3 Mo. App. 85 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause comes to this court on writ of error, sued out by the Merchants’ National Bank, seeking a reversal of the judgment rendered in favor of defendant Sells, upon an agreed case under the statute for the submission of controversies without action. The agreed case is as follows :
“ The plaintiff, being then and now still a corporation, duly incorporated under the National Bank Act of the United States, on the 19th day of May, A. D. 1874, at its banking-house in the city of St. Louis, received of the Fourth National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, a genuine dispatch, of which the following is a true copy:
“ ‘R. Eagle, Cash. Mchts. Nat. Bk., St. Louis:
“ ‘ Pay J. H. Britton, Southern Hotel, five hundred dollars and ch’ge our acc.
“ ‘ Jno. Portereielu, Gash.’
“After the receipt by plaintiff of this dispatch, and on the 19th day of May, A. D. 1874, a person claiming to be the J. H. Britton named in said dispatch called at said banking-
“ ‘At sight, pay to the order of Mch’ts National Bank, five hundred dollars, value received.
“ ‘Jas. H. Britton.
“ ‘To Fourth Natn'l Bank, Nashville, Tennl
“Endorsed, ‘ Pay Jno. Porterfield, Cash., or order.’ Which draft was executed by said person, immediately after said identification, in the presence of said teller.
“ J. H. Britton was a stranger to, and not a customer of, the plaintiff. Upon presentation of this draft it was dishonored, and it turned out that the said person was not J. EL. Britton, and not entitled to said money, but that he was another and different person, bearing no such name. He having disappeared, the $500 was lost to plaintiff, and plaintiff, on the 29th day of May, 1874, notified defendant of this loss, and demanded payment of the $500 from him, which defendant refused. Plaintiff, upon these facts, claims judgment against defendant for said $500 and interest thereon at 6 per cent, per annum from the said 29th day of May, 1874. Defendant claims that, having acted in good faith, executed no guaranty, and received no compensation or reward in the premises, he is not liable upon the case so stated.”
The St. Louis Circuit Court, on May, 17, 1875, heard and took this controversy under advisement until June 25, 1875, following, and then declared the law to be “that, upon the facts as set forth in the agreement of the parties constituting this case, the defendant is not legally liable to plaintiff, and defendant is entitled to a judgment in his favor;” and judgment was rendered accordingly for the defendant.
Plaintiff having saved all exceptions, the cause is brought here by writ of error.
It is clear that the defendant here made no express promise that he would make good the representation of this pretended J. H. Britton that he was the person named in the
It is said that there is an estoppel in pais. What is it that Mr. Sells is estopped to deny? It is the bank that asserts that this impostor was not J. H. Britton. Mr. Sells said he was Britton. It is clear that Mr. Sells would be glad to maintain the entire truth of this statement; unhappily this cannot be done.
If the bank has any ground of action against Sells, arising out of the transaction detailed in the agreed statement, it can only be an action for deceit by false and fraudulent representations. In such an action a scienter must be alleged. The petition would not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action unless it said that the defendant made certain representations knowing them to be false. On the trial it would be sufficient to show, in that respect, either that the defendant knew that this impostor was not Britton, or else that the defendant knew nothing whatever on the subject. Either state of facts would sustain the allegation, because it'would be as much a falsehood and a fraud to induce another to pay out money on a statement that a man known to the speaker to be John Smith is John Brown, as to say that a man is named John Brown whom the speaker never saw before, and as to whose name he has no knowledge or information of any sort whatever. It is quite clear that, if a total stranger should meet a merchant and say,
It is, undoubtedly, the doctrine of courts of equity that a misrepresentation may constitute a fraud against the effects of which they will relieve. But the case must be one in which one party has intentionally misled another to his injury, and then if the misrepresentation be material — that is, if it has furnished a motive for the acts of the other party, if it be of a matter as to which one party is presumed to rely on the statements of the other, and the one deceived must have been misled by the statement, to his injury. When a case arises presenting these three features, equity will relieve; and, so far as relief is concerned, it is wholly immaterial whether the party misrepresenting the fact knew
The principle involved in this case has been much discussed for a hundred years, both in England and America. It has been thoroughly canvassed by the ablest judges during that period; and, though there was some slight dissension at first, the question must now, we think, be taken to be settled, and settled altogether in the sense indicated by what we have already said.
