Farmers & Mechanics' Bank v. Butchers & Drovers' Bank
Farmers & Mechanics' Bank v. Butchers & Drovers' Bank
Opinion of the Court
The jury in this case have found, upon sufficient evidence and under propel’ instructions from the court, that the plaintiffs were holders, for value, of tin checks in question. Each of these checks, if duly certified imposes upon the bank an obligation to retain the amount for which the check is drawn, and which, by the certificate, it admits it has in hand to the credit of the drawer to mee l the check when presented, and to pay the same to the holdei on demand. This obligation is substantially the same as that assumed by the acceptor of an ordinary bill of exchange; and the certificates in this case, if authorized, may with propriety be regarded as virtual acceptances of bills, and the bank as liable, if at all, as acceptor.
The first ground upon which this liability is resisted is based, not upon any want of authority in the particular agent by whom the checks were certified, but upon a want of power in the bank to bind itself by the -contract sought to be enforced. It is insisted that the bank was not authorized by its charter to engage in transactions purely fictitious, having no connection with its legitimate • business, or to pledge its credit for the mere accommodation of third persons.
The defendant is a banking corporation, organized under the general banking law of this state; and it is, I think, a sound position, that such a corporation exceeds its powers when it becomes the mere surety for another, upon a contract in which it has no interest, or lends its credit in any
There is a dictum of the chancellor, to the same effect, in the case of Safford v. Wyckoff (4 Hill, 442), where the defence set up was, that the act of the bank, in issuing the bill upon which the action was brought, was ultra vires. The chancellor there says: “ A bill, or any other negotiable security, vhich is not upon its face illegal and unauthorized, is valid a the hands of a bona fide holder, without notice, who has paid a valuable consideration therefor, except in those cases in which the security is made void by statute.” So in the case of The Genesee Bank v. The Patchin Bank (3 Kern., 309), recently decided by this court, a similar doctrine is distinctly asserted by Denio, J., although the point was not passed upon by the court.
I have no hesitation in concurring with these learned judges in the principles thus asserted, and am not aware that a contrary opinion has ever been judicially expressed. A citizen who deals directly with a corporation, or who takes its negotiable paper, is presumed to know the extent of its
In the case of Mussey v. Eagle Bank (9 Metc., 306), the Supreme Court of Massachusetts held not only that such a teller had no original inherent power to certify checks, but that a general custom to that effect among banks would conflict with the public interests, and would be bad. I am not .entirely satisfied with the reasoning of the court in that case. JThe act of certifying a check is simply answering the supposed inquiry, of one about to take the check, whether the bank has funds of the drawer to meet it; and no other officer or agent of the bank would seem to be so competent to give the answer as the paying teller.]] His duties impose upon him the necessity of knowing the state of every depositor’s account. He is charged with all he pays out, and if he pays a check, without funds in hand, he is responsible to the bank for the amount. His knowledge exceeds that of the book-keeper, because, to the information obtained from the latter, he adds a knowledge whether any deposits have been made or checks paid since the last entry in the books. No doubt the cashier, by virtue of his general powers, and his presumed knowledge of all the affairs of the bank, would be competent to answer the question; but he could only do so by first inquiring of the book-keeper and teller. Why should the applicant be compelled to seek the information through this circuitous channel, instead of going directly to the ultimate source of knowledge on the subject? The
But it is unnecessary in the present case to decide this question, as it clearly appears not only that the teller, Peck, was in the habit of certifying the checks of customers, with the knowledge of the officers of the bank, but that he was furnished with a book for the express purpose of keeping a memorandum of such checks. His authority to certify, therefore, in a proper case, cannot be disputed. |_But it is insisted that his power extended only to cases where the bank had funds in hand, he having been expressly prohibited from certifying in the absence of funds, and hence that the bank is not bounds,
It may be doubted whether such a prohibition adds anything to the restrictions which would otherwise exist upon the powers of the agent. A teller, acting under a general power to certify checks, would be guilty of an excess of authority and a clear violation of duty, if he certified without funds.
