McClung v. Means
McClung v. Means
Opinion of the Court
One of the questions made on the trial was, whether the plaintiffs could recover without reasonable notice to the defendant. The view the court has taken of the ease renders it unnecessary to-decide that question.
The principal question arises under the mercantile law, which-, has its foundations in good faith. The first thing to be considered' is the object of the letter, so far as ic is explained by the contents, and other facts and circumstances proved in the case. The letter appears to furnish a credit, limited only by time. The liability to-be incurred was an indefinite amount, without any specification of the time or mode of payment. These were left to the discretion of Page, or of Boggs, or of both of them. They could not have: been submitted to the dealer with Page. This would have been a. folly too great to impute to the writer of a letter of credit in his: sober senses. If the discretion was confided to Page, no good' reason can be given why the letter was not delivered to him.. But as it was not, the fact itself furnishes a very strong argument that the writer did not intend to place such ^unlimited confidence in him. The letter was addressed, not to the firm, but tí»
All these matters of discretion in Boggs seem justly inferablefrom the nature and circumstances of the case. It appears one of the partners (plaintiff) had indirectly got information of the contents of the letter; besides, rumor had probably spread them over the city, and had brought them to both partners. There would, however, be something assuming the appearance of a departure from strict fairness and propriety to permit a 'man, perhaps a young and inexperienced one too, to be sought out and made enter into extensive engagements, to charge a friend, without an introduction or exhibition of the letter upon which the writer was to be charged, to an unlimited amount. Such is not the ordinary course of fair-dealing merchants. In the absence of authority, the court would pause before they would give countenance to a transaction attended with such circumstances of unfairness. The case of Ayliff v. Mr. Justice Tracy, 2 P. Wms. 65, bears a strong analogy, in principle, to the one before the court. The plaintiff courted one of the daughters of Sir T. Hazlewood, and treated with the father about the marriage, who consented to it. He wrote his daughter, intimating that he had met the plaintiff, and had agreed to give him a portion, and subscribed his name to the letter. The lather died before the marriage. The daughter did not show the letter to the intended husband before the marriage. The father had made his will before the ^treaty of marriage, and left his daughter a legacy of two thousand pounds, which the husband received. It was held this was no more than a communication, and not being shown to the husband before his marriage, he could not be supposed to have married in
The circumstances of this case authorized the jury to find for the defendant, and judgment must be entered on the verdict.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- McClung and Trevor v. James Means
- Status
- Published