Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Fisher
Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Fisher
Opinion of the Court
The complainant in this cause is the holder, and claims to be the owner, by a full and absolute title, of six bonds of the Morris Canal and Banking Company, purchased by him at public sale for a valuable consideration. They are dated 31st March,T848, and are for the payment of the sum of five hundred dollars each, payable on 1st April, 1850, to John J. Palmer, or bearer, with interest payable half-yearly, and having coupons for the interest annexed. In the body of each bond it is stated as follows : “ The holder of this bond is entitled to the security to be derived from a first mortgage on the estate and chartered rights of the company, dated 28th March, 1846, authorized by the board of directors, at a meeting held on the 10th day of March, in the year last aforesaid, and duly recorded, executed and delivered to John J. Palmer, Zebedee M. Cook and Theodore Dehon, of the city of New York, as trustees, in trust to secure the full payment of such bonds as should be issued under the same; each bond, to clearly identify the same, bearing the signature of the trustees; the whole amount of bonds to be issued not to exceed the sum of seven hundred thousand dollars.”
Upon the margin of each bond is a certificate, signed by these three trustees, whereby they certify that the bond is included in the mortgage upon the canal, which had been executed to them in trust for the bond-holders.
Before the filing of this bill, the complainant applied to the company to pay him the interest which had become due
If, then, the bonds held by the complainant are valid bonds of the company, and are entitled to the benefit of the security of the mortgage, and if the complainant is the owner of the bonds by a complete and absolute title, he is entitled to the relief which he seeks.
The defendants insist that the bonds were not issued for any of the purposes authorized by the stockholders and directors, and that, therefore, the bonds are not binding upon the company, but are fraudulent and void. The resolution of the stockholders, authorizing the execution of the mortgage, and the bonds to be secured by it, was passed 10th March, 1846, and the resolutions of the board of directors, directing the president and cashier to execute and deliver the bonds, were passed 28th March, 1846. The form of the mortgage, which was afterwards executed, was fixed by these resolutions of the board, and is therein recited at length, and the purposes for which the bonds to be secured by it were to be issued are set forth in the mortgage. The mortgage recites that the company, “for the purpose of raising money to pay off the debts incurred in improving, enlarging and repairing their canal, and of raising money to be expended in further improving and perfecting the same, are about to make, execute and issue certain bonds for sums not to exceed in the whole seven hundred thousand dollars.” And further, that with a view to enable the said company “ to raise the said moneys, and thereby secure the continued progress and operation of their said canal, and
By the resolutions passed at the same meeting of the board, the president and cashier were authorized and directed to execute and delivered the said bonds mentioned in the mortgage. But it was provided that the amount of the bonds to be issued should not exceed the sum of four hundred and fifty thousand dollars, without the further action of the board. One of these resolutions also fixed the salary of the three trustees, for the service to be rendered by them, at one-half of one per cent., each, on the amount of the bonds to be issued, and directed that a sufficient amount of the bonds to pay the salary should be retained in the hands of the loan committee, to be paid to the trustees at a time fixed by previous resolutions.
This shows the authority under which the bonds were to be executed by the president and cashier, and the purposes for which they were to be issued and used. It also shows that the trustees were appointed by the company, and were to be paid by the company for their services. Soon after these resolutions were passed, bonds were, in pursuance of this authority, executed and issued to a large amount.