The powers of the cashier himself, or other principal financial officer of the bank, would no doubt be subject to the same limitation. |To certify, a check when the bank has no funds to meet it, is to make a false representation; and neither the incidental power of the cashier, nor a general power conferred upon any other officer, could be construed to authorize that Hence, if a bank is holden, in any case, upon a certificate of its cashier that a check is good, when it has no funds of the drawer, it is not because the cashier is deemed authorized to make such a certificate, but because the bank is bound by his representation, notwithstanding it is false a,nd unauthorized.]
It will be seen that, if these views are correct, the present case does not turn in any degree upon the rules applicable to special agencies, but that the question would have been precisely the same if the check had been certified by the cashier or other principal financial officer of the bank. As 1 they may, however, admit of doubt, I shall treat the case as one of an agency specially restricted, and shall simply inquire (whether a bona fide holder, for value, of a negotiable check, certified by a special agent whose authority is limited
This is a complex question, depending partly upon the law of principal and agent, and partly upon that of negotiable or commercial paper. The defence assumes that principals are bound only by the authorized acts of their agents, and admits of no qualification of this general rule, except where the agent has been apparently clothed with an authority beyond that actually conferred. But this proposition is too broad to be sustained. ^Principals have been repeatedly held responsible for the false representations of their agents, not on the ground that the agents had any authority, either real or apparent, to make such representations, but for reasons entirely different.^ In Hern v. Nichols (1 Salk, 289), the leading case on the subject, where an agent authorized to sell a quantity of silk had made certain fraudulent representations, by which the purchaser was deceived, the principal was held liable. Lord Holt there said: “Seeing somebody must be a loser by this deceit, it is more reasonable that he that employs and puts a confidence in the deceiver should be a loser, than a stranger.” The principle of this case has never, I think, been overruled, but, on the contrary, has been repeatedly approved and confirmed. It will be found directly applicable to the present case. [The certificate of the teller is a positive representation that the bank has funds to meet the check. If that representation is false, who ought to bear the loss ? !
The reasoning of Lord Holt, in the case of Hern v. Nichols, applies here with peculiar force. The bank selects its teller and places him in a position of great responsibility. The trust and confidence thus reposed in him by the bank leads others to confide in his integrity. Persons having no voice in his selection are obliged to deal with the bank through him. If, therefore, while acting in the business of the bank, and vvithin the scope of his employment, so far as is known or
This conclusion is in no respect in conflict with that doctrine of the law of agency which makes it the duty of all persons dealing with a special agent to ascertain the extent of his powers, [it is conceded that every one taking the checks in question would be presumed to know that the teller had no authority to certify without funds. But this knowledge alone would not apprize, him that the certificate was defective and unauthorized. To discover that, he must not only have notice of the limitations upon the powers of the teller, but of the extrinsic fact that the bank had no funds; and as to this extrinsic fact, which he cannot justly be presumed to know, he may act upon the representation of the agent] [There is a plain distinction between the terms of a power and facts entirely extraneous, upon which the right to exercise the authority conferred may depend. One who deals with an agent has no right to confide in the representation of the agent as to the extent of his powers. If, therefore, a person, knowing that the bank has no funds of the drawer, should take a certified check, upon the representation of the cashier or other officer by whom the certificate was made that he was authorized to certify without funds, the bank would not be liable. But in regard to the extrinsic fact, whether the bank has funds or not, the case is different^ That is a fact which a stranger, who takes
It is, I think, a sound rule, thatijwhere the party dealing with an agent has ascertained that the act of the agent corresponds in every particular, in regard to which such party has or is presumed to have any knowledge, with the terms of the power, he may take the representation of the agent as to any extrinsic fact which rests peculiarly within the knowledge of the agent, and which cannot be ascertained by a comparison of the power with the act done under it| The familiar case of the giving of a negotiable partnership note, by one of the partners, for his own individual benefit, affords an apt illustration of this rule. Each of the partners is the agent of the partnership, as to all matters within the scope of the partnership business, and can bind the firm by making, indorsing and accepting bills and notes in such business ; but he has no more authority than a mere stranger to execute such paper in his own business, or for the accommodation of others. If he gives the partnership note or acceptance for his own debt, it is void in the hands of any party having knowledge of the consideration for which it is given; but when negotiated to a bona fide holder, the firm is precluded from questioning the authority of the partner, and is effectually bound. The cases in this state by which this doctrine is illustrated and established are numerous and uniform. (Livingston, v. Hastie, 2 Caine, 246 ; Lansing v. Gaine, 2 John., 300; Laverty v. Burr, 1 Wend., 529; Williams v. Walbridge, 3 id., 415 ; Boyd v. Plumb, 7 id., 309 ; Gansvoort v. Williams, 14 id, 133; Joyce v. Williams, id..
