On April 11, 1930, Tompkins Bevers, Inc., borrowed $100,000 from the Eighty-sixth Street Branch of the Corn Exchange Bank Trust Company for the purpose of buying 3,337 shares of Hudson River Yards. On that date the corporation gave the bank its promissory note for that amount with interest payable on October 14, 1930. As collateral security for the payment of the note, the corporation deposited and pledged with the bank the stock and also gave the personal guaranty of the president and treasurer of the company. The note was dated April 11, 1930, and was payable the 14th day of October of the same year.
Shortly before the due date, Mr. Kittredge, the treasurer, told the officers of the bank that the corporation could only pay $15,000 and asked for an extension of the balance. He was informed that the renewal would be granted only if an additional guarantor satisfactory to the bank were secured. Thereupon Mr. Kittredge obtained the guaranty of his father-in-law, the defendant, Albert L. Gifford, telling him about the facts of the transaction in the following words:
"A. I told him that we had borrowed $100,000 from the bank, that we were only able to pay $15,000 at that time, that the Corn Exchange Bank had asked Mr. Sherer to notify me that they could not go ahead and get a new line of $85,000 unless I had a satisfactory guarantor. I had two men in mind that I might get. I went to Mr. Gifford and asked him if he would sign as guarantor and I told him at that time that the note would be $85,000.
"Q. And he said he would sign it? And he did sign it? A. Yes, sir."
As we read the guaranty which Mr. Gifford signed, we must remember that it was given to procure a renewal of this $100,000 note which was coming due. The guaranty was in the following words:
"For the sum of One Dollar in hand to me paid, by the Corn Exchange Bank Trust Co. of the City of New York, *Page 157 receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged; I do hereby guarantee to said Company to the extent of $100,000 the prompt payment, whendue, of each and every claim and demand of the said Corn Exchange Bank Trust Co. against Tompkins Bevers, Inc. nowexisting or which may hereafter arise; my liability hereunder shall not extend beyond the said sum $100,000. at any one time,but this guaranty is a continuing guaranty for the said sum andshall remain in force until duly revoked by me by notice inwriting to the said company and shall extend to and cover allrenewals of any claims or demands guaranteed under thisinstrument or the extensions of time of payment thereof, andshall not be affected by any surrender or release by saidCompany of any other security held by it for any claims ordemands hereby guaranteed.
"Witness my hand at New York, N.Y. this fourteenth day of October, 1930.
"A.L. GIFFORD. "In presence of: "ROBERT GALBRAITH."
Upon receiving this guaranty the note was extended for one month for $85,000, and thereafter from time to time the indebtedness of Tompkins Bevers, Inc., was extended or renewed by taking new notes and canceling the old notes, and from time to time payments were made on account, the indebtedness being reduced so that on June 8, 1931, the note, as renewed and extended, had been reduced to $70,000, at which time the defendant revoked his guaranty in the following words:
"With reference to the guarantee which I executed and filed with you October 14th, 1930, guaranteeing note of Tompkins Bevers, Inc., in the amount of One hundred thousand dollars ($100,000), I hereby, under the terms of such guarantee, revoke same.
"I take this step reluctantly as I should regret exceedingly to embarass the officers of Tompkins Bevers, Inc., but my present nervous condition is such that my physician *Page 158 insists on my cancelling all commitments of whatever nature, and that I take a prolonged rest.
"I have no lack of confidence in the credit of Tompkins Bevers, Inc.; I am aware that they have steadily reduced their loan and I am confident they will continue to do so."
Thereafter the then indebtedness of Tompkins Bevers, Inc., to the plaintiff was never increased, but the note was extended from time to time in the same way as previously until June 16, 1933, when it had been reduced to $40,500. The renewals were always conducted in the same way as before revocation.
The sole question presented on this appeal is the construction of the guaranty and whether under its terms the plaintiff could after notice of revocation extend the time of payment without thereby discharging the defendant from all liability.
We take the guaranty as we find it as the surest way of determining the rights of these parties. We think it unambiguous. Mr. Gifford, the defendant, knew that the corporation of which his son-in-law was the treasurer, had borrowed $100,000 from the bank on a note which was coming due. The corporation could pay $15,000 and no more. The note would not be renewed without a guaranty, and he furnished it. As above quoted, he guaranteed the company to the extent of $100,000 the prompt payment of each and every claim and demand when due, which the trust company had against Tompkins Bevers, Inc. This applied not only to claims then existing but to those which might arise thereafter. The guaranty is to be a continuing guaranty and to cover claims to the extent of $100,000 that might arise thereafter. This looked into the future and anticipated new or additional transactions. Renewals of the present existing indebtedness thereafter would be included in these words. To the extent of $100,000, says Mr. Gifford, I guarantee the payment of every claim "now existing or which may *Page 159 hereafter arise." If the note guaranteed became due and was renewed, it would be a claim either existing or arising after the guaranty. The agreement then goes on to state that the guaranty "shall remain in force until duly revoked by me by notice in writing to the said company and shall extend to and cover all renewals of any claims or demands guaranteed under this instrument." These words are broad enough to cover the renewals of an indebtedness existing at the time of revocation. The words used are "all renewals." The parties could easily have said "or the extension of time of payment thereof prior to revocation" if such a meaning were intended. The words "prior to revocation" are not used. The judge at Special Term in his opinion found it very easy to express such an intention for he said the only fair construction that can be placed upon the instrument of guaranty is that the defendant intended thereby to be responsible for the original debt and any extension granted prior to its revocation. The difficulty with this construction is that it is contrary to what the parties did say. The words "prior to its revocation" are not found in the instrument and I know of no authority by which the courts can add them.
It was not necessary to use the phrase "shall extend to and cover all renewals of any claims" unless it had reference to renewals after revocation, and the use of the words "all renewals" indicates in the absence of any limitation or restriction that they were intended to apply to the renewals or extension of the indebtedness existing at the time of revocation.
With these expressions of our views, the judgment of the Appellate Division and that of Trial Term should be reversed and judgment directed for the plaintiff for the amount due, with interest, and costs in all courts.
LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, CROUCH, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur; HUBBS, J., not sitting.
Judgment accordingly. *Page 160