162 Pa. 307 | Pa. | 1894
Opinion by
. On the 24th of May, 1888, George W. Bard, Samuel H. Kutz
Under this agreement, the active business was carried on by William P. Bard, until his death about the 4th of November, 1891, when it was wound up. The entire management and supervision were intrusted to him ; George W. Bard had knowledge of occasional transactions of the manager; the other two partners seem not to have bad any.
The manager was also a practicing attorney and maintained an office in the city of Reading. The plaintiff, Annetta K. Lerch, was his client; she employed him to make an investment of $8,000, money payable to her out of the estate of her deceased husband, and for that purpose, on October 4, 1890, she gave Bard two checks, dated the same day, payable to her order and indorsed by her, drawn by Robert Bland, executor of her husband, one for $5,000, the other for $3,000. The $5,000 was invested in real estate securities, which she got. About two weeks before she delivered the cheeks to him, he represented to her that he had a good investment for the $3,000, at six per cent, and requested her to have the money ready by October 1st. After she had given the checks to him, he said to her the $3,000 was all right, and she could have the papers at any time. He paid her the interest quarterly on the $3,000, by his own checks, except on one occasion, when he paid her in money. After the death of Bard, there was found in the vault of his law office, in pigeonhole L, a large envelope in
$3,000. Reading, Pa., October 1, 1890.
One year after date we promise to pay to the order of Annetta K. Lerch three thousand dollars at lawful interest, without defalcation, value received.'
American Plumbago Mining Co.,
William P. Bard, Manager.
On this note, plaintiff brought suit against the partnership. The court, after hearing the evidence, peremptorily directed a verdict for defendant, and from the judgment entered on that verdict the plaintiff brings her appeal.
The note being produced by plaintiff at the trial, prima facie she has a right to a verdict for the amount of it. The burden is on defendants to establish, by the preponderance of evidence, a defence to it. This they undertake to do: (1) By a denial of authority to William P. Bard'to make and deliver it. (2) They aver, if he had such authorit}'-, the evidence does not show such a making and delivery of the note to this plaintiff as renders them liable.
The authority of William P. Bard to borrow money for the partnership and deliver to the lender the notes of the partnership therefor, it still seems to us, under the evidence, was a question for the jury.
The written agreement provides that no debts shall be contracted in the name of the partnership without the written consent of all the partners. It is then provided that the manager shall have the general management of the business, and authority to sign all notes, checks, drafts, and other obligations necessary for conducting the business.
There is an apparent contradiction between the two stipulations. By the first, no debt whatever is to be contracted without the written consent of all the partners; by the second, the manager is authorized to sign all notes necessary for conducting the business. Interpreting the writing from its terms alone, it seems to us not an unreasonable construction of it is that, by the first stipulation, the partners intended to restrict or limit
The real question is not, to what extent is the partnership answerable to third parties from the act of one without express authority, but, what was his authority under this agreement, from its language, and as interpreted by the conduct of those who made it?
The language of the present Chief Justice, in pronouncing the opinion of this court, when the ease was here before, 153
If Bard had authority to contract debts, and bind the partnership by note, then, under the peculiar circumstances attending the making and alleged delivery of this note, is the partnership bound for its payment ? That is the substantial contention between the parties; not whether he had authority to make- and deliver such an instrument, for that, in view of the agreement and the conduct of the parties under it, is hardly doubtful, although there is some evidence for the jury.
We regret the necessity for thus indicating an opinion on a. question to be passed on by the jury, but, unfortunately, our language in the former case, in this particular, was perhaps not sufficiently explicit, and seems to have been misunderstood by the learned judge of the court below; our desire is, if possible, to avoid a third trial here on the same question. Therefore we have endeavored to be as plain as possible, not with the expectation of convincing the learned judge of the court below, however desirable that may be, that his view of the law is wrong, but of convincing him of what our view is; for we do not doubt, when he does comprehend it, he will cheerfully adopt it as the law of this case, even if it be out of accord with his individual opinion. Because, either we must concur in his judgment when we believe it wrong, or he must concur in ours when he thinks it wrong. Which shall defer to the judgment of the other, not because of the reasons therefor, but because of the judgment, is determined by section 8 of article 5 of the constitution of this commonwealth.