It will be found difficult to distinguish these cases, in principle, from that now before the court. Every person taking the negotiable note or acceptance of a partnership, executed by one of the partners in the name of the firm, is bound to know the extent of the partner’s authority to bind the firm, but this obligation does not extend to the consideration for which the note or acceptance was given. If given for the private debt of one of the partners, or for the accommodation of third persons, all the cases agree that the burden of proving the holder’s knowledge of that fact rests upon the partnership. That the execution is by an agent is as apparent upon the face of the paper, in such cases, as in that of a certified check; because a partnership can only act in its partnership name, through agents.
The argument resorted to here, therefore, that parties are only bound by the authorized acts of their agents, and that paper issued by an agent without authority is no more obli- . gatory upon the principal than if it had been forged, is just as applicable to partnership notes' given by a partner for his individual debts as to these certified checks. |The question is not, in such cases, whether the principal is bound- by the unauthorized act of the agent, but whether he is estopped, by the representation of the agent, from disputing facts which show that the act was authorized.^ There is no analogy between these partnership cases, or the case before the court and cases where the paper is forged. The fact of the agency, and the trust and confidence reposed by the principal in the agent, create a broad line of distinction between them; and it is this trust and confidence which constitute the foundation of the "liability, and which justify the party dealing with the agent in relying upon his representation in respect to facts especially within the agent’s knowledge. The giving of a note in the partnership name, by one of the partners, is a virtual representation that it is given in the partnership
It would be difficult, I think, to discover any valid distinction, in principle, between this case and the one we are considering. The purchaser of the bonds from Delafield would, equally with Delafield himself, be presumed to know the limits of the authority conferred upon the agent; but it must have been held that he would not be bound to inquire as to the extrinsic facts attending the sale or negotiation of the bonds.
The principle is well stated in the following proposition, submitted to and approved by the court, in the case of The North River Bank v. Aymar (3 Hill, 262): Whenever the very act of the agent is authorized by the terms of the power, that is,, whenever, by comparing the act done by the agent with the words of the power, the act is in itself warranted by the terms used, such act is binding on the constituent, as to all persons dealing in good faith with the agent. Such
The opinion of Mr. Justice Nelson, who dissented from the majority of the court in this case, cannot be reconciled with the principle maintained by the same judge in Boyd v. Plumb and Gansvoort v. Williams (supra). The cases are strictly parallel. In that of Aymar, the power of the attorney was limited to the giving of notes, for the use of the principal; in the others, the authority of the partner was limited to the execution of paper, for the use and benefit of the partnership; in both, the plaintiffs were regarded by the judge as equally cognizant of the limitations of the power; and yet, in the cases of Boyd v. Plumb and Gansvoort v. Williams, he held that the burden rested upon the defendants to prove notice to the plaintiff that the paper was not given in the business of the partnership; while in the case of Aymar he held that the plaintiffs were presumed to know that the notes were not given for the benefit of the principal, and that the burden of proving the contrary rested upon them. These two positions are diametrically opposed and cannot be made to harmonize; that taken in Boyd v. Plumb and Gansvoort v. Williams accords with many other cases in this state, and with all the English cases on the subject.
