49 Mo. App. 139 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
The defendants have brought this case here'by appeal to review the action of the circuit court in entering a decree, forever enjoining defendant John Hurd from the collection of a negotiable bond for $200 and the interest coupons attached. This bond was duly executed and delivered for value to Silas E. Cheek, October 25, 1882, payable five years after date and bearing eight-per-cent, interest. This bond and coupons were sold to defendant Hurd in Bridgeport, Connecticut, for full value. He has ever since been the owner and holder. The bond has never been out of his possession since he bought it. At the time it was executed, Cummings, the maker, also executed another bond for $1,000, due in five years. Cheek also sold this other bond to defendant Hurd. Hurd sold this $1,000 bond to Mrs. Lyman of Bridgeport, Connecticut. Afterward, in 1883, James E. Cummings, the maker of these bonds, sold the lands which he had conveyed by deed' of trust to Cheek to secure these bonds and interest, to his brother, David S. Cummings, and Cummings conveyed the same to Henry Lane and Mrs. Sarah Lane. After David Cummings bought the lands, and long before the maturity of the bonds, he applied to Cheek
Cheek absconded in December, 1885, and has not been seen since. Hurd’s evidence stands uncontradicted that he bought the bond and coupons enjoined before due. It is not asserted he knew of any agreement between Cheek and James Cummings that this bond could be paid off before maturity. In the business communications between Hurd and Cheek, there is not a sentence, line or syllable that tends to make Cheek Hurd’s general agent. These .letters show no more than that there were remittances from one to the other during the continuance of their business relations. When Cheek would send Hurd a bond and mortgage which the latter could use he would either remit for it or authorize the former to draw for the amount of security purchased. It too appears thereby that Hurd transmitted from time to time as they fell due the coupons for collection. In one or more instances the bonds themselves were sent for collection.
David S. Cummings’ testimony shows that he kept the money in bank for months before Cheek could get Mrs. Lyman’s bond, “because it was not business to pay it without taking up the bond,” and yet when Cheek finally got that bond, he paid this one without getting it or any security against it. The whole case in a nutshell is that James Cummings made the bond,
It seems to us that the decisive question presented by the appeal in this case is that of agency or whether Cheek had authority to receive payment of the Cummings bond for $200 while it was in the actual custody of Hurd who was the purchaser thereof, for value before maturity. If he had not such authority he could not enter full satisfaction of the deed of trust on the margin of the record. An agency may be created by the express words or acts of the principal, or it may be implied from his conduct and acquiescence, so the nature and extent of the authority of an agent may be implied or inferred from circumstances. If the agency arises by implication from numerous acts done by the agent with the tacit consent or acquiescence of the principal, it is deemed limited to acts of like nature. Sharp v. Knox, 48 Mo. App. 169; Gibson v. Zeibig, 24 Mo. App. 66; Grocery Co. v. Capen, 23 Mo. App. 301; Wheeler v. Metropolitan Co., 23 Mo. App. 190; Brooks v. Jamison, 55 Mo. 505; Franklin v. Globe, 52 Mo. 461; Edwards v. Thomas, 66 Mo. 468; Greenleaf on Evidence, sec. 60; Story on Agency, secs. 45, 87. And where it appears that an alleged agent has repeatedly performed acts like the one in question which the principal has ratified and adopted, his authority for the performance of the disputed act may be inferred. Mechem on Agency, sec. 86; Jewett v. Railroad, 10 Ind. 586; Fisher v. Campbell, 9 Port. (Ala.) 210; Ransom v. Curtis, 19 Ill. 456; Emerson v. Coggswell, 16 Me. 77;
Now, applying the rules to which we have just adverted, to the facts in the case before us, and the conclusion is irresistible that the collection of the Oummings bond by Cheek was an unauthorized act of his. It is a noticeable fact that in the correspondence between Hurd and Cheek, as well as in the entire evidence, there does not appear a single instance where the latter collected a bond for the former without having possession of the security. There is no proof that Cheek repeatedly performed acts like the one in question which were ratified and adopted by Hurd. Certainly the fact that Cheek had the custody of the $1,000 bond of Mrs. Lyman and the deed of trust and was authorized to .receive payment of the bond, and to enter satisfaction on the deed of trust on the record to that extent, did not confer the semblance of an authority upon him to collect the Hurd bond and satisfy the deed of trust as to it. The evidence discloses no word or act of Hurd creating any such agency, nor' does it disclose any circumstance from which it can be reasonably inferred. Since Cheek had neither the custody of the Hurd note nor authority to collect it, the payment of it to him by Cummings under such circumstances was as if it had not been paid at all.
It is a well-settled, general rule that, if a debtor owing money on a written security pays to or settles with another as agent, it is his duty at his peril to see that the person thus paid, or settled with, is in possession of the security. If not thus in possession, the debtor must show that the person to whom he pays or with whom he settles has special authority, or has been represented by the creditor to have such authority, although for some reason not in possession of the secur
The true holder of the note can alone satisfy the record, and the possession of the deed of trust gives no authority (Lee v. Clark, 89 Mo. 553; Hagerman v. Sutton, 91 Mo. 519), but on the contrary one who, without the production of the note, takes satisfaction of the deed of trust is charged with notice of the lack of authority. Jones on Mortgages [2 Ed.] sec. 476.
Designating the office of Cheek as the place of payment gave Cheek no authority to collect the note. 1 Randolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 125; Glatt v. Foreman, 120 Ind. 384. The payor always has the right to insist, and should for safety do so, that the obligation be surrendered as a condition of payment. 3 Randolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 1415. And if there is any reason for suspicion of lack of authority inquiry should be made of the principal. Mechem on Agency, sec. 290. It follows that, as Cummings paid Cheek the Hurd bond without receiving it, he must be held as charged with notice of the lack of authority, unless the evidence clearly shows, as it does not, specific authority to act in that particular case. The release of the deed of trust was, therefore, a nullity.
As the abstract contains no sufficient evidence to support the plea of estoppel in pais, it becomes unnecessary to consider whether that defense is well pleaded in the answer. The release by Cheek upon the margin of the record of the deed of trust shows that Cummings dealt with Cheek, as the “assignee and legal holder of
The plaintiffs insist that, as between Hurd and them, the loss occasioned by the fraud of Cheek should fall on Hurd for the reason that he permitted the deed of trust to be surrendered up. We Cannot assent to this. Hurd did not surrender it to Cheek. Mrs. Lyman, owning the larger bond, had at least as much right to the possession of that instrument as Hurd. If Cummings had taken the precaution to have required the production of the $200 bond before he paid it, and. took satisfaction of the deed of trust he would not have been the victim of the fraud of Cheek.
It was his neglect to require this that made the fraud possible. The rule is that, when one of two innocent parties must suffer, the loss must fall upon him whose negligence brings it about..
Upon no principle with which we are acquainted can the decree in this case be upheld. It must be' reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for defendants.