140 Mass. 18 | Mass. | 1885
This is an action on a probate bond. The following facts are relied on as a defence by the sureties. Having signed another bond which turned out to be wrong in form, they signed this one in blank at their principal’s request, and upon his representation that the penal sum in the former bond ($2000) was satisfactory, and that the new bond was to be for the same amount. The principal filled out the blank with a larger penal sum, and delivered the bond, but subsequently told the sureties that it was in the penal sum of $2000, which they believed until after this action was brought.
It does not appear in terms that the representation that the penal sum of the former bond was satisfactory was false, or that the judge of probate did not require the larger sum for the first time when the second bond was offered. And if the bill of exceptions should be taken at all strictly against the defendants, it would seem that whatever expectations they may have entertained as to the action of the Probate Court when they handed the blank bond over to their principal, they handed it to him to
If we are to interpret the bill of exceptions more favorably for the defendants than we have done thus far, and to take it that they only authorized the bond to be filled in with a penal
These decisions are generally put on the ground of estoppel. It has been debated in England whether, and under what circumstances, there could be an estoppel by negligence. Swan v. North British Australasian Co. 2 H. & C. 175. And it has been admitted that there might be, in a supposed case hardly as strong as this. Tayler v. Great Indian Peninsula Railway, 4 DeG. & J. 559, 574. A specialty deriving its validity from an estoppel in pais is perhaps somewhat like Nebuchadnezzar’s image with a head of gold supported by feet of clay. But if the case is properly put on that ground, then, as was pointed out in Commonwealth v. Pierce, 138 Mass. 165, the difference between intent and negligence, in a legal sense, is ordinarily nothing but the difference in the probability, under the circumstances known to the actor and according to common experience, that a certain consequence, or class of consequences, will follow from a certain act; and it follows that the question when an estoppel will arise is simply one of degree. If, on the other hand, the true question is the scope of the principal’s authority to deliver the bond,—bearing in mind that an authorized delivery will cure defects in the writing of the bond, that the authority to deliver may be by paroi, and that the scope of authority may be greater than is wished by the obligor, ostensible authority being actual authority, — then the question is equally one of degree, depending on the particular circumstances, just as the same question is
Exceptions overruled.