The case of Pasley v. Freeman, 3 Durnf. & E. 51, was decided in 1789, and it was determined then that where a party makes a false representation of a matter inquired of him, in consequence of which the other is damnified, he shall answer in damages where there has been a design to do injury by the falsehood; for the case goes no further than that. The case of Eyre v. Dunsford, 1 East, 318 (1800), followed upon the same grounds, and it is expressly decided there that fraud is the gist of the action.
Then came the case of Haycraft v. Creasy, 2 East, 92. It was tried before Lord Kenyon, and a verdict was ren
Lord Kenyon, on the motion for a new trial, said that he had been unable to distinguish this case from Pasley v. Freeman, in which he had sat, and, though not then so well versed in the critical forms of action, had had the valuable assistance of three very able judges, from one of whom, now his colleague, he had the misfortune to differ; that it is repugnant to all religious, and moral, and social duties to make false representations to induce another to take measures to injure him; that he considered Pasley v. Freeman had been followed, and was of binding authority, and in point. “It is said,” says Lord Kenyon, “that I imputed no fraud to this defendant on the trial. It is true I used no hard words, because the case did not call for them. It was enough to state that the case rested on this, that the defendant affirmed that to be true within his own knowledge which he did not know to be true. This is fraudulent ; not, perhaps, in that sense which affixes the stain of moral turpitude on the mind of the party, but falling within the notion of moral fraud such as is presumed in all cases within the statute of frauds.”
Gore, J., professes himself unable to comprehend on what ground Pasley v. Freeman was decided; but says he is bound by it, but that it is not in point. That case was founded in fraud. Defendant in this case was a dupe to
Lawrence, J., says the verdict might have been supported if the case had gone to the jury on the ground of fraud ; there might have been some evidence to support the verdict. But it went to them on the ground that, if the representations made by the defendant were false, he was answerable, though a dupe himself. In order to support the action the representation must be made malo animo.
LeBlanc, J., says that this case differs from Pasley v. Freeman and Eyre v. Dunsford in that there is here no question of fraud; or, at least, that question was not clearly left to the jury. And he thinks there was no fraud here. What the defendant said was not true, but there was no intention to deceive. It was a case where defendant, giving credit to arts practiced on him, conceived that to be knowledge which was mere hearsay, and made a false statement without intention to deceive. Piad defendant had anything to gain by it, as in Eyre v. Dunsford, a false statement might satisfy a jury of fraudulent intent.
Ormrod v. Huth, 14 Mee. & W. 651, was decided in 1847, and the question is again examined, the briefs of counsel being quite elaborate. It was an action for false representation alleged to have been made by defendants, on the sale of certain cotton to plaintiffs, that the cotton was of the same quality exhibited. On the trial the jury were instructed that the defendants were entitled to a verdict if they acted in good faith and without fraudulent purpose. This was held to be right, and the court says : “ If a representation be honestly made, and believed at the time to be true by the party making it, though not true in fact, this does not amount to fraud in law, and the representation docs not furnish a ground of action.” And this rule, says Tindal, C. J., seems to be supported clearly by all the decisions.
So it was very early decided in this country, in Russel
And in Lord v. Goddard, 13 How. 198, it is decided that, where an action is brought for giving a letter of recommendation whereby another gave credit and sustained loss, though the representation be entirely untrue, there can be no recovery where there was no intention to deceive; and the court says that this is the well-settled doctrine in America since Young v. Covell, 8 Johns. 23, decided in 1811. “The gist of the action,” says Justice Catron, “is fraud in the defendants and damage to the plaintiffs. Fraud means an intention to deceive.”
We are referred by counsel for appellant to Espy v. Bank of Cincinnati, 18 Wall. 604, but we find nothing in that case that overrules what we regard as the received doctrine on this subject. It expressly decides that a bank will not be liable for a ‘ ‘ raised ’ ’ check because the paying teller of the drawer of the check, in answer to a question, may have said that the check was all right, although the check was “ raised ” or altered at the time it was submitted to the teller, and although it was taken on the faith of the teller’s statement. We are also referred to a recent case in Massachusetts, Litchfield v. Hutchinson, 117 Mass. 195. But that was a case of a material misrepresentation in the sale of a horse, made by the seller, in regard to a matter within his own knowledge, and relied upon by the purchaser. It was clear fraud, and the defendant was benefited by his own gainful lie. The case is not like the one before us.
The defendant here was deceived himself, and under circumstances which furnished some palliation for what was