63 Mo. 212 | Mo. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
We are to determine: Whether a curator’s bond, regular in form, can be avoided at the instance of a surety, upon the ground that he had signed it under a conditional agreement, made at the time with the principal, that the latter was not to deliver the bond until the signature of a certain person had also beeD obtained, and that notwithstanding such agreement and in violation of it, the bond was delivered.
The question has been one prolific of litigation, and the conclusions reached by different tribunals have frequently exhibited no inconsiderable lack of uniformity. But it is thought that many decisions, which at first blush appear incapable of being harmonized, will be found, on more narrow examination of the controlling facts incident to each, to bear a closer resemblance than casual observance would, at the outset, lead us to suppose. In intimate connection with the subject under discussion, we are
In the case of the State vs. Sandusky (46 Mo. 377), the point in hand was not involved. There were neither the proper averments in the answer, in respect of a conditional delivery of the bond, nor if there had been such averments, was there any evidence adduced which could have been offered in their support; “the only real defense” was a denial by the defendant of his signature. Any remarks, therefore, in that case, relative to the matter now before us, cannot be held as possessing authoritative value. And the same may be said of Cutter vs. Whittemore (10 Mass. 442), referred to in the case just cited. So far as Gasconade County vs. Saunders (49 Mo. 192,) has relevancy to the present case, it is an authority favoring the position of the beneficiaries in his action; for the point is there conceded in argument that, “when the principal in a bond, or other person not acting as the agent of the creditor, fraudulently procures the names of sureties to a bond, and the creditor takes the bond and loans his money, without any knowledge of the fraud practiced on the sureties, he cannot be made to suffer by such fraud. Their remedy is against the party who defrauded them, and not against the creditor and the judgment of the trial court was reversed, because of failure to recognize the validity of the defense that the defendant’s signature was procured by the fraud and forgery of the agent of the county.
Linn County and State to use, etc., vs. Farris (52 Mo. 75), gives full recognition to the doctrine of the conditional delivery of a bond by one co-obligor to another, and of the invalidity of such delivery when violative of previously imposed conditions. From the meager statement it does not appear whether or not the
In Ayers vs. Milroy, (58 Mo., 516,) a division of opinion occurred as to the method pursued in the discussion of that case, the majority opinion proceeding on the theory of conditional delivery to a co-obligor, while that of the minority concurs in the result upon the peculiar facts. There the suit was on a non-negotiable note, signed by the surety on the express condition, which was not complied with by the principal, that he would obtain the signature of another surety before delivering the note to the creditor. And it was held that these facts constituted a valid defense, and that the same rule was applicable to all instruments non-negotiable, whether notes or bonds. The conclusion reached was a correct one, whatever may be thought of' the reasons on which it was
Pawling vs. United States, (4 Cranch, 219,) is to the effect that if a surety signs an official bond, and delivers it to his principal, on condition that others, whose names were inserted in the body of the bond, should also sign it, that this delivery of the bond only made it an escrow, and if the requisite signatures were not obtained, that the surety was not bound.
In Duncan vs. United States, (7 Pet. 435,) the bond also lacked completeness in a similar manner. It does not appear whether there was any defect or irregularity in the bond in Suit in the case of the United States vs. Leffler, (11 Pet. 86,) and the only point considered was, as to the competency of certain witnesses respecting the conditional execution of the bond. The circumstances under which the evidence was held competent are not set forth; and in all probability the facts were like those of Pawling vs. United States, supra, and it was controlled by that decision.
Seeley vs. People, (27 Ill. 173,) holds that where a party signs his name to a bond as co-surety with another, and such other’s signature had been forged, the surety, supposing the signature to be genuine, will not be liable, but the case also, arguendo, condemns in pointed terms the doctrine which it is cited as upholding, and evidently proceeds upon the theory that to the surety not the slightest negligence was attributable.
