81 N.J.L. 86 | N.J. | 1911
I’lie opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant, the Ridgewood Trust Company, filed a general demurrer to the first, second and third counts, respectively, of the plaintiff’s declaration, and the plaintiff filed a general demurrer to the fourth, fifth and sixth pleas, respectively, filed by the defendant.
We are of opinion that the first count is good. It alleges that “in consideration that the said plaintiff, at the special insiance and request of the said defendant, would buy of the said defendant a certain bond,” payable by the Bayamon Plantation Company to the defendant as trustee under a trust mortgage, or to the bearer, “the said defendant undertook and then and there faithfully promised the said plaintiff” that the bond was secured by the mortgage referred to, and that the mortgage at the time of the sale was recorded in Porto Rico and appeared of record as the first and only lien upon or against the lands and property covered by the mortgage. The count further alleges that the plaintiff, confiding in such promise and undertaking, bought the bond of the defendant, paying $500 therefor; that if the defendant’s warranty had been true there was ample property to protect the bonds, of which the plaintiff’s was one, but that in fact the warranty was false and the plantation company having become insolvent, and the mortgage not having been recorded as warranted, the bonds were without security, and became valueless, to the plaintiff’s damage, &c.
It is contended that the count does not disclose a contract between the defendant and the plaintiff. We think it does. It alleges a warranty on a sale by “the defendant” to the plaintiff of a bond payable by the plantation company to the defendant as trustee, or to hearer. That imports a warranty
It is further contended that no consideration is shown. We think there is. The warranty is alleged to have been made at the time of the sale. It was therefore a part of the entire contract, and the price paid for the bond constitutes the com sideration for it. 30 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 132.
We think the second count is bad. It sets up -that “the defendant, acting for the Bayamon Plantation Company, in consideration that the said plaintiff, at the special instance and request of the said defendant, would buy of said Bayamon Plantation Company a certain bond, * * * the said defendant undertook and then and there faithfully promised,” &c., and then continues with the same allegations as the first count. This count therefore comes within the rule that when a person acts and contracts avowedly as the agent of another, who is known as the principal, his acts and contracts, within the scope of his authority, are the acts and contracts of the principal, and involve no personal liability on the part of the agent. Colloty v. Schuman, 44 Vroom 92; Hauenstein v. Ruh, Id. 98.
The third count is also bad. It varies from the second count in alleging that the defendant, acting as trustee under the mortgage, requested the plaintiff to purchase the bond, and in consideration that the plaintiff, at the special instance and request of the defendant, would purchase such bond from the defendant, which the defendant sold as trustee for the Bayamon Plantation Company at and for a certain price or sum of money to be therefor paid to the defendant, trustee for the Bayamon Plantation Company, the defendant under
guarded terms of a trustee’s certifícale cannot be lawfully held to embrace a representation or guaranty of the truthfulness of Hie description of the obligation as made by the obligor. Trustees act for a comparatively trifling consideration, limiting their liability to their own acts of negligence and misconduct, and it would he unfair to put so serious a burden as a guaranty upon them. So far as appears, there is not a single adjudication extending their liability to even an implied guaranty of the securities whose mere identity they have authenticated. Jones Corp. B. & Mort. (3d ed.), § 287 a. See. also, Tschetinian v. City Trust Co., 97 App. Div. (N. Y.) 380; Byers v. Union Trust Co., 175 Pa. St. 318; Short Ry. Bond & Mort., § 300.
The plaintiff’s demurrers to the third and fourth pleas respectively must he sustained. The third plea is to the fourth count and ihe fourth plea is to the sixth count.
The fourth count alleges that the defendant, having such interest as trustee in the sale of ihe bond, in consideration
The sixth count alleges that the defendant, having such interest as trustee, in the sale of such bond, in consideration that the plaintiff would buy the bond, promised the plaintiff that the defendant would be liable for and pay to the plaintiff any loss or depreciation in value which the plaintiff might thereafter at any time sustain by reason of the difference between the par value of the bond and unpaid interest thereon at any time, and tire actual value of the bond, and that the defendant would pay to the plaintiff the same within a reasonable time after such loss and depreciation.
