Whitaker v. Richards

Decision Date07 April 1890
Docket Number124
PartiesJAMES WHITAKER ET AL. v. A. T. RICHARDS ET AL
CourtPennsylvania Supreme Court

Argued March 28, 1890

APPEAL BY DEFENDANTS FROM THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS NO. 4 OF PHILADELPHIA COUNTY.

No. 124 January Term 1890, Sup. Ct.; court below, No. 644 March Term 1888, C.P. No. 4.

On March 17, 1888, James Whitaker and Theodore Whitaker, trading as James Whitaker and Brother, brought assumpsit against Alexander T. Richards and R. J. Watson, upon a bond of indemnity to the plaintiffs against mechanics' liens etc., alleged to have been given by the defendants. The defendants pleaded non-assumpsit. Before the trial, the defendant Watson died, and his executors, James V. and Sallie J. Watson, were substituted as defendants in his place.

At the trial on April 17, 1889, the plaintiffs offered in evidence the bond in suit, dated September 17, 1886, the material parts of which were as follows:

"Know all men by these presents, That Alexander T. Richards contractor, as principal, and R. J. Watson and F. C Gillingham, trading as Watson & Gillingham, lumber merchants, as sureties, all of the city of Philadelphia, state of Pennsylvania, are held and firmly bound unto James Whitaker and Theodore Whitaker, trading as James Whitaker & Brother, of the aforesaid city, county and state, manufacturers, in the sum of fifteen thousand (15,000) dollars, lawful money of the United States of America, . . . ."

[After reciting that the contract for the erection of a certain building had been awarded by James Whitaker & Bro. to Alexander T. Richards, and stating the condition of the obligation, the bond concluded with the following:]

"ALEXANDER T. RICHARDS, [SEAL.]"

"R. J. WATSON, [SEAL.]"

"[SEAL.]"

The offer of the bond was objected to by the defendants, on the ground that they had denied its execution, and, also, that the bond sought to bind the defendant Watson.

By the court: Offer admitted; exception.

The plaintiffs then showed breaches of the condition of the bond by the defendant Richards, among other things, by the filing of mechanics' liens against the building by material men, which liens the plaintiffs were compelled to pay. Thereupon the plaintiffs rested.

The defendants put in evidence the testimony of R. J. Watson, deceased, given upon the trial of a former action upon the same bond, wherein the firm of Watson & Gillingham were sued as such. The witness testified, inter alia, as follows:

Mr. Richards came to us and asked us for an estimate for the lumber for this contract, which we did afterwards furnish and deliver. He had got the contract, and wanted us to serve the lumber. We tried to persuade him not to take the contract, but he said he had got into it, and he asked me to go on the bond. I was in some doubt about it. Finally he came and said there would be no risk about it. He said Michael Magee had agreed to go on the bond with us, and he would take half the risk. On those conditions I agreed to go on. . . .

Q. State the conditions under which the bond was signed, and under which you went to Mr. Geissinger's office. A. I had satisfied myself that Mr. Magee was a good man, and I talked the matter over with my partner, and, although he was loath to do it, he said Mr. Magee was a good man, and he would go on the bond with me and take half the risk, if there was any. In pursuance of this agreement, I imparted this information to Mr. Richards, and he made an arrangement by which we were to meet Mr. Magee on the seventeenth day of September, 1886, the day the bond was signed, in Mr. Geissinger's office. Mr. Gillingham at that time was out of town, and I went down to the office, and when I got there I found Mr. Magee sitting inside of the railing. I did not know him personally. I went in and sat down and in a few minutes afterward Mr. Richards came in. . . .

Q. State to the jury what occurred at the time of the execution of this bond, when you were in Mr. Geissinger's office. A. I went into the room. I saw Mr. Magee there. I sat down, and in a few minutes Mr. Richards came out and spoke to us, and said, "Mr. Magee, this is Mr. Watson, of the firm of Watson & Gillingham. He is willing to go on my bond." I then turned to Mr. Magee. Mr. Watson [Richards] turned to me and said, "This is Mr. Magee, and he is going on the bond with you." A clerk came out then, and said that Mr. Geissinger was ready, and we went into his office. I was introduced to Mr. Geissinger. I never had the honor of his acquaintance before that. Mr. Magee was acquainted with him, and was not introduced. He was notified that we were there as co-sureties of Mr. Richards. . . .

