164 S.E. 145 | W. Va. | 1932
This case was tried by the court in lieu of a jury. Plaintiff prosecutes error to a judgment for defendants.
The plaintiff, E. L. Morrison, receiver of the Bank of Winfield, seeks judgment against the defendants, husband and wife, on a note for $5,000.00, dated at Winfield August 25, 1929, payable to the said bank ninety days after date, purporting to be signed by both defendants, A. M. Harmon and Lolla F. Harmon. The note came into the custody of the receiver along with other assets of the bank when he took charge of its affairs.
Mrs. Harmon testified that she did not sign the note, and did not authorize anybody to sign it for her. Mr. Harmon testified that when he signed the note and delivered it to the bank, it being a renewal of a prior note in like amount, his wife's name did not appear thereon as maker or otherwise. The plaintiff does not undertake to contradict this testimony. In the light thereof and of the testimony of the plaintiff that the note is now in the condition in which it was turned over to him as receiver, it must be assumed that someone connected with the bank forged Mrs. Harmon's signature on the note as a co-maker after the note had been executed by Mr. Harmon and delivered by him to the bank.
We therefore have a concise legal problem. Is the maker of a negotiable note relieved of liability to the payee where it appears that after the note was executed and delivered to the payee the name of an additional maker was forged on the note by the payee, or by someone for whose conduct he is responsible?
"Where a negotiable instrument is materially altered without the assent of all parties liable thereon, it is avoided except as against the party who has himself made, authorized or assented to the alteration and subsequent indorsers; but when an instrument has been materially altered and is in the hands of the holder in due course, not a party to the alteration, he *282 may enforce payment thereof according to its original tenor." Section 124, chapter 98A, Code 1923. This is decisive of our problem if the forging of the name of an additional maker is a material alteration. Consideration of cases and texts bearing on the subject will be helpful.
In 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills, page 556, we find the following terse statement of the general rule: "Adding the name of another drawer or maker to a bill or note is a material alteration, such as will discharge the original parties not consenting thereto." Recognizing that in a few instances courts have said that such addition of the name of a maker, without the consent of the original maker, is immaterial, the author concludes: "But we think the wiser rule is that which looks first to the integrity of the instrument, and secures that, though there be no actual injury, nor purpose of fraud." The rule is elaborated in 3 Ruling Case Law, at page 1115: "With respect to a note which has been fully issued, completed, and delivered to the payee, the doctrine seems to be well sustained that the addition of another maker at the instance of the payee, and without the knowledge of the other makers, operates to discharge the latter." In one of his valuable notes, Mr. A. C. Freeman, in 86 Am. St. Repts., at page 94, gives the following brief summarization of the attitude of courts generally on the subject: "Both in England and in this country, with the exception of the decisions in the state of New York, the rule is now well established that the addition of a new maker discharges all prior nonconsenting makers." Following are some of the many cases in accord. The Texas court inFord v. First Nat. Bank, 34 S.W. 684, said: "The reason why the addition of a name to a note, as a joint maker, after its issuance, materially alters it, is because it changes the number of parties and their relative rights; it changes the rate of contribution; and it changes the character and description of the instrument. The original obligor may thereby be subjected to a suit in a county other than that of his residence, and suffer inconvenience and injury, as was done in this very case. If it is deemed expedient to obtain an additional name to a note to make it more secure, and not for the purpose of obtaining some undue advantage, *283
the holder could easily obtain the consent of the maker. We believe that the rule which requires that the integrity and identity of this class of paper shall be maintained presents no hardship, and is founded on sound policy." The supreme court of Oklahoma is equally emphatic in Bank of Commerce v. Webster,
Examination of the reference by counsel for plaintiff in error to 8 Corpus Juris, pp. 763 and 764, and cases there cited, discloses that a distinction is made where an altered instrument has come into the hands of an innocent purchaser. In the case at bar, the instrument has not passed out of the hands of the payee.
This court and the supreme court of Virginia seem not to have passed upon the question of the alteration of a negotiable instrument by the addition of the name of another maker thereon, without the consent of the original maker. Both courts, however, have spoken unequivocally as to material alterations of instruments generally. "Many written contracts are negotiable and perform important functions in commercial transactions. It is of the highest importance *284
to the commercial world that they be preserved in their original state or conditions. Public policy demands this for the prevention of frauds upon innocent persons. The most effective means of preserving the integrity of such agreements is the rule, that a material alteration destroys the agreement so that no recovery can be had upon it, either in its original or its altered condition. The object of the rule is to enjoin the highest care upon the holder of the agreement, and to punish him with loss for his negligent and fraudulent conduct."Carey Mfg. Co. v. Watson,
We therefore reach the conclusion that the forging of Mrs. Harmon's name on the note as joint maker, without her husband's knowledge, after he had executed the note and delivered it to the bank, relieves him of liability to the bank or its receiver. This disposition of the case renders consideration of other points of error unnecessary.
The trial court's finding for the defendants was on a different ground from that which we have discussed. But, the judgment being correct the basis on which it was predicated becomes unimportant.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Affirmed.