In Leaf vs. Gibbs, (4 C. & P., 466,) the surety was to sign upon condition that his mother should do the same, but she re
Perry vs. Patterson, (5 Humph. 133,) was in its salient features similar to the one just mentioned. A compromise was effected between a debtor and the attorney of his creditor, whereby it was agreed that two sureties should sign a note with the debtor, and that this note when signed by sureties who were named and agreed to be received, should be accepted, and operate as a stay for twelve months of the judgment, for the amount of which the note was to be given. A blank note was accordingly prepared with three seals, which was signed by one of the sureties, on condition that the other intended surety should sign also. This the latter refused, but the attorney to whom the note had been delivered by the principal, never received the note in payment of the judgment, as he still insisted on having the two sureties, as per agreement. And besides, the note was not delivered to the attorney in execution of the agreement, “ but merely lodged with him, till such time as the surety could be induced to sign it.” So that the note was incomplete ; it was never delivered ; and the attorney with whom it was “ merely lodged” knew all about the attending facts. The head-note of this decision is inaccurate and well calculated tb mislead ; there was no “ ignorance of the creditor” of the circumstances, unless the knowledge of the attorney is to be deemed the ignorance of his employer. The remarks, therefore, as to the effect of the creditors ignorance are wholly outside of the case, since the proof shows nothing of the sort.
Carter vs. McClintock, (29 Mo. 464,) simply declares that no delivery of a note occurs where the payee surreptitiously obtains possession thereof, and that he cannot maintain an action thereon.
Pidcock vs. Bishop, (3 Barn. and Cress. 605,) holds merely that where a creditor and his debtor have made a secret arrangement which, without the knowledge of the surety, increased his responsibility, this was a fraudulent concealment, of which the
The gist of the decision in Lloyd vs. Howard (1 Eng. L. and Eq. 227,) is, that if a hill of exchange be delivered by A. to B. for a specific purpose, which the latter does not accomplish, but retains the bill till overdue, and then delivers it to C. without value, C. is not a bona fide holder, and cannot maintain an action against A. as an indorser. Palmer vs. Richards, in the same volume 529, was based on a different state of facts. The bill was indorsed by A. in order to have it discounted and delivered to B. for that purpose, who applied it to his own purposes, by de- » positing it prior to maturity as a security for money advanced, and held that the indorsement of A. bound him.
Aude vs. Dixon (5 Eng. L. and Eq., 512,) seems to establish that if a blank" in a negotiable note be (contrary to a previous stipulation with a surety, that another surety shall sign, before delivery,) filled with the name of the party as payee who advances the money on it, the surety is not bound. The note there, however, would appear to have been incomplete, as a blank space was left where the intended surety was to sign. But if this circumstance was not taken into account, the decision is clearly contrary to the decisions of this court, and of other American tribunals. (1 Pars. N. & B. 111 and cases cit.)
10 Jur. N. S. is not accessible, but if we may rely on a report of the ease of Swan vs. N. B. Australasian Co., (Id. 102,) the facts were substantially these : A. was induced by his broker to send him blank forms of transfer, which the broker filled up with numbers and descriptions of shares different from those of the company intended by A., being shares in the defendant’s company, and by means of a duplicate key, which he had procured to be made without the knowledge of A., obtained certificates from a box of A’s. necessary to perfect the transfers and also forged the names of the attesting witnesses, and it was held in an action against the company for damages, and for a mandamus to restore the plaintiff’s name to the registry; that the acts of the plaintiff were not such as estopped him from showing that the deed of transfer was a forgery.
In Preston vs. Hall (28 Grat. 600,) the bond was incomplete on its face, lacking the name of the payee, and the single point decided was that parol authority would not authorize any one to fill the blank thus left in the absence of the principal.
Johnson vs. Baker (4 B. & Ald. 440) shows the instrument— a composition deed — to have been incomplete when delivered to one of the creditors to procure the signatures of the others therein named.
Fletcher vs. Austin (11 Vt., 447,) discusses the point of delivery, but there the bond displayed its own incompleteness in the lack of signatures corresponding with the names inserted in its body, and there the court expressly says: “ If a bond contains the names of other obligors, and is delivered without the signatures of all, the obligee must inquire whether those who have signed, consent to its being delivered without the signatures of the others.” Now, if the duty of inquiry on the part of the obligee has its origin in palpable omissions in the bond, would it not seem to follow with conclusiveness, that no inquiry is requisite where no defect exists.