I was introduced to Mr. Magee. I was aquainted with Mr. Geissinger. I was introduced as a co-surety to go on Mr. Richards' bond. I asked him to let me see the bond, and I examined it, whatever conditions there were there, which I was prepared to sign, and I said, "I find the conditions are such as I desire to sign," and I said, "Do you desire the firm name, or do you want the individual names?" And Mr. Geissinger said, "I want the individual names." I said, "Then this will have to stop, because Mr. Gillingham is out of town." He says, "That is of no account; you can sign that and Mr. Gillingham can come down afterwards."

Q. How about Mr. Magee; did he sign there? A. I thought he did. Q. Why do you say that? A. I was sure he did. I thought I saw him do it. He took the pen from me, and I was sure he signed it, and would have sworn to it. Q. How long did you remain in the room after you signed? A. A few minutes. I said, "I suppose now you are ready for me?" And Mr. Richards and myself left, leaving Mr. Magee there.

The witness further testified that to the best of his knowledge the names of the sureties were not filled in, in the body of the bond, at the time he signed it, and had they been written in, omitting Magee's name, he would never have signed it; that his understanding was that Magee was to sign the bond, as well as Gillingham.

The defendant Richards testified in corroboration of the foregoing testimony of Watson, and stated that it was his impression that Geissinger was where he could hear, at the time the witness introduced Magee to Watson as his co-surety; that the witness thought Magee had signed the bond, and did not learn that he had not done so until about a week afterward; that the witness had previously offered Magee, as well as Watson & Gillingham, to Geissinger, as sureties, and Geissinger said they were perfectly satisfactory. The defendants showed further, by cross-examination of one of the plaintiffs, that Geissinger was their agent in getting the bond executed.

In rebuttal, the plaintiffs called Geissinger, who testified that the names of the sureties were already written in the bond at the time Watson signed it, and that no change was made in it after the signing. In this, Geissinger was corroborated by his assistant, Harold Godman. Geissinger testified, further, that Watson stated at the time of signing that Gillingham would call in and sign in a day or two, and the witness replied that that would be all right, provided there would be no trouble about it; that Gillingham did not call, and the arrangement that he should do so entirely escaped the memory of the witness; that the witness did not know on what business Magee called at his office on the day the bond was signed. Magee testified for the plaintiffs, denying that he had ever agreed to become a surety in the bond, that he had taken a pen from Watson's hand after the latter had executed it, or that he had been introduced as a co-surety to Watson. He admitted that on the former trial he stated that he might have been so introduced, and might have forgotten it.

At the close of the testimony, the defendants requested the court to charge the jury:

1. If the jury find that Richards, the other defendant, agreed with Watson that if Watson and Gillingham would go on the bond, Michael Magee would also go on the bond with them; that, on the faith of this agreement, R. J. Watson executed the bond; that Magee did not execute it; that Geissinger was the agent and architect of the plaintiffs; and that, at the time of the execution by Watson, he had knowledge of such an agreement, the verdict must be for the defendants.

2. If the jury find that Geissinger was the agent of the plaintiffs, and that the bond was executed by Watson and left with Geissinger, upon an agreement that the same should not be complete or binding upon Watson, unless also executed by Magee, your verdict will be for the defendants.

3. The bond, in the body thereof, purported to be executed by Gillingham as well as by Watson, trading together as Watson & Gillingham. Until Gillingham signed it, in the absence of proof of an agreement to the contrary, Watson's signature did not bind him.

4. The bond, in the body thereof, purported to be executed by Gillingham as well as by Watson, trading together as Watson &amp Gillingham. If you find that Geissinger was the agent of the plaintiffs; that the bond was executed by Watson and left with Geissinger, with the mutual understanding that the same was not completely executed until signed by Gillingham; and that Watson never assented to the bond being...

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