OPPENHEIM v. NATIONAL SUR. CO.

Annotate this Case

OPPENHEIM v. NATIONAL SUR. CO.
1924 OK 1017
231 P. 1076
105 Okla. 223
Case Number: 11312
Decided: 11/12/1924
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

OPPENHEIM
v.
NATIONAL SURETY CO.

Syllabus

¶0 Indemnity--Essentials, of Contract--Guaranty Distinguished.
A contract of guaranty is a collateral undertaking, and presupposes an original contract; while a contract of indemnity is original and independent. In a contract of indemnity, the undertaking is to make good and save harmless the person, with whom the contract is made, upon an obligation of such person to a third person; while, in a contract of guaranty, the obligation is to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another to the person with whom the contract is made.

W. H. Fuller, Geo. M. Porter, and John L. Fuller, for plaintiff in error.
A. C. Markley, for defendant in error.

JARMAN, C.

¶1 The Phoenix Coal Company, as lessee, had a government coal lease upon certain land in Pittsburg county, and the lessee was required to execute a bond to the United States in the sum of $ 10,000 for the payment of royalties under said lease. On April 1, 1914, the defendant, Oppenheim, executed a bond to the plaintiff, National Surety Company, to the effect that the plaintiff would be held harmless from all demands and losses by reason of its executing said bond for the lessee. In May, 1914, the lessee executed a bond to the United States in the sum of $ 10,000 to pay all royalties becoming due on the coal lease, with the defendant, Oppenheim, and the plaintiff, National Surety Company, as sureties thereon. On January 25, 1919, the plaintiff was required to pay, and did pay, to the United States Indian Agency at Muskogee, the sum of $ 1,395.20, royalties that the lessee had failed to pay to the United States. This action was commenced by the plaintiff, National Surety Company, against the defendant, Oppenheim, on the bond executed April 1, 1914, by the lessee and the defendant to save the plaintiff harmless from all demands by reason of the surety bond executed for the lessee. The record shows that, at the time the defendant executed the bond in question to the plaintiff, he was the secretary and treasurer of the Phoenix Coal Company, and that he sold out his interest in the company and notified the plaintiff to cancel and release him from said bond prior to the time any of the royalties became due, which the plaintiff paid. At the conclusion of the defendant's evidence the court sustained a demurrer thereto, and directed a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum sued for. The principal assignment of error, and the one that disposes of the case here on appeal, is that the bond sued on is a continuing guaranty and that the defendant's liability thereunder ceased when the defendant notified the plaintiff to cancel said bond and to release him from further liability thereon. The defendant contends that the bond comes within the meaning and purview of section 1041, Rev. Laws 1910, defining a continuing guaranty to be:

"A guaranty relating to a future liability of the principal, under successive transactions, which either continues his liability or from time to time renews it after it has been satisfied, is called a continuing guaranty."

¶2 The plaintiff contends that said bond is one of indemnity, within the meaning and purview of section 1074, Rev. Laws 1910 as follows:

"Indemnity is a contract by which one engages to save another from a legal consequence of the conduct of one of the parties, or of some other person."

¶3 If said bond is a continuing guaranty, the defendant was released therefrom when the notice was received by the plaintiff from the defendant revoking it. Section 1042, Rev. Laws 1910. In sustaining the demurrer to the evidence of the defendant, the trial court necessarily took the view that the bond in question was one of indemnity instead of a continuing guaranty, and we concur in this view. A guaranty is a promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another. Section 1026, Rev. Laws 1910. Guaranty is a collateral agreement and presupposes aa original contract; the guarantor guarantees payment or performance by the principal. To constitute guaranty there must, first, be an original contract from a third person to the guarantee for the payment or performance by such third person of an obligation to the guarantee; and, secondly, there must be a collateral contract executed by the guarantor to the guarantee that such third person will pay or perform the obligation as contained in the original contract or agreement. There is no contract from the Phoenix Coal Company to the plaintiff, to which the bond in question here is collateral. The bond in question is an original and independent agreement to save and hold the plaintiff harmless from any loss it might suffer by reason of becoming surety on the bond to the United States, and the United States has no connection with and is not interested in the contract sued on, and, therefore, said contract is one of indemnity. This contract is clearly distinguishable from that of guaranty as shown by the following authorities:

"Contracts of indemnity are distinguished from those of guaranty and suretyship in that in indemnity contracts the engagement is to make good and save another from loss upon some obligation which he has incurred or is about to incur to a third person, and is not as in guaranty and suretyship a promise to one to whom another is answerable." 22 Cyc. 80.

"There are important differences between a contract of guaranty and one of indemnity. The former being a collateral undertaking presupposes some contract or transaction as principal thereto; while a contract of indemnity is original and independent, to which there is no collateral contract and with respect to which there is no remedy against the third party." 20 Cyc. 1402.

"Although one of the meanings of the word 'guaranty' is 'indemnity' or 'save harmless,' and the word 'guaranty' may be used to create an obligation to indemnify one against loss, there are important differences between a contract of guaranty and one of indemnity. A guaranty being a collateral undertaking presupposes some contract or transaction as principal thereto; while a contract of indemnity is original and independent, to which there is no collateral contract and with respect to which there is no remedy against the third party. In an indemnity contract the engagement is to make good and save another from loss upon some obligation which he has incurred or is about to incur to a third person, whereas in a guaranty the promise is to one to whom another is answerable." 28 C. J. 892.

Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.