The bond mentioned in State Bank vs. Evans (3 Greene, [N. J.] 155), was incomplete, in that it lacked the signature of Olden, one of the named obligors.
In Lovett vs. Adams (3 Wend. 380,) the only point in judgment was the propriety of the rejection of two co-obligors as witnesses ; but the occasion was improved to the discussion of other points. Besides, the report of the case clearly shows that nine sureties signed a bond for the payment of a certain sum of
In Bronson vs. Noyes, (7 Wend. 188,) the sheriff, the recipient of the bond, was cognizant of the conditions upon which the surety signed, and in effect promised that those conditions should either meet with compliance or else other bail should be procured!
In Herdman vs. Bratten (2 Harrington, 396), the bond was plainly incomplete. That case was decided, however, on another point — the alteration of the bond by the erasure of certain names which were in the body of the bond, at the time of the signing in question occurred; and, moreover, the sheriff, to whom the replevin bond was executed, was apprised of the express condition on which the surety signed, and afterwards, it seems, erased the names of those whose signatures he was to procure.
In Bibb vs. Reid (3 Ala. 88,) the administration bond was lacking in nothing, and it was held that it was capable of delivery to a co-obligor as an escrow, and was invalid unless on performance of conditions; and some of the same authorities already examined were cited in support of the position.
The People vs. Bostwick (32 N. Y. 445,) is based on a portion of the authorities heretofore noticed., There was no infirmity patent on-the face of the bond, and the case was- discussed on the theory, both of the delivery of the bond to a co-obligor as an escrow, to await the fulfilment of prior requirements, and on that of estoppel, and the conclusion reached favoring the former view and relying on it, and opposed to the latter.
A result diametrically opposite to the one just announced, has been reached in Indiana, in which after an exhaustive examination and discussion of the authorities, it is held not only that one
Bagot vs. State (33 Ind. 262,) does not militate against these rulings, though the case is very loosely and obscurely reported, and a great deal of unnecessary matter introduced. The substance of the case and of the point in judgment is this: that parol authority is insufficient to authorize one having no connection with an official bond to sign the name of a third person to such bond, unless the signing take place in the presence of him giving the verbal authority. The opinion was delivered by Fraser, J., who was on the bench with Ray and Gregory, JJ., when all the cases subsequent to Pepper vs. State were decided, and who had delivered an emphatic opinion on petition for rehearing in State vs. Pepper, in which'he explicitly concurred with his associates in upholding the doctrine announced by them in 24, 26 and 27, Ind. supra, and who were still his associates when Bagot vs. State was decided. Under these circumstances, the assumption is a very bold one, that the Judge who delivered the decision in the case last cited, or those who concurred with him therein, intended to announce any doctrine variant from their prior conclusions. The rule thus enunciated is this : “ that where the surety places the instrument, perfect upon its face, in the hands of the proper person to pass it to the obligee, the law justly holds .that the apparent authority with which the surety has clothed him shall be regarded as the real authority; and as the condition imposed upon the delivery was unknown to the obligee, therefore, the benefit of such condition shall not avail the surety.”
It has doubtless been observed, that in nearly all the cases relied on by defendant, of which I have given the gist, the judicial utterances were mere obiter dicta, • or else there was something apparent on the face of the bond evincing incompletion, or some attendant circumstances showing knowledge or its equivalent, on the part of the recipient of the bond, or other instrument, that its delivery was not to occur, except other signatures were first obtained, or other antecedent acts done of equal importance.
This is true of every case instanced from other States, except that of People vs. Bostwick, and Bibb vs. Reid, supra, the latter of which discusses only, and very briefly, the question of conditional delivery by one co-obligor to another; and that is the ground whereon the decision in- People vs. Bostwick is chiefly based; and our own adjudications, as above seen, are exclusively based on that ground.
