This action was brought to recover the coupons upon $46,500 of the bonds of the Erie and Genesee Yalley Railroad Company, which had been transferred, it was alleged, by the defendant to Lot C. Clark, the plaintiff’s testator.
A recovery was allowed on the coupons of $45,000 only of the bonds.
There were two instruments of guaranty. The first was dated July 22, 1871, and is as follows :
“ Whereas, I have this day agreed with Lot C. Clark to purchase upon the most favorable terms, for our joint account, fifty thousand dollars of the bonds of the Erie and Genesee Yalley Railroad, which said bonds bear gold interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, and the principal payable in gold.
“Now, for and in consideration of one dollar to mein hand paid, I do hereby guaranty the collection and punctual - payment of the said bonds and the coupons thereon, and do further agree to hold said Clark harmless against all loss arising from the same.,
“ Dated New York, Jul/y 22, 1871.
j3oenc«n?ci«íMnpí (Signed) “L. C. WOODRUFF.”
*413The second was for $20,000 of similar bonds, and is as follows :
“ For value received I have this day transferred to Lot C. Clark twenty thousand dollars of the bonds of the Erie and Genesee Valley Railroad, Nos. 21, 22, 19, 20, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14,18, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, of $1,000 each, and 105, 100, $500 each; Nos. 4, 5, 6, of $1,000 each. Now I do hereby guaranty the payment of the principal and interest of the same as they mature.
“ Buffalo, July 24, 1873.
(Signed) “L. C. WOODRUFF.”
Mr. Clark died on the 11th of February, 1880, and after his death the plaintiff, as his executor, called upon the defendant to pay the coupons which had matured. This was not done, and in consequence this action was brought to recover the amounts alleged to be due, under the circumstances disclosed.
Upon the trial, when the plaintiff rested, the counsel for the defendant moved that the complaint be dismissed as to the first cause of action, namely, that which related to the purchase of $50,000 of the bonds on joint account, upon the ground that the plaintiff had given no evidence to show that the bonds had ever been purchased by the defendant, or received or held by the plaintiff’s testator, in pursuance of or in accordance with the terms and conditions specified in the guaranty set forth in that cause of action, but, on the contrary, that the evidence showed that the guaranty did not extend to or include the bonds or interest of the coupons described in the first cause of action, because they were not purchased or held on joint account but purchased and held ag the sole and individual property of the plaintiff’s testator and were not within the terms of the guaranty. This motion was denied and the defendants duly excepted.
. During the progress of the defense the defendant was called as a witness and was asked in reference to the first guaranty this question : That guaranty recites that you guaranteed certain bonds to be purchased by you on joint account for Mr. Lot C. Clark; did you ever purchase any bonds on joint account for Mr. Lot C. Clark ? This question was objected to, not on the ground that it related to a transaction with a deceased person but upon the ground that the obligations of the parties were to be determined by the papers. *414He was then asked the following question: Did you purchase these bonds on joint account, or any of the bonds mentioned in this suit on joint account, between you and Mr. Lot C. Clark? The same objection was made to this question, and it was distinguished by the same ruling and exception.
It will have been perceived that the guaranty was in connection with the recital of an agreement, executory in its character, and in which the defendant declared that he had that day agreed with Mr. Clark to purchase upon the most favorable terms for joint account $50,000 of the bonds of the railroad mentioned, and in consideration of one dollar in hand paid had agreed to guaranty the collection and punctual payment of the said bonds and the coupons thereon; that'is to say, the bonds and coupons to be purchased under the .agreement to which the guaranty related.
It is a well settled rule that guaranties are to be construed strictly. A multitude of cases can be arrayed in illustration of this rule, and the defendant had a right, therefore, if he could do so, to show that the purchase, to which the guaranty related, and in contemplation of which it was made, never occurred; in other words, that his undertaking to piirchase $50,000 worth of bonds referred to in the contract of guaranty was never consummated; .and if it were not, then prima facie the guaranty had no application. It is a familiar rule that sureties can only be charged when the case is brought within the very terms of the contract (Birckhead v. George, 5 Hill, 635), and that the obligation of sureties is not to be extended, by construction, to embrace purposes and ■objects not contemplated by the parties. (McCluskey v. Cromwell, 11 N. Y., 598, per Church, Ch. J.; People v. Chalmers, 60 id., 158.) So it is equally well settled that where any agreement or guaranty of suretyship is accompanied by a recital containing words of limitation or description as to time, the words of limitation in the recital are to control, any general or unlimited language in the obligation •or condition of the writing to the contrary notwithstanding. (Brant on Suretyship, § 138, and authorities cited; Ward v. Stahl, 81 N. Y., 406.) It may be, and doubtless the jury would have so said if the issue had gone to them for determination, that there was evidence sufficient to justify the conclusion that bonds were in fact delivered in performance of the contract of purchase, and it *415may be that there is evidence enough to warrant this court in declaring such a result. But the defendant had a right to present that phase of his case, because it was material upon the question of whether the guaranty itself was applicable to any of the bonds. If the defendant failed to carry out the agreement'to purchase the bonds which he agreed to make, and damages had resulted to the plaintiff's testator from a failure to perform his obligations in that respect, and the agreement was founded upon a sufficient consideration, he had a legal remedy which he might have pursued. But we are now dealing with the responsibility arising upon a contract of guaranty in reference to the first cause of action, and which may be considered and disposed of by the rules of law applicable .to such instruments.
The exclusion of the questions detailed was, under the circumstances, therefore an error, requiring a reversal of the judgment so far as any recovery was had upon the first cause of action.
There seems to be no doubt as to the right of the plaintiff to recover upon the guaranty which forms the subject of the second cause of action. The defendant’s proposition is, that no action can be maintained upon it until the maturity of the bonds specified, which would not be until 1886. This may be an ingenious, but it is an unsuccessful construction of the contract. The guaranty is of the principal and interest of the same, as they mature; that is, the payment of the principal and interest as either and both mature. The interest is guaranteed when it becomes due, and the principal wdien it becomes due. It does not seem to be capable of any other interpretation.
The proposition that the payment of the interest was not guaranteed until the principal matured would be at variance with all rules of construction, and with the clear intention of the contracting parties.
There is no evidence in this case, from which a conclusion can be fairly drawn, that in the transactions which resulted in the guaranties, there was a loan contemplated, and that the contracts relied upon were resorted to for the purpose of covering a usurious transaction nor is there any evidence of any intention to evade the statute in reference to usury.
There is nothing, in other words, to justify the conclusions that *416the investments were mere covers for a loan. It is not usury per ae to buy obligations at a discount upon a guaranty for tlieir payment in full. (Rapelye v. Anderson, 4 Hill, 472.) Although the recovery, upon the authority of that case, must be limited to the amount actually expended.
The result of the consideration of the appeal in this case is, therefore, that there must be a new trial, unless the plaintiffs waive the recovery under the first cause of action, in which case it may be affirmed as to the balance. If the waiver be not made then the judgment is reversed and a new trial ordered.
Davis, P. J., and Daniels, «L, concurred.Judgment reversed and new trial ordered,' unless plaintiff shall waive the recovery under the first cause of action, in which case judgment affirmed for the balance.