The defendant, by its third and fourth pleas to these counts respectively, sets up ultra vires in the following respect, namely, that the defendant is a trust company created under the act concerning trust companies (Pamph. L. 1899, p. 450), and that by the provisions of the act the powers of the company were defined and limited, and that the promises in such counts were beyond the scope and limit of the powers conferred on the defendant company.
We are of opinion that the act of 1899 does not so limit the defendant’s powers. By section 6 (at pp. 453, 455) several special powers are given, the exercise of which call for the power to make the promises in question.
Thus by subdivision 10, of section 6 (at p. 454), trust companies are given, among other powers, the following: "10. To purchase, invest in and sell stocks, promissory notes, bills of exchange, bonds and mortgages and other securities.” By this subdivision alone, the power to make the promises in question is implied as appropriate and convenient to the power "to purchase, invest in and sell” bonds. When the express power is given to the trust Compaq "to purchase, invest in and sell”
Again, by section 6 (at p. 453), the trust company is given the general powers conferred by the “Act concerning corporations (Revision of 1896),” so far as the same are not inconsistent with the act of 1899. In Ellerman v. Chicago Junction Railway Co., 4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 217, 241, it was argued that section 2 of the Corporation act of 1896, in providing that no corporation should possess “powers except such as shall be necessary to the exercise of the powers so enumerated and given,” meant indispensable powers; but it was decided that the word “necessary” did not mean “indispensable.” Vice Chancellor Green, in his opinion, says:
“The construction to be given to the words 'necessary to the exercise’ is settled in this state. Chief Justice Beasley, delivering the opinion of the Court of Errors aud Appeals in State, Railroad Company v. Hancock, 6 Vroom 537 (at p. 545), says: 'Power necessary to a corporation does not mean simply power which is indispensable.’ Page 546: 'A power which is obviously appropriate and convenient to carry into effect the franchise granted has always been deemed a necessary one.’ Page 547: 'In short, the term comprises a grant of the right to use all the means suitable and proper io accomplish the end which the legislature had in view at the time of the enactment of the charter.’ McCullock v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 414; Olmsted v. Morris Aqueduct, 18 Vroom 311; Crawford v. Longstreet, 14 Id. 325; Morris Canal v. Love, 8 Id. 60.”
While the power to make the promise in question appears as ail appropriate and convenient power to carry out the power expressly given by subdivision 10 alone, without reference to any other part of the Trust Company act, such power is further indicated by subdivision 2 (at p. 453), where power is given to act as agent “for any purpose now or hereafter required by statute or otherwise;” also by subdivision 5 (at p. 453), “to act as trustee under any mortgage or bond,” &c.; also by subdivision 8 (at p. 454), “lo take, accept and execute any and all
The plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s fifth plea must be sustained. This plea is to the fifth count. That count alleged that, in consideration that the plaintiff, at the special instance and request of the defendant, would purchase one of a series of $500 bonds from the defendant, the defendant promised the plaintiff that the defendant would immediately thereafter cause the mortgage executed by the Bayamon Plantation Company to the defendant as trustee to secure such bonds to be duly recorded, &c. It then avers that the plaintiff, confiding in such promise, bought such bond for $500, the breach of the promise and the damage, &c. The plea to this count is that the mortgage provides that the defendant shall not be liable for any “failure to file or record this instrument as a mortgage or conveyance of the real estate, or as a chattel mortgage.”
But this provision has not the effect to prevent the defendant from making the special independent contract to record the mortgage, with any particular purchaser of a bond such as the plaintiff. The count in question imports an express promise, independent of or in substitution for the provision of the mortgage, upon a valuable consideration moving between the plaintiff and the defendant. In such case, the defendant is deemed to have waived the provision in the mortgage.
Each party having sticceeded in part and failed in part, no costs will be allowed either party.