
    Adriance, Platt & Company, Respondent, v. Margaret Kelley, Appellant.
    Third Department,
    January 18, 1916.
    Guaranty and suretyship — when liability of surety strictissimi juris — guaranty of fulfillment of contract by selling agent—failure of agent to procure indorsement on notes —when surety not liable.
    The obligation of an individual surety or guarantor is strictissimi juris and he cannot be made liable on his contract if there has been a substantial departure therefrom, and the court will not inquire whether it is or is not to his injury.
    Where a contract employing a selling agent required him to have all promissory notes accepted by him on a sale of goods 'indorsed by a responsible party, or, in the alternative, to furnish his principal a statement showing that the maker of the note was worth at least $1,500 in unincumbered real estate,- a woman who has guaranteed the faithful performance of said contract of employment is not liable on promissory notes which were accepted by the selling agent without the indorsement required by his contract of employment and without his furnishing the required statement as to the property of the maker, if, in fact, the principal accepted the notes from the agent in the form in which they were executed.
    Evidence in an action against said surety examined, and held, insufficient to show that certain notes, for the non-payment of which it is sought to hold her liable, were taken by the agent under contracts which she had guaranteed.
    Woodward, J., dissented.
    
      Appeal by the defendant, Margaret Kelley, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of St. Lawrence on the 11th day of December, 1913, upon the report of a referee appointed to hear and determine the issues.
    
      Abbott & Dolan [Vasco P. Abbott of counsel], for the appellant.
    
      D. R. P. Parker [Waterman & Waterman of counsel], for the respondent.
   Cocheare, J.:

The complaint contains two causes of action. It is alleged in the first cause of action that on or about the 8th day of December, 1903, the plaintiff and Frank L. Kelley entered into an agreement whereby the plaintiff employed said Kelley as its agent for the sale of agricultural implements, and said Kelley agreed, among other things, to guarantee the payment to the plaintiff of all machines sold by him and of all notes taken on account thereof under said agreement and that all notes should be made payable at bank “ and contain either the endorsement of a responsible party, or a property statement showing the maker to be worth at least $1,500 in unencumbered real estate,” also to maké settlement with purchasers on delivery or acceptance of machines under warranty and to report all sales and remit proceeds to the plaintiff promptly and to make final settlement on or before the 1st day of September, 1904. It is further alleged that, in consideration of the plaintiff entering into said agreement with said Kelley, the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff an instrument in writing whereby she guaranteed the performance of said first-mentioned agreement on the part of said Frank L. Kelley “ and the payment by him of all moneys and notes given as therein mentioned. ” It is further alleged that under said first-mentioned agreement said Frank L. Kelley took certain notes of purchasers of agricultural instruments which notes were guaranteed by him to the plaintiff, and the complaint in its said first cause of action contains a statement of the amount due and unpaid on said notes and concludes as follows: “No part of which has been paid, although payment thereof before this action was duly demanded of the said defendant and said Frank L. Kelley who failed and neglected to fulfil said first mentioned agreement on his part in other respects, to wit, in procuring said notes to be endorsed by a responsible party or in procuring a property statement showing the makers to be worth, respectively, at least $1,500, in unencumbered real estate, neither of which was done, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $199.74 of principal and interest as aforesaid.”

The evidence as to the first cause of action follows the allegations of the complaint, and it seems to me to be clearly insufficient to establish liability against the defendant. It will be conceded by all that the defendant’s obligation being that of a surety or guarantor is strictissimi juris and she cannot be made liable on her contract if there has been any substantial departure therefrom and the court will not inquire whether it is or is not to her injury. (Page v. Krekey, 137 N. Y. 307, 314.) The contract of the plaintiff with Frank L. Kelley and which contract the defendant guaranteed provided that all notes should either be indorsed or contain a statement showing the makers thereof to be worth at least $1,500 in unincumbered real estate. And both the complaint and the evidence show that the notes which are made the basis of this first cause of action and for which the defendant has been held liable did not comply with the contract because they were not indorsed nor did they have the property statement as required by the contract. There has been a very material and. important departure from the contract in respect to these notes in question. Of course the plaintiff was not obliged to accept these notes and might have stood upon its contract, but, having accepted them'in the form in which they were executed, it has accepted and is now seeking to enforce against the defendant obligations for which she has not agreed to become responsible.

The second cause of action alleged in the complaint is based on a contract between the plaintiff and Frank L. Kelley and guaranteed by the defendant, which contract is similar to the one alleged in the first cause of action, but it differs materially in that it does not contain the provision that notes accepted shall either be indorsed or contain the property statement, and consequently this branch of the case is not open to the criticism heretofore made. There is, however, no evidence authenticating the signatures of the makers of any of these notes. Neither is there any evidence that the notes were taken under the contracts alleged in the complaint which were guaranteed by the defendant. The plaintiff called Frank L. Kelley as its witness and he not only failed to identify the signatures of the makers of the notes, hut also in respect to many of the notes testified that he never had any conversation with the makers about the transactions. Objections to the admissibility of these notes in evidence were duly taken at the trial. Non constat the notes were taken and accepted by the plaintiff under some other contract for which the defendant is in no way responsible. There seems to be a failure of proof in respect to the entire case.

It follows that the judgment should be reversed, the referee discharged, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.

All concurred, except Woodward, J., dissenting.

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