13 R.I. 601 | R.I. | 1882
This is an action of assumpsit on a promissory note, dated October 1, 1874, and payable one year after date. The note was given to C.B. Mahan, and is sued by Millard, the indorsee, against Barton, the maker. Plea the general issue.
The defendant testified that he never gave the note sued. He was a farmer. He said: "Mahan, the payee, came to me October, 1874, while I was at work with my team, said he was agent for the Granite Agricultural Works, and wanted me to sell agricultural tools for them on certain terms he proposed. If not sold by August, 1875, he was to take them back. While I was reading an agreement which he handed me, he wrote a note and handed it to me to sign. I told him that meant money, and was not conditioned by the agreement, and I should not sign it. I was going off. He said he must have something to show for the goods sent. I told him if he would write a condition in the note I would sign it. At his request I wrote a condition that the note was not to be paid until the agreement was fulfilled. He said there was not room to put it in that note. He opened a portfolio and wrote a promissory note and also the condition. I took a pencil and wrote my name below the condition. The condition followed the note. I read the note before I signed it. I then signed the agreement. He wrote the note on a plain piece of paper, a new sheet of paper unfolded."
Another witness testified that he was present. That Mahan filled out a printed note which the defendant refused to sign. The second note was all written. Saw the defendant read it before he signed it.
The accompanying agreement which the defendant signed proves to be a sort of bill of sale of mowing machines, c., acknowledging receipt of payment by a note with a provision that the Granite Agricultural Works were to take back all not sold by August 15, *605 1875, and pay him the same prices at which they are now billed to him, and that if the defendant did succeed in selling them he was to pay the note.
The plaintiff, the holder, produced the note, and it being admitted that he was a bona fide holder and had taken it for valuable consideration, and had purchased it in the usual course of trade before it was due and without notice of any equities, he objected to the admission of any evidence by the defendant tending to show the equities as between the original parties. The evidence was nevertheless admitted, and the plaintiff excepted.
The first question is, was the evidence properly admitted? Had the defendant, the maker, a right to show in his defence that the note was obtained from him by fraud, or that it was a forgery, and that therefore the indorsee could not recover against him?
While between the original parties the ordinary rules of contract apply, there are many cases where the maker of a note who has a good defence against the payee has none against an honest indorsee, and this brings us to the inquiry whether the present is such a case? And it will be found, we think, that the greater part of the cases where the maker has been held liable to third parties are cases where there has been more or less negligence on his part.
There is a large class of cases where the maker reposes confidence in one who abuses it; notes given to a person to be used in some particular mode or event, and he applies them to his own use; e.g. a note given to a person to renew an accommodation note, and he uses it to procure a new loan for himself; Small v. Smith, 1 Denio, 583; Bank of Missouri v.Phillips, 17 Mo. 29; McDonald v. The Muscatine NationalBank, 27 Iowa, 319; Hall v. Hale,
So in the case of Douglass v. Matting, 29 Iowa, 498, the defendant *606 signed voluntarily, but without reading, a note represented to him to be a different contract. It was held that he was guilty of culpable negligence, and liable. So in Chapman v. Rose, 56 N.Y. 137, a person signed without reading a note represented to be a duplicate of an order he had signed. Held, that if by his carelessness or undue confidence he had misled others, he was liable.
Another class is of cases where the maker has purposely left blanks for another to fill, or where he has carelessly left spaces which enabled some holder to fill them in such a way as to impose on third parties. Young v. Grote, 4 Bing. 253, was where a man left blank checks with his wife, and she filled them in such a way that a clerk was enabled to alter them without exciting suspicion. In Holmes v. Trumper,
So as to instruments so drawn as to be easily convertible into notes. Brown v. Reed, 79 Pa. St. 370. And so where a memorandum or condition is attached to the note in such a manner that it can easily be separated without exciting suspicion in the taker.
In most of the cases where the maker has been held liable to third parties, he has voluntarily signed the note and parted with the possession of it. See Burson v. Huntington,
This seems to place the right to recover on the ground of the negligence of the defendant, and to be a fair statement of the result of the decisions.
Judges in their opinions in these cases have used very broad language. Some have said that the person who takes a note before it is due, for value and in good faith, is not affected at all by any equities between the original parties. It requires but little acquaintance with the authorities to know that this is not correct. Others have laid down generally that neither duress nor fraud can affect a bona fide purchaser for value. We have seen that if the maker confides in, and acts upon, fraudulent representations, he will in many cases be held liable. But Bigelow, who has collected all the prominent authorities, says that it is equally clear, on principle and authority, that fraud may be of such a character as to make the note void in all hands. Bigelow on Bills and Notes, 539. So as to duress, a case generally cited is Clark v. Pease,
One prominent text book on promissory notes lays down the rule that a note, although obtained by theft or robbery, is nevertheless good in the hands of a bona fide holder; and to sustain the text as to robbery, cities Miller v. Race, 1 Burr. 452, which was a case of a stolen bank bill; Grant v.Vaughan, 3 Burr. 1516, which was a case of a lost check on a banker payable to bearer; Peacock v. Rhodes, 2 Dong. 633, which was a case of a bill indorsed indorsed in blank and stolen;Lowndes v. Anderson, 13 East, 130, a case of bank bills, but not of either theft or robbery; Thurston v. M'Kown,
We have alluded to these decisions for the purpose of showing, that while in cases where there is negligence the doctrine is well settled; in other cases there is a good deal of confusion, and even contradiction, in the decided cases, and that the very positive rules undertaken to be laid down by text books and some courts are not supported by any great weight of authority.
