
    Joseph Schulman, Respondent, v. Louis Buchler, Appellant.
    (Supreme Court, Appellate Term,
    April, 1906.)
    Principal and surety — Extent of liability—^Interpretation of contract: Discharge of surety — Extension—Acceptance of notes.
    A guaranty of the payment of all goods delivered to a certain person, to a stated amount, for a given period, implies a sale upon customary and reasonable credit; but where, after the sales have been made and bills rendered, the seller takes a long series of notes from the purchaser, thus extending the original credit, without the consent of the surety, the latter is discharged.
    Appeal by the defendant from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, rendered in the Municipal Court of the city of New York, Thirteenth District, borough of Manhattan.
    
      David Goldstein, for appellant.
    A. I. Gordon, for respondent.
   Scott, J.

The defendant, on September 18, 1903, executed the following written guaranty upon which this action is brought: “ I, the undersigned, do guarantee the payment of all goods delivered to Mrs. Fanny Shilkin to the amount of one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) for the period of one year beginning Sept 18th 1903 to the 18th of Sept. 1904.” Within the year plaintiff sold to Mrs. Shilkin goods to the amount of $894.96, and rendered her a bill therefor dated August 29, 1904. The debtor was unable to pay this amount at once and it was arranged between her and plaintiff that she should give a series- of negotiable promissory notes for the amount, in sums of $15 and $25, payable at weekly intervals. The plaintiffs thereupon marked upon the bill the words “ settled by notes —15 — 25 per week.” Of this arrangement and the giving and acceptance of the notes, the defendant had neither notice nor knowledge. The debtor paid some $540 of her indebtedness, but ceased making payments while she still owed $356.96, and defendant is now sued for $150 upon his guaranty. The defense is that the acceptance of the debtor’s notes for the amount due was a valid and effectual extension of the time of payment, and that such extension, -having been granted without the consent of the guarantor, released Mm. The case as made by the proofs falls directly within the principle laid down in Shipman v. Kelley, 9 App. Div. 316, a carefully considered and elaborately discussed case. It is quite true that defendant’s guaranty did not specify upon what terms sales were to be made to Mrs. Shilkin, and it was, therefore, quite competent for plaintiff to sell her upon customary and reasonable credit without losing the benefit of the guaranty. D., L. & W. R. R. Co. v. Burkard, 114 N. Y. 197. The bill rendered to Mrs. Shilkin and the testimony of plaintiff himself show that, while the goods were sold on credit, there was no such credit extended at the time of sale and as part of the terms thereof as was afterward extended by the acceptance of the long series of notes. It is this extension of the original credit which operates to discharge the surety. We have not overlooked the authorities relied upon by the respondent as holding that the acceptance of time notes from a debtor does not operate to extend his time of payment. Denick v. Hubbard, 27 Hun, 374; Graham v. Negus, 55 id. 440; Fuller v. Negus, 8 N. Y. Supp. 681. Those cases do not seem to be fully in harmony with the long established rule in this State; and, in so far as they are not in accord with Shipman v. Kelley, supra, they must be deemed to have been overruled by that case.

Tbuax and Bischoee, JJ., concur.

Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event  