72 N.Y. 506 | NY | 1878
The right of the plaintiff to maintain this action rests upon the ground that the note in question which was sold and transferred by the defendant to the plaintiff was invalid and void, by reason of its original usurious consideration. It is alleged that, being in violation of the statute against usury, it was no note, and by implication of law the defendant did warrant and undertake that the same was not usurious or illegal, but a valid and legal note. The complaint does not allege that the defendant had any knowledge of the usury or was a party to the same, but states that the seller by the act of transfer for a valuable consideration, impliedly warranted that the paper was genuine and all that it purports to be upon its face, and incurred an obligation *509 by the sale to make the paper good, although he did not indorse or guaranty the same. The question whether an action will lie for the loss sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the note being usurious, and the recovery of the amount thereof thereby defeated, has never arisen under the precise circumstances presented in this case, and demands an examination of the principle applicable to the contract entered into upon the sale of paper of this description, and of the authorities bearing upon the subject. The rule is well-settled that generally one who transfers paper by delivery only, incurs none of the liabilities which attach to an indorser, for the reason that the irresistible inference is, that if he transfers it and it is received without his indorsement, that such liabilities did not enter into the bargain or the intention of the parties. This rule, however, is not without exception, and the transferrer of notes or bills by delivery warrants the genuineness of the signatures, and that the title is what it purports to be. If the paper is forged the transferee is liable upon the original consideration which has never been extinguished by the sale. (2 Parsons on Contracts, 37, 38.) So, also, it is laid down by the same author that the vendor without indorsement warrants that the paper is of the kind and description that it purports to be, and there is an implied warranty that the parties to the paper are under no incapacity to contract, as from infancy or marriage or other disability, and the assignment of a bill or note for a valuable consideration raises an implied warranty that the assignor has done nothing, and will do nothing to prevent the assignee from collecting it. The reason given as to forged paper is that it is nothing, and the one who has transferred it has transferred nothing, and is therefore liable. (Id., 39, 40.) The question whether paper tainted with usury, which is transferred by the holder without knowledge of this defect, can be regarded as within the principle of the exceptions stated, is not free from difficulty, and at first view there appears to be some ground for claiming that a note made in violation of a statute which declares usury to be a misdemeanor, *510 and that all paper of this kind shall be void, should stand on the same footing as forged or other paper, which is excepted from the general rule.
Although the reported cases do not decide the exact point, an examination of some of the leading authorities tends to throw some light on the subject. In Marvin, Prest. of the DelawareBank, v. Jarvis (
In Webb v. Odell (
The foregoing constitute the principal cases in this State which have a direct bearing upon the question arising where the notes transferred were tainted with usury. In the cases ofWhitney v. National Bank of Potsdam (
It is of grave importance whether a scienter is material for the purpose of upholding an implied warranty in a case of this kind. In Hoe v. Sanborn (
In Evertson v. Miles (6 J.R., 138), the action was assumpsit for a breach of warranty on the sale of a horse, and the judge upon the trial rejected evidence to show that the representations proved were false, and decided that the plaintiff must show an express warranty, otherwise they could not recover upon the declaration. This ruling was sustained by the higher court, and it was said that there is no case which permits a plaintiff to establish deceit and fraud, when he declares only in assumpsit on a warranty express or implied. The question presented related to the form of the complaint, and has no application to the case now considered where the point is, what constitutes an implied warranty upon the sale of a chose in action. In Ross v. Mather (47 Barb., 582), the action was for a false warranty in the sale of a horse, and it was held it was unnecessary for the plaintiff to make proof of the scienter, but proof of the warranty was sufficient, and whether the defendant knew the warranty was false at the time of making it was of no importance. The warranty in the case cited was express and of course when proved made out a case. Here the question is, where there is no express warranty and the evidence does not show knowledge or deceit, whether any implied warranty is made out and the cases cited furnish no light *514 on that subject. In Williamson v. Allison (2 East, 446), the warranty was proved and the same rule was laid down. The reason of the rule was stated by Lord ELLENBOROUGH to be that the plaintiff was equally entitled to recover on the same proof, by striking out the whole averment of a scienter. This is apparent, and hence the rule last stated has no application to a case where the warranty is necessarily dependent upon proof of knowledge. Without proof of such knowledge no warranty is made out, for there is only the naked fact that the plaintiff purchased the notes, and as we have seen there is no reported case which holds that where such purchase is made without actual knowledge by the defendant that an implied warranty is established.
It is true that some of the cases to which we have referred, hold that express representations are not necessary to establish a case and fix a liability, but in all of those where the notes were affected by usury the evidence showed that such fact was known to the defendant. The case of a forged instrument, as we have seen, rests upon a different principle, viz.: That the note is no note, and hence none of the cases cited aid the plaintiff. The doctrine that an action can be maintained to recover back the purchase-price paid under a contract of sale of personal property, without proof of warranty or fraud, where, upon delivery of the property, it proves utterly value less, and where an offer to return has been made and refused, which is held inStone v. Frost (
The authorities cited in Parsons on Contracts (supra), in the note to uphold the rule stated that there is an implied warranty that the parties are under no incapacity to contract, do not sustain the doctrine laid down in the text. In Lobdell v.Baker (1 Met., 193; id., 469), the note was *515
indorsed by a minor, and the action was for deceit in procuring the minor to indorse it, and then putting it in circulation. Knowledge was a necessary ingredient of the plaintiff's action, and hence the case cited is not in point. In Thrall v. Newell
(
In Story on Promissory Notes (§ 118), it is said that the holder warrants by implication, unless otherwise agreed that he is the lawful holder and has title; that the instrument is genuine, and not forged or fictitious; that he has no knowledge of facts which prove the instrument, if originally valid, to be worthless, either by a failure of the maker, or by its being paid, or otherwise to have become void or defunct.