Afterwards, on the 17th March, 1848, the company were in need of money to pay the interest on those bonds and to put the canal in order for navigation for the season then approaching, and the board of directors, at a meeting held on that day, adopted a resolution, by which it is declared that the president is authorized to borrow thirty thousand dollars to pay the “interest coming due on the 1st of April, and the expense of putting the canal in order for navigation for the present year ; and to give the company’s notes, at such time as he may deem consistent with the interest of the company, and deposit with said company’s notes, the
Under this last resolution, the pi’esident of the company, on the 1st of April, 1848, borrowed of George F. Lewis, of Philadelphia, the sum of fifteen hundred dollars and seventy-five cents, and gave him the company’s note, bearing date on that day, for that sum, and at the same time deposited with him, as collateral security, six of the company’s mortgage bonds, of five hundred dollars, each. The note is made payable to the company’s own order eight months after date, is signed by the president, and endorsed by the cashier, and there is a certificate across the face of the note not signed, but proved to be in the handwriting of the secretary of the company, which states that the said six bonds were deposited with the note as collateral security. These are the bonds in controversy in this suit. I think that the defendants’ objection that these bonds were not issued for any of the purposes authorized by the stockholders or mentioned in the mortgage, and are therefore void, is not well taken. The money borrowed of Lewis was to pay interest on the mortgage bonds which had been before issued, and which it is not denied were properly issued, and also for the purpose of putting the canal in order for the season then approaching. These purposes for which this money was borrowed are, in my opinion, clearly included within those for which money was to be raised on the mortgage, and the bonds to be issued under it, as expressed in the mortgage itself. It is there recited that the bonds to be secured by the mortgage were to be issued for the purpose of raising money to pay off “ the debt incurred in improving, enlarging, and repairing the canal, and of raising money to be expended in further improving and perfecting the same.”
Now the bonds which had been issued, and on which the interest was coming due, were issued to raise money for the purposes just mentioned. To borrow money to pay that interest, and to give as security for that loan other bonds also secured by the mortgage, was surely no departure from
It is objected further by the defendants, that even if it be admitted that the money raised by this loan from Lewis was for purposes mentioned in the mortgage, yet that the directors and officers of the company had no authority to deposit the bonds as collateral security, at the rate of two dollars for one dollar borrowed*; and that, in so doing, they transcended their powers, and moreover committed a fraud upon the other bond-holders, by lessening their mortgage security, and that therefore the bonds in question in this suit are not binding upon the company, but are void, and that this court ought to protect the other bond-holders against such fraud. The objection is not that the bonds were not properly executed, nor that the money raised on them was raised or used for an improper or unauthorized purpose, for the bonds were executed by the officers of the company, in whom full authority for that purpose was vested; and it is admitted, for the purposes of this argument upon this point, that the money raised on them was for purposes mentioned in the mortgage and authorized by the stockholders. The objection, therefore, goes only to i he mode and manner in which the directors and officers of the company disposed of the bonds in raising money for purposes for which they were authorized to raise it upon those bonds. The stockholders, in authorizing those bonds to be executed and delivered, and money to be raised upon them for the purposes mentioned, did not prescribe the manner in which it should be done. They left the bonds in
But further on this point. The officers of a bank are held out to the public as having authority to act according to the general usage, practice and course of business of such institutions, and their acts within the scope of such usage, practice and course of business will bind the bank in favor of third persons having no knowledge to the contrary. The cashier of a bank is usually intrusted with all the funds of the bank in cash, notes, bills and other choses in action, to be used from time to time for the ordinary and extraordinary exigencies of the bank. He is considered as the executive officer of the bank, through whom and by whom the money transactions of the bank, in paying or receiving debts and discharging or transferring securities, are to be conducted. Story on Agency, § 114; Fleckner v. U. S. Bank, 8 Wheaton’s R. 338.
Now the stockholders had authorized the execution of these bonds, and the borrowing of the money upon them, and left them in the hands of the officers of the company, with no restrictions upon them as to the mode of their using the bonds for that purpose.
Then in borrowing money, and giving those bonds as security for it, they had authority to use them, according to the course of business in such transactions. They had a right to deposit them as collateral; for that mode of using bonds and other such securities is within the usual course and usage of business, both of incorporated companies and individuals. And if it had been done by the cashier alone, it would, by the law of agency, as laid down in the authority just cited, have been binding on the company.
