Deardorff v. Foresman

24 Ind. 481
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 24 Ind. 481 (Deardorff v. Foresman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deardorff v. Foresman, 24 Ind. 481 (Ind. 1865).

Opinion

Ray, J.

Action by the appellee, upon a promissory note, against Deeds, Deardorff & Lehman. Deeds suffered a default. The other defendants answered in two paragraphs. First, that at the date of the note in suit, Deeds, who was insolvent, applied to them to execute the note with him, as his sureties, to the plaintiff, which they refused to do; that he fraudulently represented to them that if they would sign the note, he could procure as co-sureties with them eleven other responsible men, who are named, and that he would not deliver the note to the plaintiff until such signatures were procured. That he failed to procure the names he had promised, but delivered the note to the plaintiff. The note was made payable to the order of the plaintiff. The second paragraph of the answer averred the same facts, and was sworn to. The court below sustained a demurrer to both paragraphs. This is here assigned as error.

The appellants insist that the ruling in the case of [482]*482Pepper v. The State, 22 Ind. 399, requires that the decision of the court below in this case should be reversed. We will consider the case cited only so far as may be necessary to determine its effect upon the question now before us. That ease holds that, in an action upon an official bond given to the state, the sureties may defend, either upon the ground that the names of persons appearing to be signed to such bond were forged, and that they executed the bond upon the faith that such signatures were genuine; or that they were induced to execute and deliver the bond to the principal obligor upon the condition, or upon the consideration, or upon the promise, that certain other persons would sign it. It is, however, expressly, said by the judge who delivered the opinion, in overruling the petition for a rehearing, that “we do not say that the same rule that applies to bonds taken pursuant to a statute would apply in private transactions.” We are not disposed to extend the effect of that decision to instruments negotiable either by statute or by the law merchant, unless required to do so upon authority or principle. And as the case cited is put rather upon authority than principle, we will consider how far the decisions require us to extend the ruling. Indeed, the opinion given upon overruling the petition for a rehearing rests, except so far as it is based upon the construction of the statute, which construction we are not called upon to review, upon the case of Bibb v. Reid et al, 3 Ala. 88, which, it is stated in the opinion, “is directly in point, and, after much reflection, we are prepared to- say is, in our judgment, good law.” That case cites the law as stated thus, in Sheppard’s Touchstone 59: “So it must be delivered to a stranger; for if I seal my deed and deliver it to the party himself, as an escrow, upon certain conditions, &c., in this case, let the form of. words be what it will, the delivery is absolute, and the deed shall take effect as his deed presently, and (in reference to the legal operation of the deed,) he is not bound to perform the condition.”

The opinion proceeds.: “The. rule as above stated in the [483]*483Touchstone, has-been recognized in the United States, in the cases cited from 5 Cranch 351, 8 Mass. 230, and 2 Sumner 487; but it does not appear to obtain at this day in England, as appears by the case of Johnson et al. v. Baker, 4 Barn. & Ald. 440, where a composition deed was delivered by a surety who had signed the deed, to a creditor, not to be operative unless all the other creditors- executed it. It was held that- the deed was delivered aS an escrow, and that all the creditors not having executed it, the- surety was not bound. To the same effect aré the eases cited from 3 Wend. 380, 11 Verm. 448, 4 Cranch 219, 2 Harrington 396, 11 Peters 86.” The court seem evidently to have misconceived the effect of the decision in the case of Johnson et al. v. Baker. The creditors were all parties to the deed of composition, and when the debtor alone had executed it, “the deed was then delivered to one of the creditors, in order that - he might get it executed by the rest of" the’ creditors.” It does' not very clearly appear that because ■ an instrument, after being executed by one party, may be-delivered to another party to be executed by him, and! presented by him to others who are parties to the' deed, for their execution, and still not become'a deed till executed by all parties, that therefore a deed, perfect in form and! execution, may be delivered by the'grantor’to the grantee-as'an escrow.- Nor is the citation of the ruling in Pawling et al. v. United States, 4 Cranch, as conflicting with the later casé of Moss v. Riddle, 5 Cranch, satisfactory', especially as the; later case is: in conflict with the doctriné asserted by the Alabama court. But we will examine that casé more-carefully in the- course of this- opinion, only remarking in passing, that whatever the case- in 4 Cranch does decide, which we Will endeavor to determine in the subsequent review of the case,- it certainly does not hold that a delivery may be made by the obligor of the bond to-the obligee, as an escrow. Ñor does thé case of The United States v. Leffler, 11 Peters, exainined hereafter,, establish any such doctrine. The case in 3 Wend. 380, [484]*484was where a bond had been executed by nine persons as obligors, “and sent to New York to be delivered to the plaintiff, on certain terms and conditions, by which the obligors intended to be indemnified for having become bound for the payment of the money. The plaintiffs refused to receive the bond on the terms and conditions proposed. Subsequently, on the 29th of October, 1824, five of the obligors, but not those sued in .the action, without the knowledge or consent of the defendants in this action, having made a new and different .arrangement with the plaintiffs, by which the security relied on by the defendants for their indemnity was yielded up, delivered the bond to the plaintiffs.” It was held that the bond was not obligatory upon the four who never entered into the new arrangement with the plaintiffs. The bond was dated September 21st, 1824, and the plaintiffs had .then notice of the terms upon which the delivery was authorized; they refused to receive it upon those terms, but, on the 29th of October,, made other terms with five of the parties to the bond. The plaintiffs knew the terms on which the delivery was authorized, and refused to accept upon those terms, and the case simply decides that where the extent of the agent’s authority is known to the person who deals with him, that the principal cannot be bound outside of that authority. The case is good law, but not specially relevant to the text.

The case cited from 11 Yerm. was where the names of seven sureties appeared upon the face of the bond, and only two of the sureties ever executed the same. The instrument was plainly incomplete until executed by all those whose names appeared as parties.

The decision in Herdman v. Bratten, 2 Harrington, supra, was that the deed could not be delivered to the party as an escrow. This is an express denial of the doctrine it is cited to sustain. So also the case of The State v. Crisman et al., 2 Ind. 126, decides that “a bond cannot be delivered as an «escrow to the obligee.”

[485]*485In the case of the Madison, &c., Plank Road Co.

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24 Ind. 481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deardorff-v-foresman-ind-1865.