It is true that the decision in the case of The North River Bank v. Aymar was reversed in the Court of Errors; but the opinions pronounced in that court have never been published, and consequently the views there expressed upon the point in question are unknown. Under these circumstances the principal reason against the reconsideration of a question, which has been passed upon by the court of last resort, viz., that the public needs a fixed and definite rule upon which it can rely in the transaction of business, loses most of its force. The opinion of the Supreme Court, which is published at large in the reports, is more likely to be taken a? the rule than that of the Court of Errors, to which atten tion is rarely directed. The question, therefore,- should, T
It is supposed that the cases of Atwood v. Munnings (7 Barn. & Cress., 278) and Alexander v. McKenzie (6 Mann., Gr. & S., 766) are in conflict with the doctrine here advanced; but, upon a careful scrutiny of the first of these cases, it will be seen that, if the point we are examining was involved, it received no consideration from the court. The general principle laid down in that case is in perfect accordance with the views here expressed. It is, simply, that Vwhere an agent accepts a bill, in a form which imports that he acts by virtue of a special power, any person taking the bill is bound to inquire into and is chargeable with knowledge of the terms of the power. This is not denied. But the question is, whether, after inquiring into the terms of the power, and ascertaining, so far as can be done by comparison, that the act of the agent is within the power, he is chargeable, without proof, with a knowledge of extrinsic facts, which show the act to be unauthorized!!
This question, which is the only one which arises here, was not decided, or even adverted to, in Atwood v. Munnings. The report of that case shows that the plaintiffs neglected even to call for the production of the power, to which they were expressly referred by the terms of the acceptance, and for this culpable negligence they are held responsible by the court. Justice Bailey says: ‘‘ A person taking such a bill ought to exercise due caution, for he must take it upon the credit of the party who assumes the authority to accept, and it would be only reasonable prudence to require the production of that authority.”
It seems to have been taken for granted that, if the plaintiffs had informed themselves as to the terms of the power, they would of course have ascertained the object for which the bill was drawn, and the relation existing between the drawer and the defendant. Indeed, for aught that appears
The case of Alexander v. McKenzie has even' less bearing upon the point. The report of the case, which is very imperfect, does not show the terms of the special power nor the nature of its limitations. All that the case decides is, that the words “ per procuration,” affixed to an indorsement or acceptance by an agent, import that the agent acts by virtue of a special power, and are sufficient to charge any one who takes the bill with knowledge of the precise terms of such power. The plaintiff in this case, as in that of Atwood v. Munnings (supra), had neglected to call for the production of the power, and no attempt was made to show that the indorsement corresponded with its terms. The plaintiff relied mainly upon the fact that the bank had paid two other bills indorsed in the same manner. The case, taken as a whole, is a somewhat obscure assertion of the same principle which was adopted in Atwood v. Munnings, viz., that one who takes a bill, so indorsed, is bound to require the production of the special power, and to ascertain by comparison that the bill and indorsement correspond ii all respects with its terms.
(The cases of Grant v. Norway (10 Com. Bench [70 Eng. C. L. R.], 665); Coleman v. Riches (29 Eng. L. and Eq. R., 323), and The Mechanics' Bank v. The New-York and New Haven Railroad Company (3 Kern., 599), are plainly distinguishable from the present case. In neither of those .cases was the document upon which the question arose negotiable. It was sought there to make the principal responsible for a false representation of the agent, not to the person to whom the representation was made, but to one with whom the agent had no dealings, and to whom he had made no repre
This remark presents, in my judgment, the turning point of the case, and the only obstacle to the plaintiff’s recovery, viz., the want of any privity of contract between the plaintiff and the agent. This obstacle was precisely that which the negotiability of the instrument, if established, would have removed; because^he maker of a negotiable instrument is deemed in law to enter into a contract with eveiy one to whom it is afterwards negotiated; and where the instrument is made by an agent it is in this way only that privity of contract can be established between such agent and the subsequent holders, without which the principal can never be held responsible for the false representations of the agent! Hence it is that we find the counsel for the plaintiffs in the cases of Grant v. Norway and The Mechanics' Bank v. The New-York and. New Haven Railroad Company (supra) contending so strenuously for the negotiability of the documents in question in those cases.
