23 Barb. 584 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
In Pigot’s case, (11 Coke’s Rep. 26,) it was resolved that when any deed is altered in a point material, by the plaintiff himself, or a stranger, without the privity of the obligor, be it by interlineation, addition, erasing or by drawing a pen through a line or through the midst of a material word, the deed thereby becomes void. The court of king’s bench, in Master v. Miller, (4 T. R. 320,) applied this rule, as thus stated, to a bill of exchange, and declared it applicable to all written instruments. Lord Kenyon says of the Pigot case, that it establishes the principle that all written instruments which are erased or altered shall be void. This case was affirmed in the exchequer, in 5 T. R. 367, and has ever since been followed by the English courts. In this state
The rule in this state, and in most states, is that the question
As authority for the statement that the adding another drawer or maker to a bill or note is a material alteration, Mr. Chitty refers to two cases, one in Holt’s N. P. 474, Clark v. Blackstock, and the other cited as Ex parte White, (2 D. & Ch. 334.) This last case I have been unable to find. The case in Holt was where the defendant signed a simple promissory note as a surety after it had been executed and delivered, with the assent of the maker. It was held by the judge at nisi prius, that such addition made the note a new contract, and that as such it required a new stamp, under the stamp act; that it became a new bill. This would not be so if the alteration was immaterial, or made to complete the instrument. (3 Esp. 246, and 10 East, 469.) In 5 Monroe, 25, Bank of Limestone v. Phinney, where, after the making and delivery of a joint and several promissory note by two, a third person signed it and his name was inserted in a blank left in the body for that purpose, it was held by the court of appeals of Kentucky that it was a material alteration, and that the note was void.
Concurring with the foregoing cases in respect to promissory notes are the following, in respect to bonds. In O'Neil v. Long, (4 Cranch, 69.) a new signature to a bail bond was made after its execution and it was held void. In Harper v. The State, (7 Black. 61,) a bond was altered by adding to it two obligors, and for that reason it was held void. In Speake v. United States, (9 Cranch, 28,) one name to a bond was erased and another substituted in its place, by consent of parties. Judge Story impliedly recognizes the same rule. He says, “ It is clear, at common law, that an alteration or addition in a deed, as by adding a new obligor, or an erasure by striking out an old obligor, if done with the consent and concurrence of all the parties to the deed, does not avoid it.” In these cases, or some of them, the name of the new obligor wTas inserted in the bond, but this was not material or essential to their liability. (4 McCord, 303. 7 Cowen, 484. Smith v Crooker, 5 Mass. Rep. 538.) The common law rule as asserted generally im the English and American cases in relation to deeds, bonds or sealed instruments, is tested by the inquiry whether the defendant has executed a deed which under a plea of non est factum can fairly be held to be in legal effect and substance as stated in the declaration. (9 Cranch, 28.) In relation to instruments not under seal, the rule in like manner relates to the identity and integrity of the instrument. The question is as said by Lord Kenyon in Master v. Miller, “ Whether or not the defendant promised in manner and form stated in the declaration.” (7 Serg. & Rawle, 505. 19 John. 391. 22 Wend. 392.) Such is the basis of the rule in every state where it has been asserted, except in the foregoing case in Alabama, and one or two cases in Massachusetts and Hew Hampshire,
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.
T. R. Strong, Welles and Smith, Justices.]