Bank of Commerce v. Selden, Withers & Co.

3 Minn. 155
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Minn. 155 (Bank of Commerce v. Selden, Withers & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Commerce v. Selden, Withers & Co., 3 Minn. 155 (Mich. 1859).

Opinion

By the Cowrt

— Emmett, C. J.

The complaint alleges that R. W. Latham on the 6th day of September, 1853, drew and delivered to the Plaintiffs his check, or bill of exchange, in the words and figures following:

“Washington, Sep. 6, 1853.

“At one day’s notice, Selden, Withers & Co. — Pay to C. E. Rittenhouse, President of Bank of Commerce, or order, accompanied by $5,000 Ches, and Ohio Canal bonds, thirty-five hundred dollars, with interest from date.

“ R. W. Latham.”

It further alleges that the Plaintiffs on the same day presented this check to the Defendants, and they accepted the same by writing across the face thereof, the words, “Good— Selden, Withers & Co.,” but that the check, although after-wards duly presented for payment, has not been paid.

The plain language of so simple and ordinary a transaction as is here detailed, is that Latham on his.own account and for his own individual use and benefit, drew on the Defendants, with whom he had a credit, or money on deposit, and that the Defendants after having accepted the bill refused to pay it.

The answer of the Defendants puts in issue the drawing of the bill, the presentation for acceptance, and the acceptance by the Defendants.

The case made brings up all the evidence offered on the trial of the action, and it appears from this that Latham was [160]*160a member of the firm of Selden, Withers & Co., which was then doing a banking and brokerage business in the City of Washington, D. C.; that on the 6th day of September, 1853, he applied to the Plaintiffs, who were also doing a banking business in the same place, for a loan of $3,500, but it does not appear that he stated at the time anything about the use or purpose for which the money was intended, or on whose account, whether on his own or that of the firm of which he was a partner; that he gave to the Plaintiffs a check on his firm for the amount, drawn and accepted by himself alone; that the check was not in fact presented to the firm of Selden, Withers & Co. for acceptance, but was kept.by the Plaintiffs, at Latham’s request, he paying the interest for a time, until about the 28th of November, 1851, when Selden, Withers & Co. having failed or suspended, they presented it for payment, and payment was refused, the Defendants refusing to recognize the acceptance which Latham had given; that at the time the Plaintiffs received the check from Latham, he gave to them $5,000 Ches, and Ohio Canal bonds, as collateral security; that the money thus obtained from the Plaintiffs was for the sole use and benefit of Latham, and that he accepted the check without the knowledge or. authority of his copartners — nor does it appear that they ever afterwards, directly or indirectly, acquiesced in, recognized or assented to Latham’s acceptance, or had any knowledge thereof until the check was presented for payment, some fourteen months after it had been drawn.

The theory which the Plaintiffs contended for, and to the support of which all their testimony was directed, was somewhat different from that established by these facts, and was a wide departure from that naturally suggested by the statement of facts in the complaint.

They claimed that the transaction from beginning to end was with the firm of Selden, Withers & Co., and not with Latham alone; that in the drawing as well as the accepting of the check, they had considered Latham as acting for his firm, and had a right under the circumstances so to consider him as acting, and that they negotiated the check on the [161]*161credit of the firm, and not on the credit of Latham alone. Some facts in addition to those above enumerated, were offered to establish these positions, but they do not become material in the view which we have taken of the case. No amendment of the pleadings to make them conform to the facts proved, or to the Plaintiff’s theory, was made or indeed ^asked for.

The Defendants on their part insisted that the transaction was entirely with Latham, and of which the firm was ignorant; that the name of the firm was used by Latham as surety only for his individual debt; that the form of the check itself was sufficient evidence of that fact; that the Plaintiffs were fully aware of the fact; that the attending facts and circumstances were inconsistent with any other theory, and were at least sufficient to put the Plaintiffs upon inquiry, and that they could not therefore recover against the firm without showing the transaction to be within the scope of the partnership business, or showing authority in Latham thus to use the firm name.

The Court charged the jury that in this case, under the pleadings, it was incumbent on the Plaintiffs to do more than prove the check and acceptance by one of the partners in the name of the firm, in order to establish a prima facie case ; that it should be shown that Latham thus used the firm name within the scope of the partnership business, or with the authority or consent of the firm.

That the obligation of Latham as drawer of the check was the original and primary obligation, while that of the Defendants as acceptors, was secondary and collateral, and that they stood in the relation of sureties to the obligation of the drawer.

This charge of the Court is excepted to and assigned as error. It was doubtless made with reference to the application of the facts proved, to the case made by the pleadings, rather than to the theory before mentioned, upon which the Plaintiffs claimed to recover; and ought to be construed with reference to the whole case as made out by the proofs.

The Plaintiffs were bound by the statement of the case [162]*162made by the complaint; that statement treats Latham as the drawer, and just as distinct from the firm of Selden, Withers & Co., the drawees, as though the drawer had been any other person. The presumption is that he drew on his individual funds or credit, in satisfaction, or on account of his own private debt to the Plaintiffs, or in pursuance of some private arrangement or transaction which he alone had with them— and had the facts been different, they should have been so stated. The complaint further asserts that the Plaintiffs themselves presented the check to the Defendants, which of course they could not do until after it had been delivered to them; that the Defendants accepted the same, and the Defendants are sued on this acceptance as drawees, not as original makers, or on account of any connection or interest which they may have had in the original transaction. They would not therefore be liable if they did not accept the check.

It was proved that the check was drawn, but without being presented to the Defendants, was accepted by the drawer himself; and the Judge charged that this was not enough in this case, under the pleadings, unless it was also proved that Latham used the firm name within the scope of the partnership business, or with the authority or consent of the firm.

In this we think the Judge was right. If the transaction on which the check was drawn, or the act of accepting a draft was not connected with, or within the scope of the partnership business, Latham could not bind his copartners by his acceptance without their consent — the Plaintiffs would have no right to presume an authority in him thus to bind his firm, and -sVould be bound to show the authority or consent of the remaining partners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Minn. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-commerce-v-selden-withers-co-minn-1859.