That the want of privity of contract, between the agent and the party seeking to hold the principal responsible, constituted the real difficulty in those cases is also apparent from the report in the case of Coleman v. Riches (supra), which belongs to the same class. There Bond, the agent of Riches, had given a false receipt, not to the plaintiff but to Lewis, and Lewis had exhibited this receipt to the plaintiff and obtained money upon it. The difficulty in the case was to show the relation between the parties to have been such
It seems impossible to mistake the purport of these remarks. They show that the difficulty in the way of a recovery, in this case, was that no piivity of contract was established between Biches, or his agent, Bond, and the plaintiffs, by means of which the misrepresentations made by Bond could be considered as made to the plaintiffs. Had the receipt been a negotiable instrument, a privity, would have been established.
I entertain no doubt that had the stock certificates in question, in the case of The Mechanics’ Bank v. The New-York and New Haven Railroad Company (supra), been held to be negotiable, the plaintiffs would have prevailed; and such I understand to be the opinion of two of my associates who took part in the decision of that case.
The judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I have not examined the evidence critically, in order to see whether the jury, under proper instructions, might have found that Peck, the teller of the defendants, was authorized to certify checks when the drawers had no funds on deposit. Such an authority, no doubt, might be implied from a general usage, if that had been proved, or from a practice of the kind in this particular bank, known to the directors. But as the law was stated to the jury, no such question arose for their consideration. They were instructed that there was “ no doubt of the authority of Peck, the teller, to certify checks in the manner those in question were certified, so as to bind the defendants to pay them to those who took them bona fide in the usual course of business, and for value.” They were further instructed that if the plaintiffs had previously held similar checks, certified in the same manner as those were, which had been uniformly paid by the defendants on presentation, without objection, then the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, provided they took the checks in question in good faith, for value, and without notice that the teller had no authority to certify them. The checks previously held by the plaintiffs represented actual deposits of money, and they were, therefore, certified by due authority. The defendants, of course, paid them without objection, as they could have no possible objection to make. The checks in question were false and fraudulent pretences, representing no funds of the drawer. The charge assumed the absence of all authority to certify them, but held the defendants liable on the ground that the plaintiffs received them for value, and without notice of the defect of power. It was also assumed, on the trial, that when the checks in question
The Supreme Court, whose judgment we are reviewing, regarded these certificates of the teller as acceptances payable on demand; and for that reason the delay in presentation was considered no objection to a recovery against the bank as the acceptor. In my judgment, the court was clearly right in this construction, and right also in the consequence drawn from it, that the certificates, as acceptances, if duly authorized, were obligatory, as in any other case, until paid, or the statute of limitations should attach as a bar. The question I now propose to examine is, whether the teller had power to enter into these contracts as the agent of the defendants.