But it was not done by him alone. It was authorized by
But it was insisted, on ' the argument, that even if they had the right to deposit the bonds as collateral security for the loan, yet that they had no right to do it at the rate of two dollars for one dollar borrowed. I think that that was a matter fairly within their discretion. The amount of a collateral is usually greater than the debt which it is intended to secure; how much greater it shall be must depend upon the circumstances of each particular case. By the annual report of the directors to the stockholders, dated J7lh March, 1848, a printed copy of which is in evidence, it appears that the credit of the company had become so much depressed that its mortgage bonds could not be negotiated at par. That may have been the reason why they deposited them at the rate of two dollars for one dollar, as collateral security for the money borrowed of Lewis, which was obtained two weeks after the date of that report; and if so, it can hardly be said that such security was so extravagant and unreasonable as to amount to a fraud and a breach of authority on the part of the persons making it. But it is not necessary to examine into their reasons; it is enough that that matter- was in the discretion of the directors and officers, and that there is no evidence that they abused their trust.
In addition to what I have already said on this part of
And in the report dated 2d April, 1849, page six, it is stated as follows: “ About the first of April last there was borrowed the sum of fifteen thousand three hundred and twenty-three dollars and. fifty-nine cents on the company’s notes, at six and eight months, with which were deposited, as collateral security, the mortgage bonds of the company for twice the amount of the notes.” The time of this first-mentioned loan (the first of April, 1848,) is the date of the note given to Lewis, and for which the .six bonds in controversy here were deposited as collateral security, and it is a note at eight months. It is not unreasonable to conclude, therefore, that the loan from him was a part of the sum of fifteen thousand three hundred and twenty-three dollars and fifty-nine cents mentioned in the report, and secured in the manner there stated.
This mode of using the company’s mortgage bonds as collateral security to notes given for loans, and to twice the amount of the notes, appears, therefore, to have been resorted to at different times, and to have been regularly reported by the directors to the stockholders, and the making of the loans of which the money obtained from Lewis was probably a part, and which was secured in the same way, was also reported to them. There is no evidence that the stockholders ever objected to that mode of using the bonds, or laid any restraint upon it; g,nd I think it must be considered to have received their silent acquiescence, • if not their express ap
I consider, therefore, that the bonds in question in this suit were legally and properly issued under the authority given by the stockholders, and that the depositing of them with Lewis, as collateral security for the loan obtained from him, was and is binding upon the company, and is not a fraud upon the other bond-holders.
The company’s note, given to Lewis for the loan, was not paid at maturity, and he thereupon, on 12th December, 1848, gave notice to the president of the company that the six bonds held by him as collateral security to the note would be sold at public sale on the 19th of that month, at seven o’clock, P. M., at the Philadelphia Exchange, by M. Thomas <& Sons, auctioneers, and that the company would be held accountable for the deficiency, if any, between the proceeds of the sale and the amount of the note. The president acknowledged the receipt of this notice, in a letter to Lewis, and at the same time stated to him that the bonds were not left to be used in the way he proposed; that, being deposited as collateral, they could only be used upon the inability of the company to pay the note, and that that inability was not established by the note not being paid at maturity ; that the company protested against the proposed sale, and that Lewis would be held responsible to the company for the full amount of the bonds in case such sale should be made. The sale,
It does not appear that Lewis was present at the sale, nor did it appear by the advertisements, or in any other way to the persons attending it, that he had any interest in the bonds, or was in any way connected with the sale. The bonds were mérely advertised to be sold “ without reserve, for account of whom it may concern.”
On the part of the complainant, it is insisted that the bonds were deposited with Lewis, as a pawn or pledge for the payment of the note at maturity, and on the note not being so paid, he had a right to sell them at public sale, on due notice to the company; and that, by the sale, the title to. the bonds passed to the complainant, and that he is entitled to the amount of them, and to the benefit of the security of the mortgage.
The defendants, on the other hand, say that the bonds were not deposited as a pawn .or pledge, but as a collateral security, and that that is a distinct and different thing from a pledge; that a man is not permitted to give his own promise to pay money as a pledge for another promise of his own to pay money, since it would lead to usury and extortion, and might, by collusion of parties, be used to evade the statute relating to confession of judgments ; that bonds cannot, from their very nature, be given in pledge, because it is essential to the making of a pledge that there be a delivery of it, and bonds, it is insisted, cannot pass by delivery, but only by assignment in writing; that Lewis was bound first to sue on the note, and, if he failed to recover his debt in that way, then to sue on the bonds, and not to sell them ; that, for these reasons, Lewis had no right to sell the bonds at all, and that the sale passed no title or interest in them to the complainant.
