151 N.Y. 1 | NY | 1896
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The learned General Term proceeded to judgment upon the ground that a principal is chargeable with the knowledge acquired by an agent while transacting his business, and that hence the plaintiff had constructive notice of the circumstances under which Monson procured the instruments in question from the defendants. The general rule that notice to the agent, while acting within the scope of his authority and in regard to a matter over which his authority extends, is notice to the principal, rests upon the duty of disclosure by the former to the latter of all the material facts coming to his knowledge with reference to the subject of his agency and upon the presumption that he has discharged that duty. (Casco National Bank v.Clark,
When an agent abandons the object of his agency and acts for himself by committing a fraud for his own exclusive benefit, he ceases to act within the scope of his employment and to that extent ceases to act as agent. (Shipman v. Bank of New York,
Whether this case should be regarded as an exception to the general rule, because the usual presumption as to disclosure does not exist, or simply as not covered by the rule, because *12
the acts in question were not within the scope of the agent's authority, we think that notice of the agreement between Monson and the defendants, that the checks should have no binding force, should not be imputed to the plaintiff. No question of apparent authority arises, because the defendants did not know Monson, as agent, but supposed he was acting for himself alone. When they invoke his agency for their protection, therefore, they are limited to his actual authority. (Bickford v. Menier,
If Monson had simply deposited the money to his own credit and had checked it out, the plaintiff would have had no claim upon the defendants. The loss would then have fallen on him; but it cannot be supposed that he would have continued to remit to Monson, unless the earlier remittances were satisfactorily accounted for, so that the loss would have been comparatively light. Monson, however, did account promptly for each remittance by sending the written obligations of the defendants, indorsed by himself. Those obligations were in the nature of cashier's checks, being drawn by the defendants, as bankers, upon themselves. As they were an essential part of Monson's scheme to defraud, it is natural that he should have suggested the form, but it is surprising that the defendants should have adopted it. They were not only negotiable upon their face, but their character was such as to make actual negotiation an easy matter, because they were payable on presentation at a bank, by the bank itself. No one who believed in the responsibility of the defendants and who wanted paper of that kind for any purpose, would hesitate to purchase it in the open market. The defendants, having extreme confidence in Monson, took no precaution to restrict their liability for the double credit that they gave for the same deposit. If they had drawn the checks without words of negotiability, or had written "not negotiable" across their face, it would have accomplished every purpose that Monson claimed to have in view, and at the same time would have protected third persons from imposition and injury. As memoranda, the checks would have been as useful in either of those forms as in that adopted. By action, as imprudent as it was unprecedented, the defendants placed it in Monson's power to defraud. The form of the transaction invited fraud by making it so easy, and it is not surprising that they hesitated and remonstrated before they did it. They thus, in effect, paid the deposit back to Monson and at the same time gave him their negotiable paper for it, trusting only to his word. Armed with this means of defrauding, *14
thus knowingly intrusted to him by the defendants, Monson from time to time delivered the checks to plaintiff, in fulfillment of his contract under such circumstances as could arouse no suspicion. He delivered every check as negotiable paper, with the character and quality that the defendants, over their own signatures, asserted that it had. The plaintiff received it as such, in the honest belief that it was the product of his money deposited with the defendants according to his contract with Monson, and that no one could draw the money out without presenting the checks. There was no occasion for suspicion, and nothing to put a prudent man on inquiry. It was in the usual course of business, for it cannot be termed unusual for an agent to make a deposit for his principal and remit to him the evidence of that deposit in the form of negotiable paper, such as a cashier's check, a certificate of deposit or the check of private bankers upon themselves. He treated the instruments as genuine, and why should he not, since the defendants issued them in such a form as to induce the most careful to believe in their genuineness? They had never been presented or dishonored, and he received them as soon after the dates they respectively bore as the ordinary course of transacting such business by mail would permit. The fact that the plaintiff held them so long without presentation has no bearing, except on the question of good faith, and is fully explained by the agreement made between him and his agent. No check was stale when it reached the plaintiff, and the title that he acquired as each was delivered, if good then continued to be good. He gave full consideration, dollar for dollar, not by concurrent delivery, hand to hand, but by the nearest approach to it that was practicable under the circumstances. The business was done substantially through the mails. It was initiated by a general agreement that Monson should deposit all moneys intrusted to him by the plaintiff with the defendants and remit to him their checks therefor indorsed by himself. Under this agreement the plaintiff, from time to time, mailed checks and drafts to Monson, who deposited *15
the proceeds with the defendants, received their check therefor, which he indorsed and promptly mailed to the plaintiff. This method of doing business, although perfectly legitimate, did not admit of delivery by the right hand and receipt by the left. In the nature of things there could not be mutual delivery, precisely indentical in point of time, when there were three parties to every transaction, each at a distance from the others. We think that the plaintiff parted with his money on the strength of the checks, although they were not in existence at the time, as there was an agreement which in the natural course of events promptly brought them into existence and placed them in his hands. If it had not done so, he could have reclaimed his money to the extent that it had not reached the possession of bonafide holders. (Roca v. Byrne,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide event.
All concur, except HAIGHT, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed. *16