39 Vt. 590 | Vt. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered by
From the facts found by the court below, it appears that the note now in suit was executed by the defendant, payable to the order of his brother, C. M. Scofield, at the said Manufacturers' Bank of Troy, was endorsed by the said C. M. Scofield, discounted said bank on the recommendations of Roger A. Flood, the president of said bank, and the money sent to the defendant, who lived at Pittsford, in this state.
This was done in pursuance of an arrangement between the said Flood and C. M. Scofield, that the money when so obtained should be expended by the defendant in the purchase of horses for the said Flood, and that when the note fell due, the said Flood was to pay and take up the same; this was understood by the defendant when the note was executed.
At the time the note fell due, Flood did not pay it. It was protested, and the said C. M. Scofield, (who then lived in New York,) and the defendant were duly notified of its non-payment. On the receipt of such notice, both the defendant and C. M. Scofield went to the said bank in Troy, to look after the matter. They there met Mr. Wellington, the cashier of the bank, and on inquiry of him, were told that said Flood had before informed him, (the said Wellington,)
As all the facts relating to the contract between the said Scofields and Flood were found by the court below, upon the testimony of the said Scofields, it is insisted by the plaintiff that, Flood being dead, under our statute they were not competent witnesses to testify to such facts.
The statute that makes all persons interested witnesses, provides “ that in all actions, &c., when one of the original parties to the contract or cause of action in issue and on trial is dead, &c., the other party shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor.” Was the contract between Flood and the Scofields in issue and on trial before the county court when this case was then heard ? It is not the contract declared upon ; it is not the cause of action which the party is seeking to enforce by this suit; the plaintiff claims nothing under it. The defendant does not set it up as a substantive ground of claim by way of offset, or otherwise ; neither does he set it up as a defence to the plaintiff’s right to recover, even; it is not in issue upon the record; it is not a contract between the same parties; and no judgment that can be rendered in this case will conclude the rights of either party under that contract. How then can it be said that such contract was in issue and on trial in this case, within the meaning of the statute ?
In this case the contract between Flood and the Scofields is brought in incidentally as explaining, and giving force and effect, to what took place between Wellington and the Scofields, when they went to the bank on the receipt of notice of the non-payment of the note ; its only effect being to make consistent and natural, the statements made by Wellington on that occasion, which, without the existence of some such contract, would appear to be so inconsistent and unnatural, that the said Scofields could not have been justified, either in believing or acting upon them. For any other purpose, proof of this contract was wholly irrelevant; for such purpose we think the evidence was admissible, and that the Scofields were competent witnesses to testify to it in this suit, when both parties to the contract in issue are in existence.
The question then arises wh ether the facts found by the court below constitute a legal defence to this action.
Wellington was the cashier of the bank, and as such was the regularly constituted agent of the plaintiff to hold and control this note, and to transact all the ordinary business relating to the collection and payment of it. He was the only proper person to apply to for, and to give information in respect to its payment, all such matters being confessedly within the legitimate scope of his authority as cashier. When this note fell due, Wellington, in the discharge of his duty, notified the said C. M. Scofield, the endorser, and also the defendant, of its non-payment. The notice to the defendant was received by him at Pittsford in due course of mail. The next day, he and his brother C. M., who happened then to be at Pittsford, went to Troy, called at the bank and inquired for Flood, its president. Not finding him, they inquired of Wellington respecting this note. He then knew that as between Flood and the Scofields, Flood was to pay this note. Upon the inquiry being made, it was the duty of Wellington,
In answer to the inquiries of the Scofields, Wellington tells them, that Flood told him, that the note was for him, Flood, to pay, and had directed him, Wellington, to charge it to said Flood in his account with the bank ; that he had done so, and that they need not give themselves any further uneasiness or trouble about thé note, as it was all right. This representation of Wellington was false, and he knew it to be false when he made it. The defendant and his brother believed the statement, and that Flood had paid the note, as they had a right to expect he would do. There was nothing to lead them to doubt it. Wellington’s statement was in effect saying to them, Flood has paid and taken up the note according to the arrangement between him and you. Believing the statement, the Scofields gave themselves no further trouble about the note, and in their subsequent dealings with Flood, regarded the note as paid by him. The defendant paid over to Flood a large sum of money that came into his hands belonging to Flood, which he would not have paid to him, if he had not supposed Wellington’s statement was true.
This was not an agreement between the cashier and the Scofields, that they were to be discharged from their liability without payment, and the bank to look to Flood for pay. Such an agreement the cashier could not have made that would have been binding upon the bank, and the Scofields would have been bound to know it. Nothing of this kind was attempted. The Scofields only sought information that they were entitled to in regard to a matter that was exclusively within the control and authority of the cashier, and which it
On the other hand it is claimed that the plaintiff is not estopped because Wellington, at the time he made the statement above referred to, did not know that the defendant had money in his hands belonging to Flood that he was going to give up to him, relying on the truth of such statement.
The Scofields were not making impertinent inquiries governed by idle curiosity, or seeking information as to matters in which they had no apparent interest, and this Wellington knew.
From the promptness with which they responded to the notice of non-payment; their relations to the paper and the bank ; their known connection and arrangement with Flood in respect to its payment, Wellington was bound to understand, and must have understood, that they would rely and act upon the statements he made to them, in their future intercourse with Flood. He must have known that it was for that purpose, that they made the inquiries. They did not go to him to ascertain whether they had paid this note. They knew they had not as well as he did. Their object was, as he knew, to ascertain whether Flood had paid it, and when he told them that Flood had taken up the note, he could have had no other expectation than that they would rely and act upon it. Precisely what they would do, or omit to do, he might not have known, and it is not necessary that he should have known, in order to create an estoppel. It is sufficient if the representations were such as they had a right to rely upon, and did rely and act upon, and were of such a character and made under such circumstances that he was bound to expect they would rely and act upon.
In Hicks et al. v, Cram et al., 17 Vt. 449, the rule is laid down by Redeield, J., thus: “If one man has made a representation which he expects another may or will act'upon, and the other does in fact act upon it, he is estopped to deny the truth of the representation.”
In Hacket v. Callender et al., 32 Vt. 97, Aldis J., says : “ When a person is inquired of as to a matter in which his answer may affect
The case now before us comes clearly within the principle thus laid down.
The principle is not founded upon the idea that what takes place between the parties in a case like the present, operates*as a payment, or as a discharge of the liability of the defendant, but upon the ground that the false representations having been acted upon by the defendant to his prejudice, the plaintiff is estopped to enforce the contract ; as to allow him to do so would operate a gross fraud upon the defendant.
It is insisted by the plaintiff that the defendant was not justified in believing that Flood had paid the note, inasmuch as the note was not given up to him, but was retained by the bank. The defendant did not know the note was retained by the bank. If he had known it was in the bank, he would naturally have supposed it was there for the benefit of Flood, (the president,) who, if he had paid the note was entitled to the possession of it, as in his hands it would be evidence between him and the Scofields that he had paid it according to his agreement. For similar reasons the defendant was not entitled to the possession of it, hence he could draw no inference against the truth of Wellington’s statement, from the fact that it was not delivered to him. The fact that the bank some six months after the interview with Wellington, gave the defendant notice that it looked to him for payment, came quite too late to avail the plaintiff. The defendant had long before acted upon Wellington’s representations. Besides there is nothing to show that after such notice was received (which was just prior to Flood’s death,) the defendant could have done anything to relieve himself from the embarrassment under which a reliance on such representations had placed him.
From the view we have taken of the case it is quite obvious that
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.