I do not think that the position of the defendants, that a
Wor do I see the soundness of the objection, that a man is not to be permitted to give as a pledge his promise to pay money as security for another promise of his own to pay money, on the ground that it would lead to usury and extortion, and an evasion of the statute relating to confession of judgments. How does it lead to usury ? The lender of the money would not and could not get more than his loan and interest. In the present case Lewis does not and cannot get more than his debt and interest. I do not see in such a ti’ansaetion any temptation to parties to resort to it with the hope of obtaining usurious interest or of extorting money from the necessities of others ; neither do I perceive how it could be used to evade the statute relating to confession of judgments without a resort to fraud and collusion. If these were practiced, they would make the transaction void. And the same thing may be said of many other proceedings which are in themselves honest and lawful. There is no pretence of any fraud or collusion on the part of any of the parties to the transaction new under consideration, and it would never do to lay it down as a rule that an act done with fair and honest purposes shall be void because other parties might do a like act, with a fraudulent intent to evade the laws.
The defendants are not correct in saying that bonds cannot pass- by delivery, but only by assignment in writing. Bonds may pass by delivery, and without written assignment.
The delivery of a bond for a valuable consideration is a good assignment of it without writing, and passes the bond, and the debt due upon it, to the assignee. Hutchings v.
Are bonds, then, a species of personal property w.hich may be pledged ? Story, in speaking of the things which may be the subject of a pledge, says: “These are ordinarily goods- and chattels, but money, debts, negotiable instruments, ehosesin action, and, indeed, any other valuable thing of a personal nature, such as patent rights and manuscripts, may, by the common law, be delivered in pledge.” Story on Bail., § 290. And his text appears to be fully sustained by the authorities-which he cites.
Kent alsp says,. “All kinds of personal property that are vested and tangible, and also negotiable paper, may be the subject of a pledge; and choses in action resting; on written, contract, may be assigned in pledge.” 2 Kent’s Com. 577. Among the things here mentioned as the subject of pledge, bonds are certainly included.
In Vanderzee v. Willis, 3 Bro. C. R. 21, bonds were, with other things, pledged for the security of a promissory note ; and no doubt seems to have been entertained by any of the counsel who argued the case, nor by the Lord Chancelloiwho decided it, that they could be so pledged.
In Hart v. Ten Eyck, 2 Johns. C. R. 100, and in 2 Kent’s: Com. 682, bonds are mentioned as among those things for which bills to redeem were frequently filed in chancery.
That bonds may be given in pledge, therefore, is a doctrine-, which seems to be well sustained by authority.
The bonds in question, in this case, were delivered by the company, through its officers, to Lewis, as security for the payment, at maturity, of the note given to him for the loan, and he had a right to keep them until that debt was discharged.
This was, I think, plainly the intention of the parties to-that transaction; and I am therefore of opinion that the bonds were delivered to him as a pledge. A pledge is a bailment of personal property as security for some debt or engagement. Story on Bail., § 286. It is also defined by Kent to be a bailment or delivery of goods by-a debtor to
The note was not paid at maturity; the company, therefore, failed to perform the engagement for which the bonds had been pledged. The defendants have argued that Lewis, in order to recover his debt, was bound to sue first on the note; but I find no authority for that position. He had his election to do so or to resort to his remedy upon the bonds, by having them sold under a decree of foreclosure or by selling them himself on due notice to the company.
