43 Conn. 391 | Conn. | 1876
On the 7th day of July, 1873, the defendant, having at the request and for the accommodation of one James H. Conklin endorsed a note made by him for $2,000, payable four months from date, returned the same to him to
The defendant began to endorse for the accommodation of Conklin in 1867, and did so endorse several notes, aggregating #7,000. These notes, as they became due, were renewed or provided for by other notes endorsed in like manner and returned to Conklin to be negotiated for that purpose; and thus the succession of endorsements continued to 1873. In 1869 the plaintiffs discounted upon the request of Conklin these endorsed notes to the extent of #5,000; and this line of discounts was continued by the plaintiffs from September, 1869, to July, 1873, and included thirty-five different notes, upon all of which the defendant was an accommodation endorser. Of these the note in suit purported to be one; and this was discounted by them in the usual course of business, without knowledge or suspicion on their part that it had been, altered.
The plaintiffs concede that, as a general rule, he who' places his name as endorser for the accommodation of the maker upon a note and returns the same to him complete in form, without blanks thereafter to be filled by any person, having therein named a sum, with time and place of payment, all certain, cannot be held to any liability thereon if it is materially altered without his consent or knowledge after it has been returned by him to the maker, unless there be some fault or negligence on his part in reference to such change; inasmuch as it is not the contract which he signed, and the negotiation thereof subsequent to the alteration cannot give even a bond fide holder any right of action against him.
But, they say that the defendant is not entitled to the protection of this rule, for the reason that the alteration was made by his agent in the course and business of the agency,
It is suggested that in presenting, transferring and delivering the indorsement to the plaintiffs Conklin was in the apparent exercise and execution of his agency and within its apparent scope. But, he had previously destroyed the contract which he had power to deliver, and had forged another; he came to them with this last without any authority from the defendant in reference to it; in this he was acting for himself solely; he was the principal; and we do not understand that because authority had been given to him to deliver a genuine endorsement to the plaintiffs, he is in any sense to be considered as executing that power when he offered a forged one.
Nor do we think that the case presents any opportunity for the application of the plaintiffs’ argument, “that if one of two innocent persons must suffer from the fraud of a third, he who sends out that third to act on his behalf and equips him with the means of committing that fraud should, no matter how innocent himself, take the consequences.”
It is found that when the note was delivered by the defendant to Conklin it was complete; nothing was required by way of addition or alteration to perfect it; every blank space in the printed form having been filled there was nothing to suggest any implied authority to Conklin to write a word upon it; nothing to tempt him to alter it; nothing to facilitate the work of forgery; and, if we were at liberty to impute to the
For reasons growing out of efforts to facilitate the business of the world by giving currency to negotiable paper, endorsers have been compelled to respond to their engagements in instances where there had been an unauthorized use of the note; compelled to respond even when the note had been stolen and negotiated by the thief. But in all of these cases suits were based upon their genuine negotiable contracts; only the manner of negotiation was contrary to their secret instructions. This falls far short of imposing upon them liabilities upon contracts which they have never made; and while an endorser is fairly chargeable with knowledge that his endorsement will be put in circulation and used for the purpose of raising money, he is not chargeable even with a suspicion that the amount of the note upon which it is placed will be fraudulently doubled; and we know of no case in which, even under the pressure of the necessity for free circulation for commercial paper, the law has taken under its protection notes fraudulently altered, as was the one now in suit. To do this would be to put an end to endorsements; for, if men cannot by the use of every precaution put any limit to their responsibility, they must cease to assume any. Every ordinary endorsement implies trust in some one. As soon as, and as long as, a note, a deed, or any other writing is in existence, there goes with it the possibility of a fraudulent alteration; and although, speaking in a physical sense, the act of
At the instance of the plaintiffs the committee has found that all of the thirty-five notes which in a series of years had been discounted by them, were made payable to the order of the defendant; that they were upon printed forms, the blanks being filled by Conklin; that the defendant in perhaps sis instances had endorsed notes having no time of payment therein specified and had delivered them to Conklin with leave to fill this blank in such manner as would best suit his convenience; that prior to January 1st, 1873, the defendant kept no memorandum of the notes endorsed by him other than the letters of Conklin accompanying the notes when they were sent for endorsement; that during the time of these endorsements Conklin resided three miles, and had his place of business about one mile from the defendant; and that he had been a book-keeper for him about a year before the endorsements commenced and had performed his duty honestly and faithfully so far as the defendant knew.
These facts have all been weighed by the committee, and they failed to convince him that the defendant had been guilty
We advise the Superior Court to render judgment for the defendant.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.