Byers v. McClanahan

6 G. & J. 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1834
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 6 G. & J. 250 (Byers v. McClanahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byers v. McClanahan, 6 G. & J. 250 (Md. 1834).

Opinion

Stephen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is'an appeal from Washington county court, sitting as a court of equity. The bill was filed by the appellee, against the appellant, to compel him to contribute his proportion of the money paid by the complainant, to satisfy a bond debt, for the payment of which they were joint sureties, together with certain other persons, for a certain Matthew Lind, to a certain Thomas C. Lane. The debt was contracted by Lind, to Lany, for the purchase of a quantity of bank stock. The bill charges the paymeut of a considerable part of the money by the complainant, and that Lind, the principal, and all the other sureties, except the appellant, are insolvent. The bill claims from the appellant, by way of contribution, a moiety of the money paid by the appellee, who resists the demand upon several grounds of defence. He contends in the first place, that he is not liable to contribution, because he never executed the bond as surety, and that the same is not therefore legally obligatory on him. Secondly, that if under the circumstances it is to be considered as his bond, he executed the same, and incurred his liability as surety, at the request of the com[253]*253plainant, who is therefore not legally entitled to call upon him to make contribution. And lastly, that if he is responsible in the character of a co-surety, the complainant is not entitled to recover, boeause, he has not brought the necessary and proper parties before the court.

The first question is the only one which has created much difficulty in the decision of this case. It is, whether the bond under the circumstances attending its execution, can be considered his deed, and consequently legally binding upon him. When he wrote his name and affixed his seal to the paper, it was at the solicitation of Lind, the principal, and with an understanding, that the bond was thereafter to be written upon it, the paper to which his signature and seal were attached being at that time perfectly in blank. In that state it was carried to Lane, the obligee, by Lind, the principal, who, with the consent of Lind, entered the writing obligatory upon it, but refused to accept it, until it had been filled up, and acknowledged by all the obligors as their act and deed. For the purpose of obtaining such acknowledgments, the bond, thus written in full, was placed in the hands of an agent mutually agreed upon by Lind, the principal, and Lane, the obligee. The agent thus authorised, afterwards presented stho bond to the appellant, for the purpose of obtaining his assent and recognition of it, as his act and deed, and whether upon such presentation it received the sanction of the appellant as his bond, or writing obligatory, is the question; for that it was not le-( gaily binding upon him, until it received his assent andl acknowledgment, after it had been so written in full, there] can, we think, be no doubt. The law being well settled by the earliest writers in our legal histories, that a signature and seal attached to a blank piece of paper, for the purpose of having a bond thereafter written upon it, will not bind the party as an obligor in such bond. For the proof of this principle see Shep. Touch. 54, where it is said, “every deed well made must be written, i. e. the agreement must be all written before the sealing and delivery of it; for if a man [254]*254seal and deliver an empty piece of paper or parchment, albeit he do therewithal give commandment, that an obligation or other matter shall be written in it, and this be done accordingly, yet this is no good deed.” To the same effect see 1 Ohio Rep. 372, where the court say, “the ancient law was well settled, that a valid deed could not be made by writing it over a signature and seal, made upon a blank or empty sheet of paper.” We know of no decision by which this ancient doctrine is overruled.

The cases cited by the plaintiff’s counsel are of promissory notes not under seal, and of deeds, where all the material parts were written at the time of making the signature and seal.

Byers in his answer states, that Lind called on him with the said paper, stating that he came at the instance of the complainant and John McClanahan of James, with their request that he would join them as sureties for the said Lind, in a bond to Lane for the payment of $10,000, and not of $10,500, as the bond was afterwards written, and that he wrote his name and affixed his seal with that understanding;, he denies that he ever did acknowledge it as his bond after it was written, but he admits that after the bond was filled up, a certain James Watson called on him at the instance of Lane, as he stated, and shewed him the said bond, and pointing to his name asked him if that was his hand writing, and he admitted that it was; but he did not read or examine the instrument, nor did he acknowledge it to be his bond, as stated in complainant’s bill.

Lind, the principal in the bond, states in his deposition, that the paper was signed and sealed in blank; that the representation made to Byers was, that the bond was to be filled with the sum of $10,000, and that Byers signed it under that understanding, as well as he recollects. That the additional sum of five hundred dollars was inserted in the bond, in consequence of Lane’s having five hundred dollars more coming from the bank, which he wished to have inserted or included. It is proper here to remark, [255]*255that if such was the understanding between Byers and Lind; Lane, (he obligee, was not a party to such agreement, nor was ho under the circumstances of this case bound by it. If Lind violated the confidence reposed in him by Byers, he alone is responsible for such violation of good faith, and Lane, who was a perfect stranger to the contract cannot be affected by it. The proof is, that a blank piece of paper with the signature and seal of Byers attached to it, was carried by Lind to Lane; that Lane wrote the bond upon it with the consent of Lind, conditioned for the payment of $10,500; that the bond thus written was at the request of Lane, with Lind's acquiescence, carried by Watson to Byers, for the purpose of getting him to acknowledge it as his bond; and Watson proves that Byers, when the bond was presented to him, acknowledged his hand and seal, over which the same was written ; he swears he cannot recollect whether he acknowledged it as his bond, either in words or substance, nor can he say whether he read it, but he made no objection to it as his bond. He further proves expressly, that Byers subsequently told him he knew the contents of the bond when he presented it to him. Byers admits in his answer, that Watson informed him that he came with the bond at the instance of Lane, and that when the bond was presented to him by Watson, he acknowledged the signature to be his hand-writing. If he knew, as he admits he did, that Watson came to him with the bond, as the agent of Lane, for the purpose of getting him to acknowledge his seal and signature, the conclusion was natural and irresistible, that the object of his visit was to get from him such an acknowledgment, as would make the bond legally obligatory upon him.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Gianakos v. Magiros
197 A.2d 897 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1964)
Miller v. Hospelhorn
4 A.2d 728 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Citizens' National Bank v. Parsons
175 A. 852 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Shorey v. Webb
89 A. 391 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)
Houlton v. Houlton
86 A. 514 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1913)
Whitridge v. Barry
42 Md. 140 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1875)
Whitehouse v. Hanson
42 N.H. 9 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1860)
Cutter v. Emery
37 N.H. 567 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1859)
Young v. Lyons
8 Gill 162 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1849)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 G. & J. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byers-v-mcclanahan-md-1834.