In Chitty on Bills (p. 245), it is laid down that where a person obtains money on a note, and it turns out to be forged, he is liable to refund the money to the party from whom he received it, on the ground that there is, in general, an impliedwarranty that the instrument is genuine. Again, at page 247, it is said: "If a man assign a bill for any sufficient consideration, knowing it to be of no value, and the assignee be not aware of the fact, the former would, in all cases be compellable to repay the money he had received." It is knowledge of the defect which renders the party liable for a note which is of no value, and this rule applies to a note which is tainted with usury. In Ferns v. Harrison (3 D. E., 757), the same rule was laid down. In the case last cited the holder of a bill of exchange desired to get it *516 discounted, but refused to indorse it, and delivered it to another party, who passed it off for that purpose to a third party, informing him to whom it belonged, and such last-named party disposed of it by indorsing it, being prevailed upon to do so by the person who delivered it to him. Although the original owner afterward promised to pay the bill, it was held that such promise cannot support an action brought against him by the indorser. Lord KENYON says: "It is extremely clear that if the holder of a bill sends it to market without indorsing his name, neither morality nor the laws of this country will compel him to refund the money for which he sold it, if he did not know at the time that it was not a good bill. If he knew the bill to be bad, it would be like sending out a counterfeit into circulation to impose upon the world instead of current coin. In this case, if the defendant had known the bill to be bad, there is no doubt that he would have been obliged to refund the money." (See, also, Byles on Bills, 158, 159; Story on Bills, § 111; Edwards on Bills, 191.)
In Lambert v. Heath (15 M. W., 485), the defendant, a share broker, bought for the plaintiff script certificates, which were sold in the share market, at a premium, as "Kentish Coast Railway Script," and were signed by the secretary of the railway company. The genuineness of the script was denied afterwards by the directors, who alleged that it was issued without authority. In an action brought to recover back the price on the ground that it was not genuine, it was held that it was a proper question for the jury whether what the defendant intended to buy was that which was sold in the market as such script. ALDERSON, B., said: "It appears that it was signed by the secretary of the company; and if this was the only Kentish railway script in the market, as appears to have been the case, and one person chooses to sell and another to buy that, then the latter has got all he contracted to buy." The script was of no value, because it was not genuine, as the note here is worthless, by reason of the usury. The same principle is *517 applicable in both cases, and the plaintiff cannot recovers unles it is made to appear that the plaintiff intended to purchase and the defendant to sell the note without the alleged defect.
In Hall v. Conder (26 L.J. [C.P.], 138), an action was brought to recover money agreed to be paid upon the sale of an interest in a patent right. One of the pleas interposed to the declaration was, that the invention was not new in England, and was worthless, and the plaintiff was not the first inventor. To that there was a demurrer, and it was held that there was in the agreement no warranty, express or implied, that the patent was indefeasible, and no fraud being alleged, and the defendant having the same means of knowledge as to the novelty and value of the patent as the plaintiff, the plea was bad. The rule is laid down by CASWELL, J., that on the sale of a known ascertained article, there is no implied warranty of its quality.
The examination we have made of the question shows that the law in regard to the transfer of negotiable bills of exchange and promissory notes, as laid down for a century or more, only excepts two cases as coming within the doctrine of an implied warranty, viz.: a warranty of title, and that the instrument is genuine and not forged. There is no precedent and not a single reported case in the books in favor of the doctrine that where a promissory note is infected with usury, and that fact is unknown to the party who transferred it, that is an implied warranty of the validity of the note. To uphold such a doctrine would be an innovation upon a settled principle of law and the establishing of a new and different rule from that which has governed the sale and transfer of this species of property for a long period of time. It is at least exceedingly doubtful whether it would be expedient to inaugurate a new and questionable rule of conduct for the government of transactions of this description, even if the law permitted it to be done. The hardship which may fall upon the plaintiff by the purchase of the paper in question may operate quite as harshly on the *518 defendant, as the assumption is that he had no knowledge of the inherent vice which affected the note. It is difficult to apply the rules of law in all cases with exact justice. In fact, if the rule be as the authorities hold, and as should be if it is not well understood, that the purchaser of paper of this description takes it at his own hazard and risk without any warranty, unless he chooses to require such an indemnity and makes it a part of the contract, no serious inconvenience or injury can follow. The doctrine of caveat emptor applies, and the fault is with the person who fails to exact a warranty, if it turns out that he has been mistaken or has unfortunately made an unprofitable or a bad bargain. Neither party has any just ground of complaint in such a case.
The result is that the judgment was wrong and must be reversed, with leave to the plaintiff to amend his complaint upon the usual terms in such cases.
All concur, except EARL, J., dissenting.
Judgment accordingly.