17 N.Y.S. 764 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
The action was brought upon a guaranty signed by defendant and received and acted upon by plaintiff, who shipped goods to defendant’s principal while it was in force. These goods were delivered under contract which acknowledged their receipt, and provided for work upon them by the principal, with the right to become their owner upon payment of their value within the time stated, which value was fixed in the agreement. If not so purchased, they were to be redelivered to plaintiff’s agents for sale. The goods were never redelivered by the principal, nor paid for by him. In addition to errors assigned as to the admission and exclusion of evidence, the substantial question presented upon this appeal arises out of the defense interposed that the defendant, who could not read, and had never had the guaranty read to him, was induced to sign the same by the false and fraudulent representations of his principal that the paper was a mere application for a license. These representations were made to the defendant while he was sober, and he admits that, relying thereupon, he agreed to sign and did sign, at the same interview, although, before the actual signature was affixed, he had several drinks, and appeared to be under the influence of liquor; but the defendant states even then he would not have signed the paper if its true contents had been make known to him. At the outset, therefore, we may entirely disregard considerations arising out of his physical and mental condition at the time of signing, produced by drink, for it is admitted that while sober he agreed to sign the paper, and that, although he drank several times before actually signing it, if he had known the contents, he would not have signed it, showing that he was sufficiently conscious, notwithstanding the drinks, to have formed a rational judgment as to whether he would sign or not. The question, therefore, remaining is as to the effect upon the validity of the guaranty of the misrepresentation of the principal to an illiterate man, such as the testimony shows the defendant was. The guaranty was properly executed, forwarded to the plaintiff, and in good faith, relying thereon, he shipped the goods to one Thinnes, defendant’s principal. The testimony also tended to support the view taken upon the trial that the defendant had been deceived and misled into signing the guaranty. These facts appearing, the learned judge charged as follows: “There is a general legal proposition that the courts always enforce, and that is where one of two innocent parties has to suffer for the wrongful act of another, and where the act of one of the parties has made it possible for the injury to be inflicted; where one party does an act or neglects to do an act that makes the injury possible,—then the person who is so negligent, or who does the act that causes the injury, is to be held responsible rather than the one who is perfectly innocent, and who has done nothing in the transaction, or no affirmative act that caused the injury. Applying that rule to this case, it is very plain that plaintiff did nothing that caused the injury, and is responsible for no negligence which caused it. He relied upon the guaranty, supposing, of course,, it was valid, and supposing it was signed by the person it purported to be signed by, and on the face of that he shipped the goods to defendant. The defendant signed the paper, so that what he did (his signing the paper) was the real cause of the plaintiff’..
We have thus at length referred to the charge of the learned judge, because the whole case turns upon the two views taken as to the law that should be applied to the facts, and which were raised not only upon the motion to dismiss the complaint and direct a verdict for the defendant, but upon the various requests made to the court to charge the jury. The rule, as stated above, was consistently adhered to by the judge, and it remains, for the purpose of disposing of the question thus raised, to determine whether the rule thus laid down was a correct exposition of the law. Our attention has been called by appellants to some early decisions in this state, and to many from other states, in which it has been held that the burden was on the plaintiff, the defendant being unlettered, to show that the contract was read to the defendant and fully explained before such contract was executed by him. In Trambly v. Ricard, 130 Mass. 261, where the proposition thus stated was referred to with approval, the court says: “A person dealing with an illiterate man, who cannot read, and taking from him an obligation, is bound to show affirmatively that he understood the object and import of the writing sought to be enforced against him. A party who is ignorant of the contents of a written instrument from inability to read, and who signs it without intending so to do, is no more bound by it than if it were a forgery. ” Whatever force these cases might have had as arguments, were the rule of law unsettled and undetermined, we must, in the presence of the decisions of our own state, which are binding authorities, be controlled thereby. The rule relied upon by appellants, where the action is between the surety and principal, or where an action is brought by the obligee of a bond against the surety, with knowledge of any fraud or misrepresentation practiced upon the surety, would be applicable. But in actions in our state, where, as here, the plaintiff, in good faith, received and accepted the guaranty, without notice or knowledge of any misrepresentation or fraud practiced by the principal upon the guarantor, we take it that the rule is otherwise. In regard to commercial paper and negotiable promissory notes, the law, by a series of decisions, has been settled in this state, holding, in cases wherein it was claimed that notes were procured from the maker by false representations, whereby the maker believed the contract to be of an entirely different character, the