Assuming, then, a disputed fact, which is for the jury, that the manager had authority to make and deliver the note, there would be two further questions to be answered in the affirmative before plaintiff could recover. Was the note delivered to
Plaintiff had employed Bard as her attorney to invest for her the $8,000. As evidence that he had loaned it to defendants, there is their written promise to pay, in his, her attorney’s possession, not only identified as hers by her name as payee, but in the vault of the attorney’s office, in the place papers of clients with the initial of her name should be found; in an envelope, indorsed, too, with her full name, with other papers having no connection with this loan, and which were unquestionably hers. Being thus in her attorney’s actual possession, that was her possession. She had a right to the physical possession of the paper, on demand, if it had honestly reached the pigeonhole in her attorney’s office. It was either there honestly as a consummation of the business intrusted to him in the investment of her money; or he, acting dishonestly, as the manager of the partnership, put it there without possession of the money by the partnership preceding the delivery of the obligation. This possession is not a mere presumption in any other sense than that all facts, not mathematically demonstrable, are more or less presumptions; it is a fact proven by every circumstance indicative of a legal possession. That it bore date the 1st of October, and the money was only paid on the
In judging of the conduct of this man, who was acting in this double capacity, until the contrary is shown, it must be presumed his acts and intentions were honest; that he was faithful to his duty to both parties, to the client who had intrusted him with her money for investment, and to.the business partnership that had confided to him its management. If there had been two agents for these parties, instead of one, what would have been the honest business and professional conduct of each? The manager would have delivered to the attorney the note, and, at the same time, the attorney would have handed over to him the check. And this is the presumption here; when the manager received the check dated the 4th of October, he handed to the attorney the note dated the 1st of October. Then the defendant had the money, and plaintiff the obligation, and their rights and obligations were fixed. We cannot presume that, at the date of the transaction on the
But, two days after, he deposited the money to his individual account, as attorney, in bank; this is clearly evidence of misappropriation ; but of whose money ? If he was acting honestly, as is the presumption, when he received it, and there is-no evidence to rebut the presumption, it was no longer his client’s, but belonged to the defendants ; had been theirs from the-moment he placed their obligation in his client’s envelope in the vault, and her check in his pocket. The presumption of innocence now, when he has made the deposit, no longer exists in his favor, for he has committed an act significant of fraud ;. but the presumption of guilt does not necessarily extend back and determine an immoral condition of mind on the day he delivered the note; that fact, with any other evidence bearing on the question, would be for the jury; of itself it would only show clearly that, however honest his purpose on the day he-received the money for defendant, his mind had undergone a complete change ; that now he contemplated that embezzlement
As is said in Pepper v. Cairns, 183 Pa. 114, “ This case belongs. to that unfortunate class of cases in which one of two innocent parties must suffer from the fraud of a third.”
In that case, Cairns wanted to borrow money and give as security a mortgage on his houses. To get the loan he applied to one Ruhl, a real estate agent, who had been in the habit of borrowing money on like security from Sergeant, trustee of the Pepper estate. On application to Sergeant, describing the property, he agreed to loan, on mortgage, $6,500, of which $3,500 was to be used in extinguishing a prior mortgage. He gave his check to Ruhl for the whole $6,500, and Ruhl delivered to him the mortgage previously obtained from Cairns; he then appropriated the $3,500, in satisfaction of the prior mortgage, and embezzled the remaining $3,000. On scire facias on the mortgage, Cairns defended on the ground that at most Ruhl was the agent of both parties, and Cairns would not be chargeable with the money until notified that it had been paid to Ruhl; that as Sergeant had put it into the power of Ruhl to embezzle the money he must bear the loss. The court below ruled in favor of plaintiff. This court held, affirming the judgment on appeal, that the question, which of two innocent parties should bear the loss, when the fraud had been made possible of accomplishment by Sergeant making the check payable to the order of Ruhl, instead of to Cairns, had no application. And the court says:
“ The case turned upon the question of agency, which the double capacity of Ruhl required to be defined with extreme care. The whole evidence not only fails to show that Ruhl
This case, like that, turns upon the question of the double ■agency, which requires to be carefully defined. While the facts in this case make the principle more difficult of application, on account of Bard having authority to both make and deliver the note, as well as receive the money for his principal; ■and authority as attorney, to retain the nominal custody of the note for his client until she called for it; nevertheless, when the boundary of the agency for each side is determined, the rights and obligations of the parties are clear.
As the learned judge of the court below gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for defendant, we have assumed •throughout, as we were bound to do, the facts to be those of which the plaintiff gave any evidence. The fact that plaintiff •did not know to whom Bard intended to loan her money, is not important. It is not denied that he received her $3,000 on the representation that he had an investment for it, or that he after-wards assured her he had invested it, and paid her the interest thereon quarterly. Her personal knowledge or ignorance of. the borrower cannot affect her right under the obligation, if it was delivered to her attorney, and the check honestly received by defendant’s manager. There is, on the facts, no question ■as to which of two innocent parties shall suffer because by negligence one made the fraud possible or easy of commission. If her attorney embezzled her money, she should lose it; if defendants'’ manager embezzled their money, they should lose it; blame attaches to neither; mistake to both, for both reposed ■confidence in one who was unworthy of it.
The plaintiff’s 2d, 3d, and 4th prayers for instruction asked for a statement of the law in substantial accord with this opinion, and should have been affirmed.
The judgment is reversed, and venire facias de novo awarded.