In the first and most obvious view of an agency of any description, ^ie principal is bound by such acts as he has authorized, and no othersJ[ In a just sense, this is universally and necessarily true, because the proposition is involved in the very idea of agency. If there are apparent exceptions in the books, they are not such in fact, but are merely varieties in the application of the rule, which do not contradict the rule itself. This will appear when we consider the modes in which powers are derived from a principal to an agent so as to bind the former in favor of third parties. An agency may be constituted by writing. When this is the case, the agent takes precisely such authority as the instrument confers, upon a fair construction of the language used, taken in connection with the general or particular purpose of the power. An authority thus derived of course includes, in the absence of special restrictions, all such incidental powers and means as are necessary in the execution if the main purpose. The agency may also be created by a special verbal appointment. I use the word special, not with reference to the powei’s to be exercised, but to the mode of creating them by special or express words. When the language of such an appointment is once ascertained, it i/
But there is another, and, for all purposes connected-with toe present inquiry, only one other mode of delegating power. Without any express or special appointment, an implied agency may arise from the conduct of a party. (Story on Agency, % 54.). Where a person has recognized a course of dealing for him by another, or a series of acts of a particular kind, an implied agency is thereby constituted to carry on the same dealing or to do acts of the same character. Now, the only difference between such an agency and those which are created by express appointment, whether verbal or in writing, is, that the latter may, by the very terms of the power, be confined to a single transaction or act, while the very existence of the former is derived from a course of recognized dealing or a series of recognized acts. This implied agency is therefore never a special one, in the sense in which that term has generally been used. All express agencies may or may not be special, according as they authorize, or do not, more than a single act. Although much has been said concerning general and special agencies, there never was any other intelligible distinction indicated by those terms. Where this distinction does not exist, in other words, where the power is not special in this sense, agencies by express appointment and those implied from conduct are entirely similar in all their characteristics and incidents. In the one class, the authority is manifested by an express “delegation; in the other, it is presumed or implied from the conduct of the principal. This presumption is allowed even against the real facts of the case, where the rights of Iona fide dealers are concerned.. In all this class, it is presumed that the principal has actually delegated power to do the acts which he has been in the habit of recognizing and approving. The power thus presumed is to be judged in all respects as though the
I have observed that there may be seeming contradictions of the fundamental doctrine, "that a principal is bound only by such acts of his agent as he has duly authorized. This presumptive or implied agency is one of these, because a man may have accepted and approved acts which he never authorized, and so be bound, as to third persons, by similar acts. Another and the only other of these apparent contradictions is,]where the acts done by the agent are justified, as to innocent dealers, by the authority, whether conferred by express delegation or presumed in the manner indicated, but are opposed to special private restrictions. In such cases the liability of the principal rests upon a just distinction between the power conferred and private instructions as to its exercise!] But the power must in all cases be vested either actually or presumptively, and if it be not, the principal cannot be charged.
The principles, so far stated, are simple and elementary, although they have been somewhat obscured by loose and indeterminate expressions in the books. Applying them to the present inquiry, it becomes plainly of no importance whether the power of Mr. Peck, the defendants’ teller, to certify checks, was derived from a special appointment or from a recognition of his acts. At the circuit it appears' to have been placed on the ground of recognition, and no special appointment was shown. The difference is merely in the mode of constituting the agency. The power in either case is the same. Viewing it as derived or implied from acts recognized and approved, the inquiry at the circuit should have been, what were those acts ? If they were confined to the certification of checks drawn upon actual deposits, then the power to be implied or presumed was to do acts of the same character, but not of a character wholly different, although clothed in the same form. In a
This question, it is proper now tp observe, cannot be determined in the plaintiffs’ favor on the ground that the limitations upon the agent’s power were in the nature of private instructions merely, in regard to its exercise. The difficulty which meets us in this view of the case is, that the power exercised is not embraced at all in the commission. An authority to accept drafts, in the regular business of the principal, upon funds of the drawer, is a precise and well defined authority. It cannot, in my opinion, include acceptances out of the principal’s business, and for the accommodation of third persons. So, an authority to accej>t or certify checks, in the regular course of banking business, would seem .to be equally definite. It does not embrace a power to pledge the responsibility of the bank for the accommodation of persons who are not depositors and have no funds. It is urged that the teller is a proper agent or officer to answer questions and give information as to the funds of a person who draws his check. But this is a very different thing from entering into a written engagement which operates to transfer the fund, if there be any, from the depositor, and which, whether there be any funds or not, imposes a pecuniary obligation on the bank, to last until barred by
Nor can the question before us be solved upon any distinction between a general and a special agency. I believe there-is such a distinction, valuable in some cases, but in most of no value whatever. The one I have already suggested is the one generally approved. “A special agency,” says Judge Story, “properly exists where there is a dele gation of authority to do a single act; a general agency properly exists where there is a delegation to do all acts connected with a particular trade, business or employment.” (Story on Agency, % 17.) Now, the only difference in doctrine arising out of this distinction is, that all the restrictions upon the authority of the special agent take effect, while, in the case of a general agent, all acts embraced in the delegation are valid, as to third parties, although directly
It is said that a principal is bound by all acts done within the ostensible or apparent scope of the power; and this is true. But what are the ostensible or apparent powers of an agent? The answer is, they are such as are conferred by the express appointment, or implied from recognition and the conduct of the principal; in the latter case, as we have seen the implication being that the acts were authorized which the principal has recognized and approved. In either case the authority is ostensibly and apparently given, although there are private restrictions upon its exercise. These, bona, fide dealers are not bound to know. But they are bound to know what the delegation is. If this is to be presumed from acts which have been recognized, then they are bound to know the character of those acts. That being ascertained, the power is brought to their inspection as much as though it were in writing and placed before them. The doctrine of ostensible agency goes no farther than this.
The aphorism sometimes laid down in reference to agency, that “where one of the innocent parties must suffer, he who has employed the agent and enabled him to commit a fraud should be a loser, rather than a stranger,” does not aid in solving the present question. It was first applied by Lord Holt, in Hern v. Nichols (1 Salk., 289). In that case the defendant’s factor, being authorized to sell silk, defrauded the vendee by misrepresenting the article. The principal was held liable; “ for,” said the lord chief justice, “seeing somebody must be a loser by this deceit, it is more reasonable
It should now be observed further, that'jan agent may clothe his unauthorized acts in the same form as those which are authorized, and still the principal will not be liable. To charge the. principal, the acts must be of the same character, not merely in appearance, but in their substance and nature. Thus, an authorized acceptance by an agent upon funds of the drawer is the same in appearance as an unauthorized one for the accommodation of a stranger. In the latter case the false appearance is derived wholly from the false representation of the agent. But as the principal has not authorized the act, so he has not the representation. I admit it is enough if the authority apparently includes the transaction, but that must be taken to mean the transaction as it is, and not its counterfeited. appearance^ The true rule of agency I take to be, that the principal is liable for such acts as he has authorized, and not for all their possible counterfeits. This is a distinction which I had occasion to notice at some length in the case of The Mechanics' Bank v. The New Haven Railroad Company (3 Kern., 599), and I have nothing further to add to'the remarks I then made.
In Coleman v. Riches (29 Eng. L. and Eq. R., 323), the plaintiff" was a dealer in grain, and the defendant kept a wharf. It was the custom for the vendors of the grain to
In reference to these cases a suggestion has been made, that the actions being on the case for fraud, the plaintiffs failed because they were not in privity with the defendant in each, whose agent perpetrated the wrong. In Grant v. Norway, a casual remark of one of the judges, while the argument was proceeding, affords some slight countenance to this idea. But when, after the argument, the chief justice came to deliver the judgment of the court, that ground of decision was not so much as alluded to. So in Coleman v. Riches, four of the judges delivered then opinions seriatim, and all of them went on the ground of a want of authority, and none of them on the ground of a want of privity in the dealing. The remark of Chief Justice Jervis, that there was no evidence that Riches agreed to furnish Coleman with vouchers for corn delivered, was intended by him as one of the arguments showing the want of authority; for he adds as follows: “It was only the case of a wharfinger whose duty it was, on delivery of goods, to give a receipt note. That consideration,” he continues, “really disposes of the case, because the agent had authority, on the ’evidence, only to give receipts for goods which were, in fact deliverei
It is, I believe, admitted that the present case cannot be distinguished in principle from The North River Bank v. Aymar, decided by the Supreme Court of this state (3 Hill, 266), and afterwards in the Court of Errors. There the agent was authorized by a written power of attorney, amongst other things, to sign and indorse notes and to accept and indorse bills of exchange in the name of the principal. .The action was on eleven notes, six of which were signed and five indorsed in the principal’s name, by the agent, and in form in all respects according to the power. It was shown on the trial, as to nine of the eleven notes, that they were not signed or indorsed in the business of the principal nor for his use, but for the accommodation of third parties. The plaintiffs’ bank had discounted the notes in good faith, and believing they had been given and indorsed in the business of the principal. It was held in the Superior Court of the city of New-York, where the suit' was brought and tried, that the plaintiffs were affected by the excess of power, and could not recover on the nine notes. Error was brought into the Supreme Court, where the judgment was reversed upon the opposite doctrine. The opinion for reversal was delivered by Justice Cowen, in which Bronson, J., concurred. A dissenting opinion was delivered by Chief Justice Nelson. All were agreed that the power of the agent was confined to notes and bills signed, accepted and indorsed in the business of the principal, although not so expressed, in terms, in the letter of attorney; and all were therefore agreed that the power was in fact exceeded, but not in such a sense as to affect the plaintiffs, who were Iona fide holders. The distinction made in their favor, it is well to observe, did not rest at all upon the negotiability of the paper, but upon the familiar principle already stated, that
In the case of The Mechanics' Bank v. The New Haven Rail road Company, a question, which I think identical in principle with the present one, received the careful consideration of this court. In that case the transfer agent of the defendants’ corporation was authorized to sign and issue certificates of stock, on a transfer from one shareholder to another upon the books, and on the surrender of the previous certificates. The agent, for his own purposes, signed and issued certificates to a large amount, when there had been
The doctrine of the cases cited has received the sanction of the Supreme Court of the United States, in a case which has very recently appeared. I refer to The Schooner Freeman et al. v. Buckingham et al. (18 How., 182). In that case the libellants were the consignees named in two bills of lading, signed by the master of the schooner, declaring in the usual form that certain quantities of flour had been shipped on board to be sent forward to them. In fact, the flour had not been shipped, and the bills were fraudulent contrivances of the supposed shipper for the purpose of obtaining advances from the consignees, who did advance accordingly, and afterwards libeled the vessel for nondelivery of the goods. They failed on the sole ground that the owner of the schooner was not bound by the contract of the master, the goods never having been shipped. The remarks of Mr. Justice Curtis are so much to my purpose that I quote: “Nor,” said he, “can the general owner be estopped from showing the real character of the transaction by the fact that the libellants advanced money on the faith of the bills of lading; because this change in the libellant’s condition was not induced by the act of the claimant (the principal), or of any one acting within the scope of an authority which the claimant (the principal) had conferred. A willful fraud, committed by the master on a third person, by signing false bills of lading, would not be within his agency. If the signer of a bill of lading was not the master of the vessel, no one would suppose the vessel bound; and the reason is, because the bill is signed by one not in privity with the owner. But the same reason applies to a signatura
These remarks apply with great precision to the case under consideration. It was in the usual course of the teller’s employment to certify checks for actual deposits of money, as it is in the usual course of the employment of a master to sign bills of lading for goods actually shipped. In both examples, and for precisely the same reasons, the course of employment measure's the apparent authority, and, therefore, the whole certifying and signing power of the agent. Simulated and fraudulent instruments may be concocted by the agent, well calculated to deceive. But these are the frauds of the individual who concocts them, for which he alone is liable. It is better, I think, in principle, that the rule snould be thus, than to adopt another which
It should not escape observation also that the case of The Schooner Freeman meets directly the suggestion already noticed, that the English cases of Grant v. Norway, and Coleman v. Riches, and the case here of The New Haven Railroad Company, can be distinguished from the present by the supposed want of privity between the defrauded recipient of the false instrument and the principal. I say the case of .the Freeman meets that suggestion, because the defrauded libellant was the consignee and not the assignee of the bill of lading. By the instrument itself, therefore, he stood in privity with the owner of the vessel, provided it had been signed by the master, acting under due authority. It may he added that the English cases were referred to as authorities, and were understood precisely as I have stated them.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Farmers and Mechanics' Bank, of Kent County, Maryland v. The Butchers and Drovers' Bank
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