56 N.Y. 34 | NY | 1874
The ruling of the learned judge at the circuit in directing a verdict for the plaintiff, cannot be sustained. When the note was indorsed by the defendant and delivered to the maker, the only blanks in it were the time and place of payment. These blanks the maker had an implied authority to fill up by inserting any time and place he chose, but he had no authority to make any material alteration in the note. The note was perfect in other respects. The addition of the words, "with interest," increased the liability of the indorser; and the maker had no more right to add those words than he had to increase the sum for which the note was given by adding the amount of the interest to *37
it for the time the note had to run. The defendant might have been willing to confer unlimited authority as to the time of payment. The longer the time, the less would be the present liability; and in no event could the liability exceed the sum specified. He never could be made liable for more than $175, while an authority to add interest might render him liable for double that amount. The General Term affirmed the judgment upon the authority of Van Duzer v. Howe (
The rule that "whenever one of two innocent parties must suffer by the acts of the third, he who has enabled such third person to occasion the loss must sustain it," is not applicable for the reason that the indorser did not, in any legal sense, enable the maker to make the alteration. He indorsed a note for a specific sum, which, as we have seen, conferred no authority upon the maker to change or alter it. If it did, indorsers would occupy a perilous position. An indorsement of a note of $1,000 would authorize the maker to change it to $10,000. It matters not whether the amount is large or small, the principle involved is the same.
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
All concur. Judgment reversed. *39