Cross v. State Bank

5 Ark. 525
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 Ark. 525 (Cross v. State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cross v. State Bank, 5 Ark. 525 (Ark. 1844).

Opinion

By the Court,

Sebastian, J.

The question to be decided here is, whether a paper signed and sealed with blanks, and filled up without, or in violation of authority, from the defendants, in a material point, can be considered as their deed? Whether it was filled up and delivered by Thompson, one of the joint obligees, or by an agent and clerk of the bank, makes no difference in principle under the view 'which is here taken. Were it the case of a promissory note or bill of exchange, there would be no difficulty, and the question would be of easy solution. The rule is well established that the signing a blank paper confers upon the holder an unlimited letter of credit, and that an abuse of the confidence, which it imports, affords no defence to the maker of it. This was partly a rule of policy, founded on the great convenience and facility they afford to commerce, and on the necessity of removing all obstacles to their free and easy circulation, and of inspiring confidence in the value of them as commercial securities. And, while the growing importance and increasing necessities of commerce have made not only these, but also bonds and other sealed instruments, in a great measure, subservient to its purposes; yet we are not to forget the great distinguishing features in their original creation. These originating in a state of things, which has long since ceased, have yet become so fixed and engrafted in the law, that the task of reform must be left to the Legislature, while we declare the law as it. is written. It is true that these sealed and unsealed instruments, for many purposes, have become the same. They both import a consideration; the one, from its commercial character, and the other, from the solemnity of its execution. As securities or evidence of debt, there is nothing now, but the forms of pleading and the statute of limitations to mark the difference between them. These changes in the law have not lessened the dignity of deeds, but have elevated the other to the same grade in importance. Yet the ancient divisions into contracts by parol and under seal, is still recognized, and remains the same. Promissory notes are still known as parol contracts, and the distinction once attempted between ordinary verbal and written contracts has never been established. If unsealeds such contracts, whether written or unwritten, are still preserved in their original class of parol agreements. It was upon this ground that they might be created by parol or verbal authority. For this reason too, we can see no difference between ordinary money bonds and official bonds. The one is as much a deed as the other; and while promissory notes and sealed instruments for many purposes of commerce, have become assimilated, it must be remembered that the forms and solemnities of their execution have never been changed. By the ancient law three things were necessary to constitute a deed — writing, sealing and delivery' — and when executed, it was held absolutely to estop and conclude the party. This conclusiveness arose from the great deliberation and reflection which were supposed to accompany each successive step in the slow process necessary to constitute it a final act and deed. The maxim that no one could bind another by deed, unless by authority under seal, was but a corollary to this principle; for, as the want of either act of deliberation, rendered the deed of no obligation, so when it was done by an attorney, the assent of the obligor, to be bound, should be shown by an act of equal solemnity; otherwise a solemn instrument of high obligation would be made to depend upon all the uncertainty and frailty of parol testimony. 1 Com. 777.

The rule requiring the deed to be in writing, seems to imply, that the obligation goes no further than the writing. This appears from Perkins, sec. 118. “If a common person seal an obligation, or any other deed, without any other writing in it, and deliver the same unto a stranger, man or woman, it is nothing worth, notwithstanding the stranger make it to be written, that he who sealed and delivered the same to him, is bound unto him in £20.” There being no sum of money stated in the bond, when it was sealed, defendants were no more bound by the instrument in that shape, than if it had been an entire blank. In this case it would have been unavailable, unless by a re-delivery after the blanks had been filled. The question then is, whether the defendants have authorized any person to fill up the blanks in such a manner as to create an obligation which did not exist before. Does the signing it with blanks, which must be filled up to make it complete, amount to authority by implication, that they may be so filled, and thus bind the party? This would seem to be decided by what is before said from Perkins. That case seemed to imply that the person to whom it was delivered, had authority to fill up the blank with an obligation, yet it was adjudged it could not be done. This same authority is referred to and cited as law in Shep. Touch. 54, and 4 Com. Dig. Fait (A. 1.) The same principle is to be extracted from Roll. R. 39, 40, where a bond being made to C with blanks left for the Christian name and addition of the obligee, which were filled up afterwards with the assent of the parties, it was held that the bond was void. 2 Stark. Ev. 373. So, in general, if blanks be left at the time of sealing and delivery, which are afterwards filled up, the .deed is thereby avoided, for it is no longer the same contract which was sealed and delivered. Ib. 2 Roll. Abr. 29. These cases show that parol authority will not answer for that purpose, even where there is a necessary implication arising from the purpose of the blank to be filled up, as in Facman’s case cited from Roll. Abr. above. These decisions establish the ancient doctrine, and it has been preserved, notwithstanding some inroads which have been made upon it in a series of modern decisions, in its original purity and simplicity. Thus, in Powell vs. Sheriff of Middlesex, 3 Camp. 182, which was upon a bail bond, executed by defendant, who being in a great hurry at the time, left the condition to be filled up, which was done, it was held by Lord Ellenborough, that the bond was void; and in that case he said: <£a man niay render himself liable as a party to a promissory note or bill of exchange, by signing his name on a blank stamp, but there are certain solemnities indispensable to the validity[of deeds. The defendant never did execute a bond with such a condition.” The rule thus laid down in Perkins and Shepherd, has been followed in manv American cases. In 1 Yerger 69, it was held that a bond signed and sealed in blank, with a verbal authority given at the time to fill it up, is void unless re-delivered; and the same principle was again recognized by that court in 1 Yerger 149. In Kentucky the adjudications have re-asserted the doctrine in Lockhart vs. Roberts, 3 Bibb 362, in which it is treated as a familiar and well settled principle; and in Bank of Limestone vs. Pennick, 5 Monroe, the doctrine is again recognized, for which the same authority from Perkins is cited. It has heen so ruled in Virginia, 1 Washington Rep. 73 and 4 Randolph 176. In this last case the court condemned the doctrine, that the signing and delivery of a bond in blank is an implied authority to fill it up. The case of Byeer vs. McClanahan, 6 Gill. & Johns. 250, is full to the same point, and so is 1 Hill S. C. Rep. 267.

Should it be supposed there is any difference in principle between a filling up by the obligee after delivery, or by an agent of the obligors before, the case of Davenport vs. Slight, 1 Dev. & Battle Rep. 381, settles the point.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ark. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cross-v-state-bank-ark-1844.