Story, on this subject, says: “Another right resulting by the common law from the contract of pledge, is the right to sell the pledge when there has been a default in the pledger in complying with his engagement. Such a right does not divest the general property of the pawner, but still leaves in him a right of redemption. But if the pledge is not redeemed within the stipulated time, by a due performance of the contract for which it is security, the pawnee has then a right to require a sale to be made thereof, in order to have his debt or indemnity. The common law of England existing in the time of Glanville seems to have required a judicial process to justify the sale, or at least to destroy the right of redemption. But the law, as at present established, leaves an election to the pawnee. He may file a bill in equity against the pawner for a foreclosure and sale, or he may proceed to sell ex mero motu upon giving due notice of his intention to the pledger. In the latter case, if the sale is bona fide and reasonably made, it will be equally as obligatory as in the first case.” Story on Bail., §§ 309, 310.
The same doctrine is laid down in 2 Kent’s Com. 582, and in Parker v. Brancker, 22 Pick. 40. But the defendants have argued that although this is the general rule in regard to property given in pledge, yet that bonds form an exception to it. I do not, however, find any authority or any well-
In 4 Kent’s Com. 139, it is said, “ the pawnee, by bill in chancery, may bar the debtor’s right of redemption, and have the chattels sold. This has frequently been done in the case of stock, bonds, plate, or other personal property pledged for the payment of debjfcs. But without any bill to redeem, the creditor, on a pledge or mortgage- of chattels, may sell at auction, on giving reasonable opportunity to the debtor to redeem, and apprising him of the time and place of sale, and this is the more convenient and usual practice.” So that the right of the pledger to sell bonds is here expressly maintained. And why, it may be asked, should such bonds as are in question here be an exception to the general rule ? They are, as has been stated, made payable to bearer, with coupons for interest annexed. Bonds of this description are, in point of fact, often sold, and the market or current price of some classes of them is frequently advertised and quoted. To sell them, is therefore not an extraordinary proceeding, but one usual among indviduals in their private transactions.
I consider, therefore, that Lewis had a right, on the failure of the company to pay the note at maturity, to proceed to' sell the bonds in one of the two modes already mentioned. He chose to sell on his own authority without judicial process, and that is said by Kent to be “ the more convenient and usual practice.”
Certain letters, which passed between the president of the company and J. P. Morris & Co., of Philadelphia, were offered in evidence by the complainant, in order to show that the company had admitted that J. P. Morris & Co., with whom the company’s mortgage bonds had been deposited as security for a note, had the right to sell them on the failure of the company to pay the note. The defendants objected to this evidence as inadmissible, but offered, on
When Lewis proceeded to sell, he gave notice to the company of the time and place of the intended sale. The notice seems to have been a proper one, and no objection has been made to its reasonableness or sufficiency. The sale was advertised in a full and ample manner; it was made by established auctioneers, at a public place, and seems to have been fairly and openly conducted. It is charged in the answers of the company, that in buying the bonds, the complainant acted in collusion with Lewis, who, it is charged, was to have an interest in the purchase; but there is no evidence whatever to sustain this allegation. The complainant appears to have acted fairly in the matter, and to have purchased on his own account, without any connection with Lewis, or any knowledge that he had any right or interest in the bonds. The complainant is therefore to be considered as the bona fid,e purchaser of the bonds for a valuable consideration, at a public sale fairly made and authorized by law, and whereof due notice had been given to the company.
It is further insisted by the defendants, that even if Lewis had a right to sell the bonds in the way he did, and even if the complainant bought them bona fide, yet that he cannot hold them with any other or higher right or title than Lewis had in them; that he must stand in Lewis’ shoes, and
And it is argued that the same rules must apply to these bonds in the hands of the complainant; that Lewis held them only as collaterals, and subject to be delivered up on payment of the principal and interest' due on the note; and it is argued that the complainant is merely his assignee, and must hold them subject to the same claim, and must deliver them up on payment by the company of the amount of the note.
By the delivery of the bonds to Lewis, in pledge for the payment of the note, he acquired only a special property in them, the general property remaining in the company. Story on Bail., § 287; Cortleyou v. Lansing, 2 Caines’ Ca. 202.
And the effect of the default in the payment of the note at maturity was not to vest the entire property in the bonds in Lewis, but to give him a power to sell them, he accounting to the company for the.surplus remaining, if any, after paying the note. Story on Bail., § 308 ; Coggs v. Barnard, 1 Smith’s Leading Ca. 99, and notes. So that at the time of the sale by Lewis, there was in him only a special property in the bonds, the general property in them still remaining in the company.