In some cases the right to recover, where the maker has been negligent, has been put upon the ground of estoppel. Swan v.The North British Australasian Company, 2 H. C. 175;Freeman v. Cooke, 2 Exch. Rep. 654. In Halifax Union v.Wheelwright, L.R. 10 Exch. 183, 192, it is suggested that it may be supported on the ground of avoiding circuity of action; as, if the holder had honestly lost his money by the maker's carelessness, he might in many cases have an action against the maker for the damages growing out of his carelessness. Swan v.The North British Australasian Company, 2 H. C. 175, 190.
In many of the cases involving questions of this sort the parties have argued on the principle, so often referred to as almost to have become a maxim, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer, he should suffer who, by his negligence, has put it in the power of a rogue to impose on the other. See comments on this in Burson v. Huntington,
It is obvious that before this principle can apply there must be negligence on the part of the maker. This would include cases where he had imprudently reposed confidence, where he had been induced to make and deliver a note by deceit, many cases of lost notes, and perhaps some cases where a note had been stolen.
It may be well to consider in this connection some of the cases as to how much caution or good faith is required on the part of the holder.
While there has been a great deal of inconsistency upon the point of how much negligence, on the part of the buyer of a note, is consistent with his right to recover, the cases which are strongest in favor of the plaintiff require something on his part.
In Goodman v. Harvey, 4 A. E. 870, it was held that even *609 gross negligence on the part of the holder would not invalidate his title, except so far as it might be evidence of bad faith. And see Jones v. Gordon, L.R. 2 App. Cas. 616, 628. Honest carelessness is very different from refraining to inquire because the taker has a suspicion that there is something wrong.
In Goodman v. Simonds, 20 How. U.S. 343, 365, 366, the court, while holding the same doctrine as laid down in the English case, go on to say that the question of whether the holder had notice or knowledge, which is the same thing, is a question of fact for the jury. "Every one must conduct himself honestly in respect to antecedent parties, when he takes negotiable paper in order to acquire a title which will shield him against prior equities; while he is not obliged to make inquiries, he must not wilfully shut his eyes to the means of knowledge which he knows are at hand, as was plainly intimated by Baron Parke, in May v. Chapman, 16 M. W. 355; for the reason that such conduct, whether equivalent to notice or not, would be plenary evidence of bad faith. Mere want of care and caution is not enough."
In Bailey v. Bidwell, 13 M. W. 73, 76, A.D. 1844, Baron Parke says it has certainly been since the late cases the universal understanding, that if the note was proved to have been obtained by fraud, or affected by illegality, that afforded a presumption that the person who had been guilty of the illegality would dispose of it and would place it in the hands of another person to sue upon it, and such proof casts upon the holder the burden of proving that he is a bona fide holder for value.
In May v. Chapman, 16 M. W. 355, 361, Baron Parke said notice and knowledge mean not only express notice, but knowledge or means of knowledge to which the party wilfully shuts his eyes.
Many cases have held that the fact that the note is or is not taken in the usual course of business is important. As to the meaning of this see Roberts v. Hall,
For a full history of the decisions on these points see Judge Clifford's opinion, in Goodman v. Simonds, 20 How. U.S. 343, and the argument of counsel, p. 345; Bigelow on Bills and Notes, 440, 441; 1 Smith Lead. Cas. *607, and criticisms on the cases in *610 the Central Law Journal, vol. 2, p. 425; vol. 3, pp. 6, 213; vol. 7, pp. 238, 348. See, also, Story on Promissory Notes, § 196 and notes.
As the law now stands, the holder of negotiable paper takes it at his own risk as far as its validity may be affected by the incapacity of the party, as the law makes all contracts void for usury, forgery, c.
We think the plaintiff was not entitled to protection as abona fide holder in the present case.
It will be seen that the admission here is, not that the plaintiff gave full value, but that he was a holder for a valuable consideration. The latter might be enough in some cases, but in a case like this where the defence is fraud, alteration, or forgery, the fact that the plaintiff purchased the note for a sum much below its face, even if he did not know of any equities between the original parties, might be a circumstance tending to show that he wilfully shut his eyes to the means of knowing the facts.
In the case before us if the cheat was practiced by superposition, then it was at least a fraud, and a question of negligence might arise. The defendant testifies that he signed a note not negotiable and read it before signing, and the jury must have been satisfied there was no blamable negligence. If the ink was erased by any chemical process and a negotiable note substituted over his name, then it was a forgery, and no question of negligence could arise.
The defendant testifies that he read it, having refused to sign the one first presented to him. In this he is confirmed by another person present, and the payee was not produced to contradict his statement, as he might have been if it was not true.
In the order of trial the plaintiff first produces his note, and, the signature not being denied, may rest his case. If the signature is his, it is prima facie evidence that the whole instrument is genuine.
Then the defendant may put in evidence to prove fraud, c., in the inception of the note. The plaintiff, in all those cases where the note would be valid in the hands of a holder for value, must then show that he is such and that he took it in good faith. And he may be required to show the circumstances under which he took the note, as bearing upon this point. So laid down in Wyer *611 v. Dorchester Milton Bank, 11 Cush. 51, although not necessary to the decision there; and see Bigelow on Bills and Notes, 540,580. If proved to be a forgery, it would not matter how he obtained it.
We think the evidence was properly admitted. The jury must have been satisfied that it was a fraud, without negligence on the part of the defendant, or a forgery, and we do not think the verdict is against the evidence.
Petition dismissed.