6 Wash. 593 | Wash. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought to cover an amount alleged to be due upon a note purporting to be that of the appellant, the Pacific Boom Company. It was signed in its name by its president, and secretary and treasurer. The defense of the appellant was that the officers of the company who executed the note were not authorized so to do by any formal action on the part of the board of trustees, nor had there been a ratification of their action by the
Upon the question as to the authorization of the officers to execute the note, it appeared from the undisputed proofs in the record that there was no express authorization or ratification of such action on the part of the company. It, however, appeared that all the business of the company, including the making of numerous notes of the kind in question, had been for a long time transacted by said officers, and informally ratified by the company by its action thereon in paying the same, and in other respects. The record shows that not only had this been occasionally done, but that such was the universal course of business with the company. From such proofs it appears that to all intents and purposes the business of the company had been transacted by the two officers who signed the note in question, and that, although this course of business had been continued for a long period, no fault had ever been found with the action of these officers in so conducting the business.
Under these circumstances we think that the jury were justified in finding that the company was estopped from asserting the fact that the officers, in executing the note in question, acted outside of their authority as such. And in our opinion the instruction of the court upon this subject fairly submitted this question to the jury, for while it is true that there seems to be no affirmative proof to justify the court in saying that the company would be estopped under the circumstances shown by the record if the plaintiff relied upon such practice and custom, yet we think that under the circumstances proven there arose from the course of practice a presumption that all who dealt with the company relied thereon, and that for that reason that part of the instruction had a foundation in the proofs, and if it
There are two other exceptions which it is necessary to notice, and they may well be considered together.
The court instructed the jury as follows:
“Now, I instruct you, as a matter of law, the taking of a note from a third person, as in this instance, the taking of the note of Mr. Behrens by Mr. Duggan at the time of delivering up die first note, is not in itself a payment of the debt; but the fact that the plaintiff had a note of the company and delivered that up and took Mr. Behrens1 note is a circumstance which you can take into consideration in arriving at the question of whether Mr. Duggan released the boom company and took Mr. Behrens for the debt, and it is for you to determine, gentlemen of the jury, under all the evidence and the instructions given you by the court, whether Mr. Duggan accepted Mr. Behrens and released the boom company from this obligation. If Mr. Duggan, in accepting the note of Mr. Behrens, did not release the boom company, as I have instructed you before, it is not a payment of the debt, and, consequently, the boom company would be liable upon the note, if you find, under the evidence and the instructions of the court that this note has been legally executed. ’ ’
To the giving of this instruction the appellant excepted. The court also refused to give the following instruction asked for by the appellant:
“The taking of Behrens’ note and surrendering the company note was presumptive evidence of payment and extinguishment of the original debt between plaintiff and the'Pacific Boom Company. If you believe from the evidence that the note sued upon was given in payment or exchange for the private debt of A. Behrens, then you are instructed that such a transaction was unlawful so far as this company was concerned, and your verdict should be for the defendant Pacific Boom Company. ’ ’
The instruction given, when fairly construed and taken altogether, does not so misstate the law as to lead us to
There are a few cases going to the extent of holding that the taking of a note of a third person from a debtor is conclusive evidence of the payment of the debt when such debtor does not endorse the note of such third person, but the weight of authority is in favor of the proposition that the intent of the parties at the time of the transaction must govern, and if it appears that at the time such note was taken it was not the intent of the parties that it should be received as an absolute payment of the existing indebtedness, then in case of the non-payment of such note the payment of the original indebtedness could be enforced. Taking the whole instruction under consideration together, we think the jury were sufficiently informed of this rule of law. If the appellant had desired that the instruction should be more definite as to any particular point, it should have requested a proper instruction in regard thereto. This it attempted to do as to one particular point in the request above set out, and had it been content with asking the court to give the first clause of such instruction it would have probably been entitled to have had the same given to the jury, as the giving thereof would have made more certain the intention of the court in the instruction which we have been considering. Appellant, however, saw fit to couple this clause with another, which, in our opinion, it was not entitled to have given to the jury, and embody both clauses in a single instruction, and having
We find no error in the record of sufficient magnitude to justify a reversal of the judgment, and it must, therefore, be affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., and Stiles, Anders and Scott, JJ., concur.