76 Cal. 203 | Cal. | 1888
This action was brought to recover the amount due on a promissory note which reads as follows:—
“September 7, 1881. “$1,135. One day after date, without grace, we promise to pay A. D. Hobson or order the sum of eleven hundred and thirty-five dollars, payable only in gold coin of the government of the United States, for value received, with interest thereon in like gold coin, at the rate of ten per cent per year from date until paid. “A. Hassett, President.”
The court below found that prior to the year 1878, the Grangers’ Business Association of Healdsburg was duly organized as a corporation, and has existed as such ever since; that on the eighth day of January, 1878, the said corporation became indebted to the plaintiff in the
Upon these facts the court found, as a conclusion of law, that the note was the note of defendant, and not of the corporation, and thereupon judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appealed, and the case comes here on the judgment roll.
The principal contention of the appellant is, that the note was the note of the corporation, and not of the defendant, and that the court erred in its conclusions of law to the contrary.
In view of the large number of adjudicated cases, it is sometimes difficult to determine whether a note or bill
Professor Parsons says: “If an agent make a note in his own name, and add to his signature the word ‘agent/ but there is nothing on the note to indicate who is principal, the agent will be personally liable, just as if the word ‘agent’ were not added.” (1 Parsons on Notes and Bills, p. 95.) And “ one who puts his name on negotiable paper will be liable personally, as we have seen, although he acts as agent, unless he says so, and says also who his principal is; that is, unless he uses some expression equivalent, to use Lord Ellenborough’s language, to, ‘I am the mere scribe.’ For if the construction may fairly be that while he acts officially, or at the request of others, yet what he does is still his own act, it will.be so interpreted.” (Page 102; and see also Sayre v. Nichols, 5 Cal. 487; Stackpole v. Arnold, 11 Mass. 27; 6 Am. Dec. 150; Williams v. Robbins, 16 Gray, 77; 77 Am. Dec. 396; Tucker Mfg. Co. v. Fairbanks, 98 Mass. 101; Sturdivant v. Hill, 59 Me. 172; 8 Am. Rep. 409; Pentz v. Stanton, 10 Wend. 271; 25 Am. Dec. 558; Powers v. Briggs, 79 111. 493; 23 Am. Rep. 175.)
The cases cited by appellant are not in conflict with the rules above stated. In Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank v. Colby, 64 Cal. 352, the note was signed by “G. A. Colby, Prest. Pac. Peat Coal Co., D. K. Tripp,
In Bean v. Pioneer Mining Co., 66 Cal. 451, 56 Am. Rep. 106, the note was signed “ Pioneer Mining Company, John E. Mason, Supt.” The plaintiff sought to hold Mason personally responsible on the note, but the court considered him not bound. The court said: “The signature is not John E. Mason, Superintendent of the Pioneer Mining Company,” the last portion of which, in the absence of any words in the body of the note indicating an intention that it should be an obligation of the company, might, it is claimed, be held to be merely descriptio personse. But here the words ‘Pioneer Mining Company/ precede the name ‘John E. Mason.’”
In Mechanics’ Bank of Alexandria v. Bank of Columbia, 5 Wheat. 326, the question was, whether a certain act done by the cashier of a bank was done in his official or individual capacity. The action was based upon a check, and the court said: “But the fact that this appeared on its face to be a private check is by no means to be conceded. On the contrary, the appearance of the corporate name of the institution on the face of the paper at once leads to the belief that it is a corporate, and not an individual, transaction; to which must be added the circumstance that the cashier is the drawer, and the teller the payee; and the form of ordinary checks deviated from by the substitution of ‘to order/ or ‘to bearer.’ The evidence, therefore, on the face of the bill, predominates in favor of its being a bank transaction.”
In Carpenter v. Farnsworth, 106 Mass. 561, 8 Am. Rep. 360, the action was on a check, having the words “.¿Etna Mills” printed in the margin, and signed “J. D. Farnsworth, Treasurer.” The court said “that this check
The other eases cited do not need special notice.
In the light of the rules of law above announced, the question then is, Did the defendant, by signing the note as he did, make himself personally responsible for its payment? It seems to us that there can be but one answer to this question, and that is, that he did. There is nothing on the face of the note to show that there was any principal back of the defendant. He signed his own name, and wholly failed to indicate, if he had a principal, who or what 'the principal was. The word "president,” which he added to his name, must, therefore, be regarded as a mere descriptio personx.
It is further contended that, as the promissory note of the defendant, it was without consideration. We do not think this position can- be maintained. The note imports a consideration, and it must be presumed that when the old note was paid it was given up, and the new one taken in its place. The old note was a sufficient consideration for the new one.
We think the court drew correct conclusions from the facts before it, and therefore advise that the judgment be affirmed.
Hayne, C., and Foote, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is affirmed.