Now I consider that the sale of the bonds at public auction to the complainant did not operate simply as a transfer to him of the right which Lewis had in them at that time. It was not merely an assignment by Lewis of his right in them to the complainant; it was much more. It was a sale of the whole interest in the bonds, arid conveyed the whole property and title in them to the complainant. If this were not so, and if the sale operated merely as a transfer or assignment to the complainant of the special property which Lewis had in them, there would be no need
Under this view of the case, it is of no consequence whether the complainant had notice or not that the bonds had been deposited with Lewis as a pledge; for if the pledgee had a right to sell the pledge absolutely, the knowledge of the right and authority by which he does it cannot destroy nor affect the title of the purchaser.
The defendants insisted that the complainant ought to have charged in his bill that he bought without notice. But I do not think so; the case made by the bill is complete without it. If he had notice, and the defendants thought that his rights were thereby affected, it was competent for them to prove it; but I do not think that it was necessary for the complainant to aver want of notice in this bill.
But there is another view of this case, which, in my opinion, forbids that any right to redeem, or any other equitable claim which the company may have had upon these bonds, should follow them into the hands of the complainant. These bonds must, I think, be regarded as negotiable securities, and capable of passing by delivery, in the same way as a promissory note payable to bearer or a bill of exchange endorsed in blank.
The bonds are payable to John J. Palmer, or bearer, with coupons annexed for interest payable half-yearly. Bonds of this description were unknown to the ancient common law; they are of comparatively modern origin. They have been issued in this country in very large amounts, and have entered extensively into the business operations of the community. And by the corporations which have issued them, and among all persons who in the course of business have had occasion to receive them or to pass them to others, or to deal with them in any way, they have always been considered and treated as securities which pass from hand to hand by delivery. This was asserted upon the argument, and not denied, and cannot, I think, be controverted. The usage in regard to them must have been understood by the company when they issued these bonds. By the terms of
The case of Gorgier v. Mieville et al., 3 Barn. & Cress. 45, was the case of a bond of the king of Prussia, in which he declared himself and his successors bound to every person, for the time being holder of the bond, for the payment of the principal and ¿interest. The plaintiff had deposited the bond in the hands of Agassig & Co., to hold for his benefit, and receive the interest upon it. Agassig & Co., being in want of money, pledged the bond to the defendants, and this was an action of trover to recover the bond.
It was proved, at the trial, that bonds of this description weie sold in the market, and passed from hand to hand daily, like exchange bills, at a reasonable price, according to the state of the market. The opinion of the court was against the plaintiff, and under its direction the jury found a verdict lor the defendants. On a rule nisi for a new trial, the case was fully argued, and it was decided by the court that the rule must be discharged, and judgment entered for the defendants. In delivering the opinion, Abbott, Chief Justice, said: “This instrument, in its form, is an acknowledgment, by the king of Prussia, that the sum mentioned in the bond is due to every person who shall for the time being be the holder of it, and the principal and interest is payable in a certain mode and at certain periods mentioned in the bond. It is, therefore, in its nature precisely analogous to a bank note payable to bearer or to a bill of exchange endorsed in blank. Being an instrument, therefore, of the same description, it must be subject to the same rule of law, that whosoever is the holder of it has the power to give title to any person honestly acquiring it.”
The case of Clark v. Farmers’ Manufacturing Co., 15 Wend, 256, was cited by the defendant’s counsel as holding
Holding these bonds of the complainants, therefore, to be negotiable, they are, under the authorities already cited, the subject of pledge, and having been pledged, and the pledgee having lawfully sold them, that sale is binding upon all parties, and conveys a perfect title to the purchaser. Story on Bail., §§ 290, 300.
