54 N.Y. 234 | NY | 1873
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *236 I am well satisfied, upon a long line of authorities, that the insertion of the place of payment in this note did not avoid it in the hands of a bona fide holder for value.
The defendant made his note perfect in form except the place of payment, and intrusted it to Istel for a special purpose. If the word "at" had not been inserted in the note it would have been a complete note without the insertion of other words. But with that word in, preceding a blank, it carried upon its face an implied authority for any bona fide *238
holder to insert the place of payment. In such case, if the note be used, or the blank filled up contrary to the agreement or intention of the original parties, the maker is held to any bonafide holder for value, upon the principle that, where one of two innocent parties must suffer by the fraud or wrong of a third person, the one who put it in the power of such third person to commit the fraud or wrong must bear the loss. The liability of the maker in such case has also, sometimes, been placed upon the principle of estoppel; he, having put his paper in circulation, and thus invited the public to receive it of any one having apparent title, is estopped to urge the actual defect of title against a bona fide holder. Upon one or both of these principles the defendant must be held liable. In Mitchell v.Culver (7 Cowen, 336), the note was made and indorsed on the twenty-seventh day of November, payable in sixty days, with the day of the month in blank, and the maker delivered it to the plaintiff in the suit, who, by the direction of the maker, filled the blank with the fifth day of November. It was held that, where the indorser of a note commits it to the maker with the date in blank, the note carries on the face of it an implied authority to the maker to fill up the blank. To the same effect is Page v.Morrell (3 Keyes 117). In Van Duzer v. Howe (
In Kitchen v. Place (41 Barb., 465), it was held, that where a blank space is left in a promissory note after the word "at," in the place where the place of payment is usually mentioned, the holder of the note is authorized by an implied authority to fill the blank; that the word "at" implies that the blank space which succeeds it may be filled before the note is delivered with a designated place of payment.
If a note be obtained from a maker by fraud, even if the fraud amount to a felony, under the statute against false pretences; if it be made for one purpose and used by the holder for another; if it be delivered in blank, with an agreement that the blank shall be filled in one way, and it be filled in another, in all these cases the maker is liable to a bona fide holder for value. The maker, rather than such holder, must suffer from his negligence or misplaced confidence. The learned counsel for the appellant claims, however, that the rule is different where the note, as in this case, is *240 delivered not to be used or filled up in any way. I can perceive no difference founded upon any principle. In the one case the note is delivered to be used or filled up in a particular way, and it is used or filled up in an entirely different way. In the other case, the note is made and delivered not to be used in any way. In each case there is the same wrong to the maker, the same misplaced confidence, and the same breach of trust. In either case, justice as well as the public policy, which lies at the foundation of the laws as to commercial paper, requires that the loss shall fall upon the maker rather than on the innocent holder.
In this case the liability of the defendant could be based upon his negligence. He gave a note to operate as a receipt, a purpose to which it is no way adapted. He made the note payable to his own order, and if he had stopped there it would have been just as useful as a receipt, and could not have been used against him as a note. But he made it negotiable by indorsing it, thus enabling Istel to perpetrate the fraud. He must therefore be held liable.
These views are not in conflict with the case of Benedict v.Cowden (
The stamp was omitted from this note simply that it might not be used as a note. There was no intention to defraud the revenue, and hence the omission of the stamp did not render the note invalid. (Green v. Halway,
The order of the General Term must therefore be affirmed, and judgment, absolute, ordered against the defendant with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed and judgment accordingly. *242