95 Mich. 430 | Mich. | 1893
Plaintiff had judgment upon the following promissory note:
“$336.96-100. Grand Rapids, Mich., Dec. 22, 1887.
“Ninety days after date, I promise to pay:-to the order of Geo. Keidan three hundred thirty-six and 96-100 dollars at the Old National Bank of Grand Rapids, Mich., value received, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per .annum until paid.
“W. S. Winegar, Agt.”
Defendant, with his plea, filed an affidavit setting forth—
“That the note, a copy of which is attached to the ■declaration in said cause, and served upon said deponent with a copy of said declaration, is not the note of this ■deponent, defendant as aforesaid; and he denies the same and the execution thereof, and says that he, said defendant, is not indebted to said plaintiff upon said' note, nor for any part thereof, nor is he indebted to said plaintiff in any sum whatever, nor in any manner whatever.”
Dpon the trial defendant offered to show that in 1884, before plaintiff had any dealings with defendant, plaintiff was informed that defendant was carrying on business as. ■the agent of Maggie G. Winegar, and was not doing business for himself; that business relations were then established between plaintiff and said Maggie G. Winegar; that ■said - business relations continued from the early part of 1884 to and including the year 1887, and embraced many transactions between plaintiff and Maggie G. Winegar; that many instruments were made between the parties, which were signed exactly as the note sued .upon is signed,' and that this form of execution had come to be recognized and adopted between the parties as binding Maggie G. Winegar; that during that time* no business was transacted by the defendant in his individual capacity, and all the business done was that of his principal, and known
The clear weight of authority is that the promise in the present case is prima facie the promise of William S. Winegar, and, as between one of the original parties and a third party, the addition of the word “ agent ” is not sufficient to put such third party upon inquiry. The question here, however, is whether, as between the immediate parties to the instrument, parol evidence is admissible to show the real character of the transaction.
In his excellent work. on Agency, Mr. Mecliem lays down the following general rules, which we think are sustained by reason.and the weight of authority:
“I. Where the paper, on its face, is the undertaking of the agent only, no reference being made on its face to representative capacity, and where the paper, on its face, is unmistakably the principal’s, parol evidence will* not be received, in the one case to exonerate, and in the other to charge, the agent.
“II. But where the paper bears on its face some reference to a principal, or some appellation indicating representative character, while it is undoubtedly true that the mere addition of the word ‘agent/ ‘trustee/ ‘treasurer/ and the like, or the mere recital in the body of the instrument that the person signing is such agent, treasurer, or trustee of a principal named or unnamed, is, as has been seen, do be regarded, prima facie, as descriptio personae, merely, and not as characterizing the act as one done in a representative capacity; and while it is true, as a general*433 rule, that parol evidence is not admissible to exonerate an agent from a contract into which he has personally entered, —yet it is believed that the preponderance -of authority will warrant the statement of the rule that—
“1. Between the immediate parties to a bill or note, parol evidence is admissible to show—
“a — That, by a course of dealing between the parties, that form of execution has become to be the recognized and adopted form by which the obligation of the principal is entered into; or—
“ h — That the instrument was, to the knowledge of the parties, intended to be the obligation of the principal, and not of the agent, and that it was given and accepted as such.
“c — That an instrument which is so ambiguous upon its face as to lender it uncertain who was intended to be bound was known to be intended to be the obligation of the principal.” Mechera, Ag. § 443, and cases cited. See, also, 1 Amer. &■ Eng. Enc. Law, 390, 391.
In Metcalf v. Williams, 104 U. S. 93, 98, Mr. Justice Bradley says:
“The ordinary rule, undoubtedly, is that if a person merely adds to the signature of his name the word ‘agent/ ‘trustee/ or ‘treasurer/ etc., without disclosing his principal, he is personally bound. The appendix is regarded as a mere clescriptio persones. It does not of itself make third persons chargeable with notice of any representative relation of the signer. But if he be in fact a mere agent, trustee, or officer of some principal, and is in the habit of expressing in that way his representative character in his dealings with a particular party, who recognizes him in that character, it would be contrary to justice and truth to construe the documents thus made and used as his personal obligations, contrary to the intent of the parties.”
In Kean v. Davis, 21 N. J. Law, 683, 687 (47 Amer. Dec. 182), Chief Justice Green says:
“The ijuestion is not, what is the true construction of the language of the contracting party, but, who is the contracting party? whose language is it? And the evidence is not adduced to discharge the agent from a personal liability which he has assumed, but to prove that in fact he never*434 incurred' that liability; not to aid in the construction of the instrument, but to prove whose instrument it is.
“Now, it is true that the construction of a written contract is a question of law3 to be settled by the court upon the terms of the instrument. But whether the contract, was in point of fact executed, when it was made, where, it was made, upon what consideration it was made, and by whom it was made, are questions of fact, to be settled by a jury, and are provable in many instances by parol, though even the proof conflicts with the language of the instrument itself.”
In Hides v. Hinde, 9 Barb. 528, where an agent drew a bill on his principal for a debt due from the principal to the payee, adding the word “ agent ” to his signature, and the payee knew that the drawer was authorized by his principal to draw the bill as his agent, and it was the understanding of all parties that the drawer signed only as agent, and not with a view of binding himself, it was held that the drawer was not personally liable on the bill.
To the rule that extrinsic evidence cannot' be received to contradict or vary the terms of a valid instrument, there are many exceptions. As between the original parties, the consideration may be impeached; fraud or illegality in its inception may be shown. It may be shown that the note was delivered conditionally, or for a specified purpose, only; that it was made for accommodation, merely. And it has been held that .if, by mistake, one party indorses before another, such mistake may be shown to relieve him from his apparent liability; that a party who indorses his name upon the back of a note may be maker or indorser, dependent upon parol proof as to when he placed his signature; that, although the legal effect of successive indorsements is to make the indorsers liable to each other in the order of time in which they signed their names, yet such legal effect may be rebutted by parol proof that all were accommodation indorsers, and,
In Hubbard v. Gurney, 64 N. Y. 463, Chief Justice Church says:
“The contract was in all respects the same, whether the defendant was principal or surety. In either- case it was an absolute promise to pay $1,000 one day after date; nothing more and nothing less. * * * The fact is collateral to the contract, proving simply the relation of the parties. It is an extrinsic circumstance, not affecting the contract made, but which operates, when knowledge of it is brought home to the creditor, to prevent him from changing the contract, or making a different one with the principal debtor, without the consent of the surety, or from releasing any security held for the payment of the debt. * * * The fact .proved by extrinsic evidence, and that the creditor had knowledge of it,' is as potent as if added to the name of the surety; and it is potent, not in varying the contract, biit in imposing certain duties and obligations upon the creditor, in his subsequent dealings with the principal debtor in respect to the contract."
As is so often said, it is the intent of the parties which is to be carried out by the courts. The rule that rejects words added to the signature is an arbitrary one. Its reason is not so much that the words are not, or may not be, suggestive, but that they are but suggestive, and the instrument, as a whole, is not sufficiently complete to point to other parentage. The very suggestiveness of these added words has given rise to an irreconcilable confusion in the authorities as to the legal effect of -such an instrument. Extrinsic evidence, therefore, is admissible in such case, between the immediate parties, to explain a suggestion con
In the case of Tilden v. Barnard, 43 Mich. 376, under a state of facts similar to those offered to be- shown here, it was held that defendants there were not liable.
We think that in the present case defendant was entitled to make the showing offered. Under the general issue, defendant was entitled to give in evidence any matter of defense going to the existence of any promise having legal force, as against him. 1 Shinn, PI. & Pr. § 740.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial- ordered.