The defendants, however, have insisted that they were not pledged to Lewis, and therefore he had no right to sell them. But the holder of negotiable paper, even though he be not the owner, may sell or transfer it to another person, who, if he takes it without notice of the fraud, acquires a good title against the owner. The complainant, as has been already shown, bought these bonds without notice of the character in which Lewis held them, and the transaction is therefore binding upon the company, and the complainant has a good title against them. This depends on well-settled
It was earnestly urged, upon the argument, by the defendant’s counsel, that if the complainant should be held to be entitled to recover the amount of the bonds, that the company will be compelled to pay almost double the amount they borrowed of Lewis, and that this would be a hard result, and one which a court of equity ought to prevent. But when property, which has been given in pledge for the payment of a debt or- the performance of an agreement, is sold in default of the pledgee to perform his contract, it must often happen that it will be sold at what he considers a great sacrifice. This must be so in the very nature of things, and it is one of the risks which he incurred when he made the pledge. But if it was fairly sold he has no cause of complaint. Such sale must be maintained or the law of pledge must be abolished. Suppose, in the present case, that the purchase by the complainant had proved to be a bad one, and that he had given much more for the bonds than they were worth, and must be the loser to a large amount. He could not call on any one to refund to him ; he must abide by his contract, and bear whatever burthens it might impose. If, then, his purchase will prove a good one, shall he not also have its benefits ? There would be great injustice in laying down a rule which would compel a purchaser in such case to bear all the loss if he made a bad purchase, and to surrender all the advantages of it if it turned out to be a good one.
It is a circumstance worthy of consideration, and entitled to weight in this ease, that the company, though fully apprised of the sale, took no measures to be represented there, and gave no notice whatever to the public or to the purchasers attending the sale that they had any claim upon the bonds, or any objection to their being sold. When notice of the intended sale was given to the company they took no steps to warn purchasers. They merely protested to Lewis against the sale, and informed him that they would hold him responsible. If they considered that they had a remedy
In every view which I have been able to take of the case, it seems to me clear that the complainant is the absolute owner of the bonds, and of the debt secured by them, free from all claim upon them on the part of the defendants.
It is further contended by the defendants, that even if the complainant is the owner, of the bonds, yet that he is not entitled to the benefit of the mortgage security, because the mortgage was not assigned to him, and, being a chose in action, it cannot pass by delivery, but only by assignment in writing.
But it has been decided in this, as well as in other states, that a mortgage may pass by delivery without written assignment. Hutchings v. Low, 1 Green 246; Allen v. Pancoast, Spencer 68, and cases there cited.
It is also well settled that the debt secured by a mortgage is a principal thing — the mortgage is only an incident to the debt, and passes with the debt. Martin v. Moulin, 2 Burr. 978; Green v. Hart, 1 Johns. C. R. 580;
1 am, therefore, of opinion that the complainant is entitled to the benefit of the mortgage to the extent of the bonds held by him • that he is entitled to have the amount due upon them, with his costs to be taxed, raised and paid by sale or sequestration of the mortgaged property, and that it should be referred to a master to ascertain and report the amount, to the end that a final decree may be made. And I do respectfully advise the Chancellor that an interlocutory decree and order of reference should be made acccordingly.
J. Wilson, M. G G
February Term, 1854.
The opinion of the Court of Appeals was delivered by
El.mek, J. The complainant, Samuel F. Fisher, was shown to be the bona fide holder of six bonds of the Morris Canal and Banking Company, the defendants, and the question upon which the case on this appeal mainly turns, is, whether the honest acquisition of these securities, without notice of any defect in the title of the seller, if a defect there was, confers on him a title similar to that acquired by a bona fide holder of money, bills of exchange, and. promissory notes, payable to bearer. So far as we are aware, this is a case of the first impression, and it is certainly one of no little importance. Similar bonds have been issued, within a few years, by our numerous railroad and canal companies, to an immense amount, and are daily sold by the brokers and others, and passed from hand to hand by delivery, without any formal assignment, and without inquiry as to the title of the possessor.