question for the jury was as to whether or not the maker was negligent in signing the note, relying upon false representations as to the character of the instrument, and that if he was so negligent he was liable to a bona fide purchaser for value before maturity, and without notice. Whitney v. Snyder, 2 Lans. 477; Chapman v. Rose, 56 N. Y. 137; Bank v. Veneman, 43 Hun, 241; Fenton v. Robinson, 4 Hun, 252, etc. As stated in Whitney v. Snyder, supra: “The precise question presented here, as applied to commercial paper in the hands of a bona fide purchaser, etc., * * * has * * * been presented in the case of Foster v. McKinnon, 38 Law J. (N. S.) 310, which case was fully argued and carefully considered. * * * The learned chief justice who tried the case left the jury to say whether the signature was obtained on fraudulent representation that the paper to which it was put was a guaranty, and instructed the jury that if it was so obtained, and the defendant signed it, not knowing it was a bill, and under the belief that it was a guaranty, and if he was not guilty of any negligence in writing his name on the bill without ascertaining what he was signing, he would be entitled to their verdict. This instruction
Appellant, however, insists further that the defendant’s physical inability, by reason of his illiteracy, to read or understand the contents of the instrument, presents an additional reason why this rule should not be applied. We do not think, however, there'can be any real difference between cases where one cannot read an instrument and the cases, many of which are given in the books, where persons innocently affix their names to papers above which nothing was written, and where subsequently obligations were written in to which they were bound. In the latter cases, the fact that they were educated, or could read, in no way would help them, because the opportunity of reading was not afforded, and yet, in these cases, it was held that a liability ensued; so in the case of notes, where the amount has been left blank, and subsequently a much larger sum than was agreed upon by the parties has been inserted. Here the opportunity of examination or reading the contents was wanting. We are of opinion, upon an examination of the cases, all of which
There remains, however, briefly to consider some of the exceptions taken to the rulings of the court upon evidence.
The first exception relates to the reading, upon the trial, of the deposition of the plaintiff taken upon defendant’s application before trial. Subsequently to the reading plaintiff was present, and testified in his own behalf. The exception to the allowance of the reading of the deposition without proving that the person was unable to attend is not good, for the reason that section 882 permits, without such preliminary proof of absence, etc., the reading of a deposition of a party taken at the instance of an adverse party.
The second exception relates to the reception of the guaranty in evidence, which was objected to on the ground that the defendant, who was a witness, being illiterate, the burden was upon the plaintiff, and it was necessary for him to show that the contents of the paper purporting to be subscribed by the defendant were made known to him before he delivered it. It will be seen, however, that, before being allowed in evidence, the witness, in answer to a question, testified that the signature thereto was in his handwriting, and, in other respects appearing to have been duly and regularly executed, it was properly received. The question as to the burden of proof has already been considered in the prior discussion of the principal question of law presented.
The next exception relates to the introduction in evidence of the agreements between the plaintiff and Thinnes subsequent to the guaranty. The agreements and notes also offered seem to us to have been properly received, being admissible as acts or admissions of the principal, establishing the receipt of the skins, the terms on which received, and the time of the option, and the value. They were part of the res gesta, and therefore admissible. The discrepancy between these agreements and the guaranty as to the place where Thinnes, upon failure to pay, should deliver them, was not so material or vital as to prevent the introduction of the agreements themselves, or uphold the validity of the guaranty. Bed el i very to either Bose, McAlpin & Co., the parties named in the guaranty, or Myers & Gordon, the persons named in these agreements, introduced in evidence, or to any accepted agent of the plaintiff, would have discharged the guaranty. The introduction of a new name was therefore immaterial. When the guaranty was made, there was no principal contract. When one was made it fell wholly within the scope of the transaction authorized by the guaranty, and the principle of discharge by alteration has no application.
The next exception relates to the exclusion of certain questions asked by the defendant as to what was said between Thinnes, the defendant, McKenzie, and some others, at an interview long subsequent to the signing of the guaranty by defendant. It is true, the plaintiff was permitted to show part of the conversation between the parties, which was entirely immaterial and irrelevant, and not binding upon any of the parties, and exception to which would have been good were it not evident from the case that the learned judge reached this conclusion and determined to keep out of the case this irrelevant testimony, and in his charge to the jury expressly told them that such testimony, in reaching a determination, should be entirely disregarded, thus obviating any harm that otherwise might have flowed from permitting plaintiff to testify as to part and refusing the defendant an opportunity to give the balance of the entire conversation between guarantor and principal.
The sixth exception relates to the exclusion by the learned judge of questions put to witnesses for the defendant, in form as follows: “ Question. Have