequisite to suit on the one phase of this contract, it would seem it should also be held to be a prerequisite to suit on the other. There is no proof nor is the claim made in behalf of Mrs. Obenauer that she will be more burdened by compliance with her obligation under the acceleration clause than by paying under the instalment provisions of the contract. And it may well be questioned whether she could be heard in making such a claim because the plaintiff has the right to terminate its contract relations with a defaulting vendee who has not "faithfully performed said contract" as Mrs. Obenauer guaranteed. It is asserted in Mrs. Obenauer's brief that to hold this guaranty applicable to the acceleration clause "is to require this defendant to answer on an entirely different liability than the one which she signed." But in this connection it should be noted we have held that enforcing liability under an acceleration clause in no way changes the terms of the contract. Union Trust Co. v. DetroitMotor Co., 117 Mich. 631. The acceleration clause is part and parcel of the original contract.

When Mrs. Obenauer sold this contract to plaintiff she knew that she passed to it the right to declare the full unpaid portion of the contract due *Page 152 forthwith upon default in the payment of one or more of the instalments by vendee. This is the right that plaintiff exercised, and thereupon under the terms of the contract the whole of the unpaid portion of the purchase price became due and payable; and Mrs. Obenauer's guaranty that the vendee would "faithfully perform said contract" included payment under this acceleration clause just as much as it included payment of the monthly instalments. One was just as clearly included in the land contract as the other and just as essential to its "faithful performance." Both were plainly covered by Mrs. Obenauer's guaranty. And in passing it may be noted that the undisputed testimony is that plaintiff would not have purchased this contract without this guaranty of Mrs. Obenauer, Plaintiff not only purchased the vendor's interest in the contract, but it also purchased the vendor's guaranty of payment; and Mrs. Obenauer, having guaranteed that the vendee in the contract "would faithfully perform said contract," should be held bound by the plain terms of her guaranty, which included performance or payment of the contract under the acceleration clause in case plaintiff so elected upon the default of the vendee. If Mrs. Obenauer desired notice of the vendee's default as a condition precedent to her being held liable under the acceleration clause or as a condition precedent to suit on her guaranty it should have been so provided in the contract of guaranty itself. Litigation by which guarantors seek to escape the terms of their plain and positive contracts of guaranty, by means of which contracts they have negotiated the guaranteed obligations for a valuable consideration, ought not to be encouraged. The court has no right or power to modify this contract for Mrs. Obenauer's benefit *Page 153 and against the interest of plaintiff by holding it does not apply to the acceleration clause.

The decree of the circuit court is affirmed, with costs to appellee.

CLARK, C.J., and POTTER, FEAD, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred with NORTH, J.