77 F. 129 | 8th Cir. | 1896
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
A preliminary question 1ms been raised in tins case respecting the, construction which should be placed on the petition on which the ease was tried in the circuit court. It is insisted in behalf of (ho defendant: in error, who was the plaintiff below, that the averments of the petition are sufficient: to warrant a recovery either for money had and received or for damages on account of fraud and deceit practiced in the sale of the mortgage bond, or for damages for the breach of the written agreement alleged to have been made by the defendant, bank to guaranty the payment of the bond. It is not claimed, as we understand, that the three causes of action aforesaid are stated separately in as many different counts, as the Code of Nebraska requires (Consol. St. Neb. 1891, § 4633, but it is insisted that, while ihe petition contains but one count, it lias been so deftly drawn that, at the plaintiff’s option, he is entitled to demand a judgment on either one of the three* grounds above stated. We are not able to assent to that: view. It is manifest that the petition, tlu* material parts of which are quoted in the* statement, does not state* a good cause* of action for fraud and deeeeit in the sale* of properly, for the reason ilmi: it. contains no alle>galion to the effect that the* ele*fe*nelant bank, for Hu* purpose of effecting a sale of the; mortgage bond, falsely represented the* title to the mortgaged premises to be; free; and clear from ineumbranetes. knowing sueth repre;se;ntaHon to be; untrue. There is no such avemineut in the petition. It is not alle;ge*el, e;ither directly or indirectly, that the ele*fe*nelant: bank, by fraudulent representations or decent ful conduct, induce*! the plaintiff’s testator to become a purchaseT of (he security. In short, if it be* conceded that the record dise*Ie>se*s fae-ts that might warrant a rei:overy of damages for fraud and deceit, such facts are found in the evidence adduced at the trial, and not in the averments of the petition. It follows, therefore, that the petition is insufficient to warrant a recovery on the ground last stated.
• Treating the suit, then, as an action to enforce the contract of guaranty, we turn to consider whether the trial court, on the state of facts disclosed by the testimony, properly instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The guaranty was signed in behalf of the bank by G. H. Toncray, cashier, to secure the payment of
In the case in hand there was evidence which tended to prove, even if it did not conclusively show, that Isaac E. Smith, the original plaintiff’s testator, when he purchased the mortgage bond in controversy, was well aware that it did not belong to the defendant bank, but that it had simply undertaken to negotiate a sale of the same for a commission in that behalf paid to it by thé mortgagor. In other words, there was evidence tending to show that he knew that the bank was engaged in the brokerage business. Walker & Co., who acted ostensibly as agents for the defendant bank in negotiating the sale of the mortgage bond, evidently understood that it did not belong to the bank. The members of that firm, in consequence of their prior dealings with the bank, were advised that the bank, in offering the bond for sale, was acting solely in the capacity of a broker. They do not claim, and there is no evidence in the record which tends to show, that they represented to the purchaser of the bond that it was the property of the bank, or that the bank was selling it for its own account; it does appear, however, that Walker & Co. exhibited to him, prior to the sale, an application for the loan in question, dated July 7, 1888, made on a printed form, which was signed by Elwood and wife, the mortgagors, and was verified before C. H. Toncray as a notary public. In addition to this request for the loan, which was made by the mortgagors, the purchaser also had before him the bond and mortgage, which were executed on printed forms, and both of which bore the following statement: “Negotiated by the Farmers’ & Merchants’ National Bank, Fremont, Nebraska.” Under these circumstances, it is necessary to conclude that when the plaintiff’s testator purchased the security in question, he was well aware that it did not belong to the bank, and that the bank was engaged in the business of selling such securities on commission. From the nature of the transaction we do not see that any other inference could fairly be drawn. The representation contained on the face of the mortgage that it was
Concerning the power of the defendant bank to engage in the business of selling mortgage bonds on commission, little need be said, because it does not seem to be claimed that such a power could be, lawfully exercised by the bank. The brokerage business is entirely distinct from the business of banking which it was authorized to transact. If a national bank can lawfully act as a broker in selling farm mortgages for a commission, no reason is perceived why it may not act in the same capacity in selling any other species of property, real or personal. The national bank act does not, in terms, or by necessary implication, authorize national banks to act as brokers in negotiating the sale of securities, and it is generally agreed that they cannot lawfully engage in such business. Weckler v. Bank, 42 Md. 581; Wiley v. Bank, 47 Vt. 546; First Nat. Bank of Lyons v. Ocean Nat. Bank, 60 N. Y. 278; Talmage v. Pell, 7 N. Y. 328.
The case disclosed by the record, then, is briefly as follows: The plaintiff’s testator bought the mortgage bond in controversy from the defendant bank through its ostensible agents, Walker & Co., either knowing, or having sufficient reason to believe, that the bank was acting merely in the capacity of a broker for the mortgagors. He was affected with knowledge that the bank could not lawfully act in that capacity, and that the transaction in question was ultra vires. After the purchase was made, and the money was paid, he accepted a guaranty of the loan, executed by C. H. Toneray as cashier, to guard against a loss which might be sustained owing to the existence of prior incumbrances on the mortgaged premises. The cashier acted wholly without authority in executing the guaranty, and the plaintiff’s testator made no inquiry as to his authority, but relied on the assumption that the act was within the scope of his ordinary duties. The bank received no part of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgage bond, and has not profiled to any extent by the unauthorized act of its cashier. In view of the foregoing considerations, we are of opinion that the defendant hank is not bound by the alleged guaranty which the cashier assumed to execute in its name, and that: the bank is not estopped from denying the cashier’s authority to execute it. When the plaintiff’s testator accepted the guaranty, he was not dealing with the bank under such circumstances as warranted him in assuming without inquiry that it was executed and delivered with the sanction and approval of the board of directors, but be was dealing with it under conditions which conveyed notice that, if the bank had in fact undertaken to dispose of the security in question, its action in that regard was in excess of its lawful powers.