
    Charles H. Eccleston and Charles G. Eccleston, Respondents, v. J. Fred Sands, Appellant.
    
      Contract of suretyship — what failure to demand payment monthly from the principal debtor does not discharge the surety — application of payments made by the principal debtor.
    
    One Sands executed and delivered to parties named Eccleston the following instrument: “Please deliver to Winchester Dental Manufacturing Company, teeth to the amount of §200.00. Said teeth to he consigned and paid for every thirty days as sold. All teeth to be returned on receipt of your order and placed to the credit of said Winchester Dental Manufacturing Company.”
    
      Held, that, assuming that the liability of Sands to the Ecclestons under the instrument was that of a surety for the dental company, the fact that the Ecclestons did not every thirty days demand from the dental company an account of the sales made during that time or require payment for the goods so sold, but permitted the dental company to retain the entire amount of goods delivered upon the credit of the order for a much longer period than thirty days, when they demanded from the dental company payment for all of the goods sold and a return of the balance thereof, did not operate to effect such a change in the terms of'the contract of suretyship as would relieve Sands from liability thereunder;
    That the Ecclestons .were not obliged, in the absence of instructions from the dental company, to apply cash payments made to them by the dental company, subsequent to the delivery of the goods upon the credit of the order executed by Sands, to the payment for such goods, but had a right under those circumstances to apply such cash payments to other debts due to them from the dental company. ‘ ■ ,
    Appeal by the defendant, J. Fred Sands, from a judgment of the County Court of Chenango county, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Chenango on the 17th day of February, 1905, affirming a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs by a justice of the peace. ,
    
      Jerome S. Seacord, for the appellant.
    
      C. Stratton, for the respondents.
   Parker, P. J.:

The action is brought to recover against the defendant upon a written order signed by him, and of which the following is a copy:

“ Unadilla, N. Y., Aug. 6th, 1902.
“Union Tooth Co., ' "
“ Oxford, N. Y.:
“ Gentlemen.— Please deliver to Winchester Dental Manufacturing Company, teeth to the amount of $200.00. Said teeth to be consigned and paid for every thirty days as sold. All teeth to be returned on'.receipt of your order and placed to the credit of said' Winchester Dental Manufacturing Company.
“ Yours most respectfully,
“ J. FEED SANDS.”

The- appellant claims that by the fair construction of such order the defendant undertook, as surety, that if the plaintiffs, who were doing business under the name of “Union Tooth Company,” would consign to the Winchester Dental Manufacturing '.Company $200 worth of teeth, to be sold for them, such company would pay every thirty days for all that were sold during that period, and would return all teeth so received, whenever the plaintiffs demanded such a return, to be placed to the credit of such dental company. He further .claims that the defendant, being a mere surety under such under-' taking, any substantial variance between plaintiffs and thé dental company in the terms of such contract operated as a discharge of " defendant’s liability thereon; that there was such a substantial change, and hence this action cannot be maintained.

Conceding such to be its correct construction, I am unable to discover from this record that any substantial change has ever been made in the terms of this contract between the plaintiffs and the dental company, or anything in the conduct of either with reference thereto which could affect defendant’s liability thereunder.

Clearly the goods were delivered upon the credit of that order, and no arrangement was made between plaintiffs and the dental company 1 which could operate to change those terms. Indeed, no other arrangement whatever was made between them; nothing whatever was agreed to concerning such teeth save what was expressed in such ' order. They went into the possession of the dental company, therefore, and were received by it, under just such terms as the defendant himself specified, and no act appears on the part of the plaintiffs that has changed those terms or the character of its holding. ,

The plaintiffs did not demand from the dental company an account of sales made every thirty days, nor payment for the amounts so made, but permitted the whole amount to be retained by the dental company until in October, 1903, and then demanded from such company payment for all sold and the return of the balance unsold. Such a delay does not violate or change materially the terms of such contract'. There is nothing in it that requires plaintiffs to exact an accounting or enforce, a payment every thirty days. In October, 1903, the plaintiffs received and credited back to such company teeth to the amount of $69.95, which, as they claim, left a balance due them of $130.05. This amount, and no more, save the interest accrued thereon, they have recovered against the defendant in this action.

On the construction which, the defendant’s attorney himself gives to the contract, I am unable to see in what manner the defendant has been discharged from the conceded liability thereby assumed, unless it is found in the further defense he sets up that the claim has been fully paid.

As to such defense the trial court has, in effect, found, and I think correctly, that ño part of the amount received has been paid. Also I am of the opinion that the defendant’s claim that payments of cash, which were made by the dental company to the plaintiffs subsequent to the delivery to it of the teeth in question, should have been applied towards the payment for such teeth in those instances where the dental company did not itself apply them elsewhere, is not well taken. The plaintiffs had the right to apply such payments, and did apply them, to other debts which the dental company owed them. ( Wanamaker v. Powers, 102 App. Div. 485, 490.)

The claim that the 300 sets of teeth delivered .under this order, or teeth in lieu thereof, had been returned, is not sustained. At least the trial court lias so determined, and, although the evidence on that question is quite confusing, I cannot say that it has made a clear error in that respect.

The judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.

All concurred.

Judgment affirmed, with costs, ■

Cases ; DETERMINED IN THE FOURTH DEPARTMENT IN THE - APPELLATE DIVISION, • ©jctoRjev 1905.  