57 How. Pr. 191 | NY | 1879
The transaction developed in this case is not an uncommon one. The plaintiffs in New York consigned to one Van Alstyne articles of personal property, and forwarded the same by defendant marked "C.O.D., $94.28." It was in effect evidently intended as a sale by plaintiffs to Van Alstyne of the property, the price payable on delivery. The defendant undertook to deliver the property and collect the money, and return it to the plaintiffs. The defendant accepted a check of Van Alstyne on a Troy bank, payable to the order of the plaintiffs, and delivered it to the plaintiffs who accepted it, and transmitted it for collection, and it was returned protested. There is no dispute but that the defendant would have been liable if the plaintiffs had refused to accept the check, or had accepted it in a qualified manner, but the question is whether the unconditional acceptance of the check did not amount to a waiver of the requirement to collect the money or a ratification of the act of receiving the check in lieu of the money. The learned counsel for the plaintiffs relies mainly upon two positions. 1st. That this is the case of receiving a note or check of a third person for an antecedent debt or obligation, the rule being that such note or check is not to be deemed a payment unless an agreement to that effect is made. 2d. That it is not a ratification because the principal was ignorant of the fact that there were no funds.
As to the first proposition the answer is, that there was no pre-existing debt, the payment over of the collection was but the consummation of a single transaction. The defendant received this check as money; it was optional with the plaintiffs to receive it as such, or not. It was delivered to them as such. The only rational construction of the transaction if put in language, is, that the defendant said I delivered your property, and took this check instead of money, will you receive it as such? to which the plaintiffs *379 assented, and accepted it. It would be unnatural to construe it as an offer to turn out the check of a third person, upon a pre-existing debt. True, the defendant had done an act which would fix a liability upon it for the amount if the plaintiffs had so elected, but it was competent for them to waive the strict performance of this part of the contract.
As to the second point it is insisted that the acceptance of the check is not a ratification, because the principal did not have knowledge of all the facts. It is a general rule, that knowledge of all material facts, is indispensable, in order to bind the principal by a ratification. (Story on Agency, § 243;Nixon v. Palmer,
The case of Walker v. Walker, 5 Heiskell's R., 425, gives some countenance to the contention of the plaintiff. There an agent in one State collected money for his principal in another under instructions to remit by express. Instead of doing so, he purchased a check on New York from a firm in good standing, and sent it by mail to the principal. It was sent the 6th of February but was delayed so that it was not received until the 17th of April, and the principal forwarded it to New York for payment. On the 13th of April the maker failed, and the check was not paid, and it was held that taking and transmitting it to New York was not a ratification, because the failure of the drawer was unknown to the principal at the time he received it.
In this case there was no such intervening fact. There was an apparent necessity for forwarding the check to prevent a discharge of the maker by laches, and hence the act was not entirely inconsistent with the continued liability of the agent. Some stress too was laid upon a letter written by the agent the day before the receipt of the check, from which an inference was drawn that he regarded himself liable if the check was not paid, and the check was drawn by a person entirely unknown to the principal, who necessarily relied upon the representations of the agent as to his credit and solvency. Under these circumstances it was held by a divided court that the act of transmitting was not a ratification. Whether the decision in that case was right or not, I do not think it controlling in this case. The circumstances here are capable of but one construction according to the mode and habits of business, and that is, that the plaintiffs adopted and ratified *381 the act of the carrier, by the unqualified acceptance of the check. The judgment must be affirmed.
All concur, except ANDREWS, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed.