Edwards v. Noel

Biggs, J.

This is an action on an alleged guaranty of a bond issued by the Lindell Hotel company. In the spring of 1893 the plaintiff and the defendant (a bond broker) had a conference looking to the purchase of some kind of securities by plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that he was acting in the matter for his father, E. L. Edwards, since deceased, and that he so informed the defendant. The defendant denied the latter statement. As a result of the conference the defendant addressed the following letter to plaintiff:

“St. Louis, May 16th, 1893.
11 Mr. J. B. Edwards, Jefferson City, Mo.
“Dear Sir: ' We offer subject to sale at 100 and interest $4,000 (total issue $100,000), first mortgage 6 per cent Gold Bonds running 15 years straight from April, 1892, interest payable April and October at the St. Louis Trust Company and secured upon the Lin-dell Hotel Building in this city and a perpetual lease upon the ground of $27,500 per annum. These bonds are secured by deed of trust and are registered by the St. Louis Trust Co. Bonds are also fully covered by insurance. We consider the lease on ground worth $350,000 cash, beside the value of the Hotel building. The ground was bought subject to the above lease for $500,000 cash and is now owned by the Ground Rent Company of Boston. The bonds are in every way desirable. Balance of issue held here. Advise us at once if wanted.
“Yours truly, H. M. Noel & Co.”

*135To the foregoing letter the plaintiff sent the fol-' lowing reply:

“Jeeeerson City, Mo., May 17, 1893.
“Messrs. E. M. Noel & Go-.,'St. Louis.
“Dear Sirs: Send me $1,500 of Lindell hotel bonds as per your letter of the 16th. If they are sold before you receive this letter send me next best you have to this amount. Only send me bonds that you can ■guarantee. I have telegraphed you at noon to-day.
“Yours truly,
“Jos. R. Edwards.”

The defendant received the letter on the morning of the eighteenth, and in response thereto he mailed the following letter to plaintiff:

“St. Louis, May 17th, 1893.
“Mr. J. B. Edwards, Jefferson Gity, Mo.
“Dear Sir: Your esteemed favor of the 17th received. As the Lindell Hotel bonds are $1,000 each we can only send you one of them and a $500 Clarksville, Mo., funding bond. We think both of these bonds good and will give you satisfaction. We enclose a memorandum bill of same and have drawn for the amount through the First National Bank, Jeff. City. Thanking you for past favors, we aré,
“Yours very truly,
“H. M. Noel & Co.”

The bonds were sent to the bank at Jefferson City with the following draft or acceptance:

“St. Louis, May 18th, 1893.
“1,517.08.
“On delivery $1,000 Lindell Hotel “A” and $500, Clarksville, Mo., five per cent bonds pay to the order of St. Louis National Bank fifteen hundred, seventeen and -r!hr (with exchange on St. Louis or New York) value received.“To J. R. Edwards. H. M. Noel & Co.”

*136The evidence leaves no doubt that the last named letter was written and mailed on May 18, instead of the seventeenth. It was received by the defendant at Jefferson City on the morning of the nineteenth. After the receipt of the letter the plaintiff paid the acceptance with the money of his intestate and received the bonds. The Lindell Hotel Company paid the interest on the bond for a year or two and then defaulted. The plaintiff notified the defendant of the default and requested that he make good his alleged guaranty. The defendant denied liability, and hence this suit.

Guaranty of bond: correspondence: construction: judicial questión The questions are, whether the plaintiff’s letter of May 17 is to be.construed as a demand for a guaranty of the particular bond,’and if so, whether the defendant in his letter of May 18 acceded to the demand? The first question is not free from difficulty. It is a question whether the plaintiff intended to demand a guaranty for all bonds that might be sent, or for such only as the defendant might send in lieu of the Lindell Hotel bonds. The defendant contends for the latter construction, and in this we think he is right. It is conceded that all of the negotiations are' represented by the letters above set forth. Therefore, in order to solve the ambiguity in the plaintiff’s letter of May 17, it is proper that the entire correspondence be read. In his first letter the defendant gave all particulars as to the Lindell Hotel bonds, that is, the time they- were to run, by whom issued, the amount of the issue, and of the situation and condition of the property pledged for their payment. His evident intention was to put the plaintiff in possession of all the facts so that he himself might judge of the character and solvency of the bonds. In answer to this the plaintiff gave a peremptory order for $1,500 of these bonds, but noting in the *137defendant’s letter that the offer of defendant was made subject to the sale of the bonds to other parties, he instructed the defendant to send him other bonds, if he was unable for any reason to fill his order for the hotel bonds. In that connection he wrote “only send me bonds that you can guaranty.” A fair construction, we think, leads to the conclusion that the plaintiff’s demand for a guaranty referred only to such other bonds as the defendant might send, in the event he could not comply with plaintiff’s order for Lindell Hotel bonds. As to the hotel bonds plaintiff was fully advised, but as to other bonds which the defendant might conclude to send he would probably know nothing. Therefore it was but reasonable that he should exact a guaranty as to them. This was obviously the view of the circuit court as indicated by the plaintiff’s fifth instruction. The only error committed by the court was in submitting by this instruction the question whether the plaintiff intended to exact a guaranty as to all the bonds. The rule is that the construction of written instruments is for the court, except where there is an ambiguity which can only be solved by reference to unconceded extrinsic facts. Here the extrinsic facts were conceded, which left the question of construction for the court and not for the court sitting as a jury. This error, however, was against the defendant.

Gbo?d:Nco^r°econstruction. Whether the defendant in his last letter acceded to the demand for a guaranty of the Clarksville bond, is a matter of doubt. After naming the bonds he said: “We think both of these bonds good and will give satisfaction.” It can not be said either that he made an express guaranty of anything, or that a guaranty should be implied from silence. The language used makes room for the contention that he declined to *138become a guarantor at all. It will also be noted that the plaintiff accepted and paid for the bonds after receiving this letter.

With the concurrence of the other judges the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed. It is so ordered.