192 Mass. 526 | Mass. | 1906
These two actions were tried and argued together. The only evidence offered was the auditor’s report which it was agreed should be accepted in both cases as a finding upon the facts. It also was agreed that the only questions of law to be determined were the questions arising" upon the auditor’s report and the pleadings. The judge found for the plaintiff in the first action, and for the defendant in the second, and reported the cases upon the question whether the evidence contained in the auditor’s report was sufficient in law to warrant his findings.
The first action is upon three notes alleged to have been authorized by a vote of the town, signed in the name of the town by one Jennings, its treasurer, and approved by its three selectmen, two of the notes being alleged to have been lost and the other alleged to be in the possession of the defendant. If the plaintiff prevails in the first action she does not seek to recover in the second.
We are of opinion that there was evidence sufficient to warrant a finding for the plaintiff in the first action. That case turns upon the question whether there was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the two notes,
The selectmen kept no complete record of the notes which they signed or of the total amount which the town had borrowed. Meetings were held regularly every Tuesday evening and notes were usually signed at such meetings; but they also frequently were signed by them at their houses or places of business. Notes were usually signed two or three days before their date. The selectmen had a regular meeting on Tuesday evening December 19 and one also on Tuesday evening December 26. It is found, as already observed, that two notes for $5,000 each were signed by the selectmen at the meeting which was held Tuesday evening December 19, and it would plainly be more in accord with the usual course of business that these notes should have been dated December 23, than that they should have been dated December 27, which would carry them by another meeting of the selectmen. In view of the fact that there would be a regular meeting on the evening of December 26 it can hardly be supposed that the notes signed on the 19th would be dated as of the 27th. And if the date was written in at the time when the notes were signed by the selectmen on the 19th the probabilities are more in favor of its being the 23d than the 27th. Or if, as quite likely, no date was written in, it is more probable that Jennings procured the selectmen to sign them with the expectation on their part and his that they would be negotiated before the next meeting and that pursuant to such expectation he dated them December 23 but delayed or was prevented from disposing of them till the 26th, than that he dated and disposed of them on the 27th. Moreover Jennings was a defaulter, and it is not unreasonable to suppose that he
The three notes which are the subject of the first action fell due in December, 1900. They were not paid in cash at maturity, but were surrendered to Jennings for what purported to be a note of the town for $15,000. This note is found by the auditor to have been raised from five to fifteen thousand dollars. When this note fell due it was also surrendered to Jennings who gave what purported to be a new note by the town for the same amount. The auditor found that both of these notes were forgeries ; but, even if they were not, he ruled that the treasurer would have had no right under the votes of the town to issue them in renewal of other notes. Abbott v. North Andover, 145 Mass. 484. It is clear that payment by a forged note is no payment. Central National Bank v. Copp, 184 Mass. 328. National Granite Bank v. Tyndale, 176 Mass. 547. Walker v. Mayo, 143 Mass. 42. Grimes v. Kimball, 3 Allen, 518. Atkinson v. Minot, 75 Maine, 189. The defendant contends that the
The result is that in each case the judgment is to be affirmed.
So ordered.
The first of the notes sued upon was as follows:
“ State of Massachusetts.
“ $5,000.00 Wellesley, December 23, 1899.
“ One year after date, for value received, the Town of Wellesley, by its Treasurer, acting under authority of a vote of the Town, passed March 6,*528 1899, promises to pay to the order of its Treasurer the sum of Five Thousand Dollars, in Boston, at the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company. This note is given in anticipation of taxes of the present municipal year, and is payable therefrom.
“ The Town of Wellesley,
“ By Albert Jennings, its Treasurer.
“ Approved, and we certify that this note is issued under authority of the above described vote, that it conforms to the requirements thereof, and that the total sum borrowed to date, including this note, is $50,000.
“ Fred O. Johnson,
[seal] Bichard Cunningham,
Oliver C. Livermore,
[Indorsed] Selectmen of the Town of Wellesley.”
“ The Town of Wellesley,
“ By Albert Jennings, its Treasurer.”
Here followed a certificate of the town clerk to a copy of a vote of the town authorizing the treasurer with the approval of the selectmen to borrow temporarily in anticipation of taxes the sum of $80,000.
The second note was exactly similar to the first in all respects except that in the certificate of the selectmen the total sum borrowed to date was stated to be $55,000 instead of $50,000.