But it is said, defendants are estopped from averring a want of consideration, for, by the act of issuing the warrant to bearer, they represented to all persons that there was a good consideration. If this is so, then fraud would possess a power never before accorded to it. For plaintiff’s agent (and in legal estimation Buck must be so treated), according to the answer, by fraud obtained this written representation upon which plaintiff relies, and by which it is insisted defendants are estopped, and this very fraud is now used or invoked to close their mouths against speaking or averring the truth.
It is said, however, that if, defendants had performed their plain duty, there would have been a consideration, and that they ought not to take advantage of their own wrong. The plain answer to this is, that perhaps they would but for the fraud of the party under whom plaintiff claims in obtaining the order.
In further argument it is suggested, that if defendant had wantonly, willfully and recklessly dug a pit in the highway into which plaintiff fell, the defense of want of consideration would not lie. But how would it be if plaintiff himself had dug it, or his agent, and defendants as well as plaintiff were injured thereby ? A reference to some of the cases cited by plaintiff, will be sufficient to show that they contain nothing in conflict with the views above expressed. Lobdell v. Baker, 1 Met. 193, was where the defendant and holder of a note fraudulently procured it to be indorsed by a minor (not a party to it), and sold it to one who relied upon the validity of such indorsement. That was a case of actual fraud, and it possesses no element of want of care or diligence on the part of the purchaser or holder.
Wasson v. Mitchell, 18 Iowa, 153, is cited to show that
That case falls far short of teaching any such doctrine. The doctrine deduced (rather than decided) from Thompson v. Dumfort, 9 B. & C. 78, 2 Smith’s Lead. Cases, 212, that an agent is to be held as principal if he had no authority, though he may have innocently supposed he had, is not denied. That case was one of contract, however, and the party relied upon the contract of sale. In this case the contract is abandoned. There, too, the engagement was with the known principal. The alleged contract being with the principal, it may be, if plaintiff’s assignor had fulfilled his undertaking, that defendant’s acts would have been ratified and the warrant paid.
Lick v. Madden, 36 Cal. 208 (Law Reg. 1869, p. 701) holds, that while a public officer should be made to answer to one who is injured through his malfeasance, omission or neglect, yet he is not responsible if the damages would have been sustained, notwithstanding such misconduct, or if the injured party had, by his own fault or neglect, contributed to the result. Measure, plaintiff’s case by this rule and in the light of what we have said above, and it is plain to us that the court below erred in sus taining the demurrer to the answer. ,
Revei sed.