Burgess v. Chapin

5 R.I. 225 | R.I. | 1858

This is another of the cases which have grown out of the barter of cotton for the notes of third persons, common in the market of Providence, in which cases, as we have before considered, there is no implied warranty of the past or future solvency of the parties to the notes; the rule of caveat emptor applying, in the absence of fraud, to that, as well as to the quality of the cotton. Knowledge of the insolvency of the *228 maker of the note, by the defendant, at the time he exchanged it for the cotton of the plaintiff, or of such facts as that he must reasonably infer from them the maker's insolvency, would, without doubt, make the transaction fraudulent on his part, and as such, if concealed from him, enable the plaintiff to rescind it. Knowledge of the fact that the maker of the note had asked and obtained from one of his creditors a renewal of one of his notes, without security, alleging, as an excuse, a fair one for a small manufacturer, that he had been short of water, which is all the knowledge we deem proved upon the defendant, is, in our judgment, far from being knowledge of the insolvency of the maker, or of a fact from which the defendant would be bound reasonably to infer it. The very indulgence of the creditor, granted without additional security, would tend to lull all suspicion; and when we have the oath of the defendant, that the knowledge of this fact did not in the least impair the credit of the maker in his view, and that at the time he parted with the note he believed that it would be paid at maturity, we should be guilty of substituting a vague, conjectural, suspicion, for the proof of fraud which the law requires, if we should come to the conclusion that this bargain of exchange was tainted by it. There is no such analogy, as the counsel for the plaintiff seems to suppose, between the case of one who proposes for insurance either for himself or another, and the case at bar, in which the parties meet in open market upon the well-known common-law ground ofcaveat emptor. In the former case, disclosure of every fact material to the risk is imposed by law as a duty upon the assured, from his presumed knowledge, and the insurer's presumed ignorance, of all that relates to the subject of the insurance. Both act upon this well-known rule of presumption and policy of the law. In the latter case, on the other hand, it is quite as well understood, that where there is no warranty, each party to a common-law contract of sale or exchange is to look out for himself. Neither is bound to express to the other his opinion of the true merits of the bargain in which they are about to engage, or to disclose to each other the slight and inconclusive facts calculated to sway opinion with regard to the subjects of it. In the case at bar, the parties were confessedly *229 dealing in paper which did not enjoy a first-rate credit; and the plaintiff covered the risk which he confessedly took, by exacting and receiving a half cent more per pound for his cotton than the market price. The fact known to the plaintiff about Holden's renewal of one of his notes, was not communicated to him as a secret; and he had a right to suppose, that it was as well-known to the plaintiff, as to himself. It certainly might have been known, and much more, it seems, to both, had they made inquiry.

And this brings us to another suggestion made by the counsel for the plaintiff, that the fact known to the defendant was one that at least put him upon inquiry, which, if he had made with ordinary diligence, would have led him to other facts, conclusive as to the insolvency of the maker of the note bartered to the plaintiff. But the law does not require of him who, without warranty, sells or exchanges a chattel, diligence, either greater or less, in ascertaining the defects of what he is parting with; since there is no obligation on him to disclose such defects unless he knows them, and knows that they are concealed from the other party by art, so that he cannot by ordinary diligence discover them. As there is no obligation to disclose these, unless known, there can, of course, be no obligation to acquire knowledge in order to be able to disclose fully concerning them. The relation between buyers and sellers and between exchangers, dealing without warranty, imposes no duty of knowledge on either, as to the subjects of their contracts; but only the duty of honesty, which is quite compatible with total ignorance with regard to the quality and value of those subjects. On the contrary, under such circumstances, each is bound to inquire, and obtain the knowledge requisite to enable him skillfully to contract, for himself; and if he will not, or does not, the very last person, in the eye of the law, of whom he has a right to complain, for not informing himself that he might inform him, is the party who, in the competition of trade, is dealing thus antagonistically with him. The case of Raphael v. The Bank ofEngland, 33 Eng. L. Eq. R. 276, is to the point, that in carrying on the business of buying and selling paper, *230 the sole duty to others is, bona fides; not diligence in caring for their interests. In that case, the plaintiff, who was a Parisian money-changer, had bought in Paris, for value, a stolen Bank of England bill, for £ 500; and, under the direction of the court recovered the amount of it against the bank, notwithstanding it was in proof, that a notice of the theft was left at his place of business previous to his changing the bill, and that it was the custom of his office to file such notices, and to examine the file whenever a bill or note of very large amount was offered; the jury having found that he took the notebona fide. The court of common pleas refused to disturb the verdict; upon the ground, that the settled doctrine of Westminster Hall was, that a want of care, or negligence, in receiving a negotiable instrument, could not invalidate a party's title to it, if he had acquired the title in good faith. This was but the application to the case before them of the principle, common to all transactions of mere buying and selling, that it is good faith in doing one's own business, and not diligence in caring for the interests of others, which, in such an act, is required by the practical morality of the law. As we see no reason to doubt the defendant's good faith in the transaction before us, judgment must be entered for him.