The case has been elaborately and ably argued on both sides. On behalf of the appellants, it was insisted that these bonds being under seal, are in law specialities, and although in terms payable to bearer, if they are assignable by delivery only, it is by force of our statute, which leaves them
That under ordinary circumstances, the property of bank notes and of bills and promissory notes payable on their face, or by a blank endorsement to a bearer, follows the possession, has been long settled. By analogy to this class of cases, the exigencies of business have from time to time introduced other securities into the same category. The Court of King’s Bench seems to have hesitated to recognize India bonds as belonging to it. Glyn v. Baker. But parliament immediately interfered and declared them negotiable instruments. Exchequer bills were so regarded, in the case of Wookey v. Pole, 4 Barn. and Ad. 1. In the ease of Gorgier v. Mieville, 3 Bar. and Cress. 45, bonds of the king of Prussia, which were shown to be ordinarily passed from hand to hand by delivery, and so designed, were held to be like money or bills, so as to give a bona fide possessor the legal title. And in the case of Lang v. Smyth, 7 Bing. 284, the same principle was applied to the case of instruments issued by the government of Naples, although in that case they were held not to be negotiable, because it was found that they did not usually circulate without a certificate, which did not accompany them. Parsons, in his recent work on contracts, vol. 1, page 240, expresses the opinion
The manner in which these bonds are engraved, with coupons making the interest payable half-yearly to the bearer of them, and all the evidence before us conspiTe to show that the company which issued them, and which now disputes the title of the holder upon the ground that they put them into the hands of the seller for a special purpose, which did not authorize him to dispose of them as he did, really intended them to circulate, as in fact they do. This design is indeed quite as apparent as if it was engraved on their face in express words. The objection now made, that the legal character of the instrument adopted is such as to frustrate this design, certainly comes with a bad grace from the party which put them in circulation. Even as between third parties, we suppose the common usage to transfer them by delivery, without inquiry as to the title of the transferrer, would justify us in holding these securities to differ from common obligations, in being so far negotiable that the bona fide possessor shall be held to have a good title. But the case is still stronger against the party which made and issued them, with full knowledge of the prevailing usage, and with the manifest design that they should be so circulated. To permit such parties to dispute this result of the usage, would be to permit them to take advantage of their own wrong. And besides, the obvious interest of the companies is, that these bonds should be salable, free from all questions of equity. They are generally issued for the express purpose of raising money by their sale. To declare them subject to the equities existing in the case of ordinary bonds, upon every transfer of them, would be to strike a blow at, the credit of the great mass of these securities now in the market, the consequences of which it would be impossible to predict.
We are, therefore, of opinion that the title of the present possessor of these bonds must be held to be complete. His right to proceed on the mortgage, in the manner adopted, follows as a necessary consequence. As to the objections
This view of the case renders it unnecessary to enter at large Upon the investigation of the question so elaborately discussed by counsel, whether Mr. Lewis had a right to sell the bonds as he did. Some of the views taken by the master, in his very able opinion on this subject, seem questionable. If the bonds in dispute ought to be considered as placed in Lewis’ hands by way of pledge, it is probably because they were securities usually sold in the stock market, and understood by the parties to be designed for that use, aud not because a party’s ordinary bond or mortgage, deposited as a collateral, could be so regarded. No case was produced where the debtor’s own obligation, has been held to be a pledge for a debt due by simple contract. Uíor do wo think it clear that even a third party’s bond or mortgage, deposited by way of a collateral, or as a pledge, can be sold by the pledgee, in default of payment, after notice to the pledger, unless a known usage or express agreement to do so is shown. But it is not intended to express any decided opinion on these questions. Eor the reasons assigned, the decree appealed from must be affirmed, each party to pay their own costs.
Decree affirmed unanimously.
Cited in Mor. Can. & Bkg. Co. v. Lewis, 1 Beas. 329; Winfield v. City of Hudson, 4 Dutch. 262; Freeman v. Freeman, 2 C. E. Gr. 47; Vreeland v. Van Horn, 2 C. E. Gr. 140; Morrow v. Inhabitants of Vernon, 6 Vr. 493.
Reference
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- The Morris Canal and Banking Company and others, and Samuel F. Fisher
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