Austin, Nichols Co., Inc. v. Gross

120 A. 596, 98 Conn. 782, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 54
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 4, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 120 A. 596 (Austin, Nichols Co., Inc. v. Gross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin, Nichols Co., Inc. v. Gross, 120 A. 596, 98 Conn. 782, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 54 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

*785 Wheeler, C. J.

All of the questions set forth in the statement were asked by defendant’s counsel, as the parties agree, either for the purpose of proving the defendant’s claim that this check was the check of State Street Grocery Company, Inc., and not the defendant’s personal check, or for the purpose of proving the defendant’s authority to act for the Company. Other rulings complained of are either bad in form or immaterial.

The plaintiff’s objection was evidently based upon the ground that parol evidence was not admissible to prove these facts. If parol evidence was admissible, the rulings were erroneous. So that the single point for determination is whether parol evidence is admissible to prove that the signature—M. Gross—was not an individual signature, as it purported to be, but was the signature of State Street Grocery Company, Inc.

The decision must be based upon the terms of General Statutes, § 4378, which is a part of and identical with § 20 of the Negotiable Instruments Law as drafted by the Commissioners. We should give to the sections of this law a liberal construction, so as to secure to them a reasonable meaning and to effectuate the intention of its framers and make it workable and serviceable to the important business to which it relates. It is a codification of the law upon this subject and embraces all of the law to which its terms expressly or by necessary implication may be held to relate. Its framers sought to adopt the best rule prevailing in this country. Occasionally they have departed from their primary purpose and sought the rule elsewhere. Section 20 (General Statutes, § 4378) was copied from the German Exchange Act, and some of its provisions are a departure from the prevailing rule in this country. This section has been subjected to severe criticism, but it has outlived it, due to the *786 fact that the business world approves of it because it increases the negotiability of commercial paper and simplifies the proof in the recovery. Article by Charles L. McKeehan, published in Brannan’s The Negotiable Instruments Law (3d Ed.) pp. 472, 494.

Cases arising under this law are to be decided without reference to the authority of prior decisions, either those of our own jurisdiction or elsewhere, except that in the construction of a given section of the Act “consideration should be given to the authorities upon which the section is based,” or to those which will aid in the construction of the section. The not infrequent practice of courts to decide cases within the Act without reference to the Negotiable Instruments Law, has tended to impair the prime purpose of the law— uniformity in decision—, and also the tendency of courts to rest the case upon prior decisions and make this law an appendage of these, has tended in some jurisdictions to confuse the profession and complicate the law of commercial paper instead of making it clear, simple and certain as its framers intended. General Statutes, § 4378, of our Negotiable Instruments Law, which we are to construe, reads as follows: “Where the instrument contains, or a person adds to his signature, words indicating that he signs for or on behalf of a principal, or in a representative capacity, he is not liable on the instrument if he was duly authorized; but the mere addition of words describing him as an agent, or as filling a representative character, without disclosing his principal, does not exempt him from personal liability.”

This section covers at least five classes of cases: 1. Where one adds to his signature to a negotiable instrument words indicating that he signs for or on behalf of a principal, or in a representative capacity, he is not liable on the instrument if he was duly authorized. *787 2. By necessary implication from this statute, as Mr. Crawford and Professor Brannan have pointed out in their works on The Negotiable Instruments Law, it follows: Where one adds to his signature to a negotiable instrument words indicating that he signs for or on behalf of a principal or in a representative capacity, he is liable on the instrument if he was not duly authorized. 3. Where one adds to his signature to a negotiable instrument words describing him as an agent, or as filling a representative character without disclosing his principal, he will be personally liable. 4. By necessary implication it follows: Where one adds to his signature to a negotiable instrument words describing him as an agent or as filling a representative character, and does disclose his principal, he will not be personally liable. 5. Where the negotiable instrument contains words indicating that one has signed it for or on behalf of a principal, or in a representative capacity, he is not liable if he was duly authorized.

The questions involved in classes 1 and 2 are, whether the signature indicates that the signer signs for a principal or in a representative capacity or not, and whether he was duly authorized. These are facts to be ascertained from all the legitimate evidence in the case. If the instrument does not furnish the information from which a reasonable inference may be drawn, it must be obtained outside of this. Such evidence will not vary the contract, it will merely determine, or help to determine, what in fact the contract was. The prevailing rule at the time of the drafting of the Negotiable Instruments Law accorded with the rule of Hovey v. Magill, 2 Conn. 680, 682, a case where Magill placed under his signature to a note the words “Agent for the Middletown Manufacturing Company.” Magill claimed upon the trial that he was not personally liable, and evidence was received, in support of his *788 claim, of a vote of the Company by which he was appointed the agent for transacting the business of the Company, that he had acted as such agent and had been in the constant practice of signing notes, as in the note in suit, and with the knowledge of the Company which had regularly paid such notes. Similar ruling was had in Myers v. Chesley, 190 Mo. App. 371, 379, 177 S. W. 326, and Germania Nat. Bank v. Mariner, 129 Wis. 544, 109 N. W. 574. The authority of the agent to sign must necessarily be proved outside the instrument, and concededly this may be done by oral as well as by written evidence.

The questions involved in classes 3 and 4 are, whether the signature does describe the signer as agent or in a representative character, and whether at the execution or delivery of the instrument the principal was disclosed. Any form of legal evidence which tends to prove such disclosure may be admitted. This may be done by proof of the circumstances occurring at the execution or delivery and known to the payee, or by any facts which legally tend to show that the payee had such knowledge at this time. Cases decided under the Negotiable Instruments Law where evidence was received as between the original parties on the question of whether disclosure of the principal was made at the time of delivery, are: Megowan v. Peterson, 173 N. Y. 1, 4, 65 N. E. 738; Riordan & Co. v. Thornsbury, 178 Ky. 324, 198 S. W. 920; Phelps v. Weber, 84 N. J. L. 630, 87 Atl. 469. The case of Jump v. Sparling, 218 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 596, 98 Conn. 782, 1923 Conn. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-nichols-co-inc-v-gross-conn-1923.