Chase v. Breed

71 Mass. 440
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 71 Mass. 440 (Chase v. Breed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Breed, 71 Mass. 440 (Mass. 1855).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

This is an action upon a bond, alleged to [441]*441have been given by Josiah Clark of Boston, jointly and severally with the defendant, in August 1837. The bond recited that Henry A. Breed had made certain notes, which were indorsed by the plaintiffs for his accommodation, and held by the Nahant Bank ; and was conditioned to indemnify the plaintiffs against such indorsements, in case the Nahant Bank did not hold sufficient collateral security to discharge the notes. This suit was commenced in October 1853. Clark, one of the obligors, died in 1844.

The delivery of the bond being denied, it became necessary for the plaintiffs at the trial to prove such delivery. The bond being produced at the trial by the plaintiffs, this was prima facie evidence of a delivery; but it was counteracted and rebutted by proof that, after the decease of Clark, one of the obligors, the instrument was found amongst his papers, and possession of it was obtained by the plaintiffs, if not improperly, at least without the assent of any one having authority to deliver it.

The presiding judge then proceeds to state the testimony of James Jackson, the attesting witness, and that of Ebenezer W. Stone, who was the executor of the will of Clark; and repeatedly states that he reports all the evidence bearing upon the question of delivery. It is then stated in the bill of exceptions that “ there was no other evidence on the subject of the delivery of the bond; and the evidence was not in any manner attempted to be impeached; and the defendant’s counsel requested the court to instruct the jury, that if all the facts are just as stated by the witnesses, the jury would not be warranted, in law, in finding a delivery of the bond. But his honor the presiding justice did not so instruct the jury, but left it to them to find, upon the evidence, whether there was in fact a delivery either to the obligee, or to any one in his behalf.” The jury having returned a verdict for the plaintiffs, the defendant excepted.

It appears to the court quite clear, that the evidence thus reported did not prove a delivery of this bond by the obligors, and that the jury could not be warranted in finding a verdict for the plaintiffs.

The delivery of a bond, or other sealed instrument, to give it [442]*442effect as the deed of the party signing and sealing it, is technical, and has a strict legal signification. It is not enough that it is signed and sealed, and put out of the possession of the signer, to give it that effect. This is too familiar a principle of settled law to require authorities. It must be delivered to the obligee, or some person for his use, either at its date or after-wards ; if to a thud person, for the use of the obligee, it may be either absolutely, or upon some contingency; in the mean time it is an escrow, and if so deposited with a third party, it must be coupled with authority from the signer to deliver it at a future day, or to hold it till a future authority be given to the depositary by the maker.

But simply placing an instrument, thus signed and sealed, in the custody of a third party, without any purpose expressed, without authority, absolute or contingent upon the lapse of some term of time, or the happening of some future event, to deliver it to the obligee as the deed of the obligor, is not a delivery, in the sense of the law. Where it is delivered to such depositary, with authority to deliver it to the grantee or obligee upon some condition, or the happening of some contingency, it must appear affirmatively that the contingency has happened, or the condition been complied with, before it can take effect as a deed.

Upon the evidence reported, it appears to us that there Was no delivery of the instrument as the deed of the obligors. The evidence was competent, and pertinent as far as it went, because it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove the signing and sealing; but it stopped there. The burden of proof was on the plaintiffs to go further and prove a delivery.

The attesting witness, James Jackson, being called for that purpose, testified that he was a clerk in the employment of Clark, the first named obligor, in whose counting-room it was executed; that it was not then delivered to the obligee, who was present, but was handed to the witness, he thinks by Clark, his employer, without any authority, or instruction what he should do with it, that he recollects; that it remained in his custody some time, he thinks months; does not remember why [443]*443it was handed to him ; thinks it remained in the counting-room when he left Clark’s employment. Then, from the testimony of Stone, it appears that the instrument was in the possession of Clark at the time of his decease, and the possession of it was obtained by the plaintiff, if not improperly, at least without the agency of any body having any authority to deliver it.

But here we are met with a serious, not to say formidable objection, on the ground that a decision in favor of the defendant would be to set aside the verdict the plaintiffs have obtained, as a verdict against evidence. And the argument is earnestly pressed by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs, that this court cannot, upon a bill of exceptions, set aside a verdict as against evidence. It is argued, and it is undoubtedly true, that it is not the ordinary province of a bill of exceptions to present a case to this court for revision of the evidence, to reconsider and decide questions of fact; and the authorities to that point we would not in any respect weaken or impugn. Commonwealth v. Morris, 1 Cush. 391. Barnacoat v. Gunpowder, 1 Met. 225. French v Bancroft, 1 Met. 502.

The reason obviously is, that the province of this court, on a bill of exceptions, is to revise questions of law, and that ordinarily, in a bill of exceptions, the evidence is not fully reported, and is not reported with a view to enable this court to decide whether the verdict is contrary to evidence or not.

Perhaps a judge at nisi prius may not be required, and in ordinary cases, and indeed in most cases, it would be irregular and inconvenient, to express an opinion to the jury, whether on the whole evidence they would or would not be warranted in finding a verdict one way or the other. But it appears to us that this case presents itself in a different aspect; the judge is careful to state that he gives all the evidence, and adds, ex industria, that no evidence appeared on either side to control or impeach it; he seems therefore, by allowing a bill of exceptions in this form, to have adopted this mode of raising and presenting the question of law, whether on these facts testified of, if believed and found all true, the plaintiffs would be [444]*444entitled to a verdict, having in effect, by declining to give any instruction on the subject, given the jury to understand that they might find a verdict either way, upon the evidence, according to their judgment, which would be valid in law.

It is no doubt true, that the question of the delivery of a deed, and of the time of its delivery, is a question of fact for the jury. But, like many other such questions of fact, it was. a mixed question of fact and law, to be decided by the jury under certain directions in matter of law, asjfco what constitutes a delivery.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Mass. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-breed-mass-1855.