Did we care to press the point, it might not, perhaps, in a manner at all consonant with rudimentary definitions, be easy to explain how an instrument could be deemed an escrow unless delivered as such to a third person ; nor how, if an escrow, it could be incomplete. But we are content to waive the point, since it is not plainly necessary to the proper disposal of this case, being desirous of placing that case on broader grounds than those incident to a narrow technicality.
An estoppel in pais is said to arise when an act is done or statement made by a party, which cannot be contradicted with
Surely then a .more opportune application of the language of Lord Holt in Hern vs. Nichols (1 Salk. 289), could not occur,than to the case before us, that seeing that somebody must be a loser by this decpit, it is more reason that he that employs and puts trust and confidence in the deceiver, should be a loser than a stranger.”
If the doctrine of estoppel would not apply here, might not the significant query well be asked ; to what state of fapts would it apply ?
Now, the rule is well settled, that if I stand by, and, without objection, see another dispose of my property, I cannot be afterward heard to assert ownership in it; and, this, in accordance with the maxim: “ That he who did not speak when he should have spoken, shall not be heard, now that he should be silent.”.
In such instances the question of power to make the sale and pass the title is one not worthy of a moment’s consideration. The only proper inquiry is ; Did I, by my silence, give the purchaser reason to infer that his -vendor had the right to dispose of the property? If so, then, upon every principle of fair dealing, the true basis of such estoppels, I am estopped to assert anything to the contrary of what my silence might naturally be inferred to indicate, and the hypothetical case is by no means stronger than the real one under discussion. For the officer to whom was committed the duty of taking the bond had literally conformed to
A stronger case of estoppel could not well be conceived than this, where a surety, after standing by for years, and allowing the patrimony of orphans to be squandered, now steps in at this late day, and asserts that, owing to a hitherto undisclosed arrangement, he, although apparently bound for any default of his principal, was not in fact bound.
This subject of estoppels, and under what circumstances they arise, considered with reference to bonds, has recently undergone discussion in the national Supreme Court, and the same result has been reached as above, and the ruling made in Pawling vs. United States, which is the basis of all subsequent kindred decisions in this country, is explained on grounds entirely satisfactory, and similar to those already adverted to. (Dair vs. United States, 16 Wal. 1.)
To the same effect are exhaustive and elaborate discussions in Virginia and Maine. (State vs. Peck, 53 Me. 284; Nash vs. Fugate, 24 Grat. 202.)
But there are, other elements which also enter into a proper consideration of this cause, and which, on that account, should not be ignored. Are not sureties sufficiently solicitous about es' caping from what they regarded,- when signing, as remotely contingent possibilities, without opening new avenues to facilitate their eager escape ? . ■
And would it not be acting 'in"flagrant violation oi one of the most familiar rules of evidence, and of the very spirit of the law itself, to permit formally executed securities to be annulled by testimony of some contemporaneous parol agreement ? If, under ordinary circumstances, such testimony would be objectionable would it not be doubly obnoxious in eases like this one, where the agreement is kept sedulously concealed from the other contracting party ?
Again, it concerns the State, that the heritage of the helpless, confided to the protection of her courts, should not suffer detriment. The consequences would he fraught with disaster, and it would be subversive of the plainest dictates of public policy if sureties in such cases were permitted, by means of some “ ill-remembered conversation,” or some occult understanding, never disclosed but under the shadow of impending loss, to escape liabilities which their own solemn deed and recorded specialty announces them to have incurred.
These reasons appear to us conclusive that the following declaration of law asked by plaintiff should have been given :
“Although the court may believe from the evidence that the defendant, Jabez H. Potter, may, at the time of his signing the bond sued on, have had the agreement with James M. Turley, the principal in said bond, that said Turley was not to file said bond, or'deliver the same, until Wm. B. Bothwick also executed said bond as surety; yet, if said bond was afterwards, in violation of said agreement, filed by said Turley in the county court of Pettis county, Missouri, and was approved by said court, and said bond was, when so filed and approved, complete and regular upon its face, and the officers of said court had no notice of said agreement between said Turley and said Potter, then such agreement constitutes no defense to this suit, and the court must find for the plaintiff,” and that the one of a contrary effect should have been refused. In so far as our former decisions aie in opposition to this view they are overruled.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.