First National Bank v. Shaw

112 N.W. 904, 149 Mich. 362, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 678
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1907
DocketDocket No. 57
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 904 (First National Bank v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Shaw, 112 N.W. 904, 149 Mich. 362, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 678 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This action was brought upon a note reading as follows:

“$600.00 Onaway, Mich., Nov. 18th, 1901.

• “ On September 1st, 1903, after date, for value received, I promise to pay to Comstock & Crawford, or order, six hundred dollars at the Onaway Banking Company office in Onaway, Mich., with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, interest payable annually.”

Signed by Thomas E. Shaw and 19 others.

Plaintiff purchased this with two other notes, aggregating $2,000, and claimed to be a bona fide holder thereof. Defendants pleaded the general issue with notice that the note was procured by fraud on the part of the payees; that the names of a number of the signers of the note were forged; that some of the'makers signed the note with the understanding and agreement that before the note was to be delivered certain others should also sign it, which was not done; that the note in question was given as the purchase price of a certain stallion; and that’the horse did not comply with the representations made by the payees of the note. A copy of the note in question was embodied in the declaration by which the suit was commenced. Thomas Shaw, one of the defendants, made and filed an affidavit, denying the execution of the note. The case was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict in favor of defendants.

[364]*364Inasmuch as the jurors were instructed that the plaintiff was a bona fide holder of the note, it will be unnecessary to discuss many of the questions presented by counsel. There are, however, two important questions which call for consideration. The first of these is, Was the notice sufficient to justify the requirement that plaintiff must show the execution of the note, before it could be offered in evidence, and to admit the defense of forgery as to some of the signatures ? We think the judge was justified in holding the notice to be sufficient, by the following authorities: McCormick v. Bay City, 23 Mich. 457; Wren v. McLaren, 48 Mich. 197; Haight v. Arnold, 48 Mich. 512; McRobert v. Crane, 49 Mich. 483; Thompson v. Village of Mecosta, 127 Mich. 522.

The important question in the case is presented by those portions of the charge to the jury reading as follows:

“ Here was a club of 20 men, as is conceded, organized for the purpose of purchasing this horse. Those 20 men were willing to sign notes which would bind them for the payment for that horse. The paper which they did sign— that is, those of them who signed it — is a joint and several note. The language of the note is: ‘ On September 1st, 1903, after date, for value received, I promise to pay to Comstock & Crawford, or order, six hundred dollars.’ And the other notes, each of them for $700’, are of the same tenor and purport. It is not only a joint note, of 20 defendants, but it is a joint and several note, upon which any one of these defendants might be sued alone and held for the full payment of the face of that note. And those men, gentlemen, when they signed that note, had the right to have it signed by 19 other men, whose signatures should not be forgeries, but should be the genuine, binding signatures of the men whose names purported to be upon the instrument. It seems to me that that would be common sense. It seems to me to be common sense. It sounds to me as though it would be common fairness, and honesty, and it is the law.

“The question in this case, gentlemen of the jury, for your consideration is whether these claims of these men that they hevpr signed this note, or authorized it, are true.' Mr. Gillis, Mr. Curtis, Mr. Irwin, Mr. Deitrich, [365]*365and Mr. Thomas assert they never signed this paper. * * *

‘ ‘ I charge you as the law, that if those five men, or any one of them, did not sign this note — if those five men or any one of them, did not sign this note, or authorize it to be signed for them, but that their names were forged without their consent, it would invalidate the note as to every one of these defendants, and your verdict would be no cause of action. That is the law of this case in a nutshell. * * *

“ If you do not find that fact by a fair weight and preponderance of the evidence, you will find a verdict for the plaintiff for $736.02.”

Counsel for the defendants insists the court properly instructed the jury upon this phase of the case. We quote from his brief:

“The note in question contained 20 signatures. Five of the men whose names appear on .the note allege their names are forged. When the payees procured this note, it was with the understanding and agreement, expressed and implied, that genuine names should be signed to the note of responsible men to the number of 20. Witness Chandler was the last man to s gn the note. There were 19 other names on the note at that time. Mr. Chandler testifies that when he signed the note, the last man to sign it, he did not question the other signatures. At that time he was asked by the payees of this note, who brought it to him, to sign the note, which note, at the time it was so brought to him by the payees, contained from on© to five forged names. As soon as the payees obtained Mr. Chandler’s name to the note, they retained possession of it, and seek to maintain that it is good in the hands of an innocent purchaser. We contend that it was a forged note and void as against every signature, even in the hands of an innocent purchaser. * * *

“ The evidence in this case shows that the payees took the note from man to man, securing the signatures of the makers. To every maker who actually signed the note, there was a forgery before or after his signature. If it was before his signature he was defrauded as much as though it was after his signature. * * *

“If those five names had been signed by the parties themselves, the other 15 signers would have less to pay. They were therefore prejudiced in any view we may take [366]*366of it, by the forgery of the names in the note; and, as held in Searles v. Seipp, 6 S. Dak. 472: ‘ Under the modern authorities, such a note is held void in toto.’”

There can be no serious doubt that forgery of a negotiable instrument, or the indorsement thereon, except in case of ratification or estoppel, nullifies the instrument as to all parties against whom the forgery is committed. Norton on Bills & Notes (3d Ed.), p. 254, and this is true of paper which is altered in a material part. 2 Parsons on Notes & Bills, pp. 571, 580. It has been held that the destruction of a memorandum written under a promissory note, and qualifying it, vitiates the note in the hands of a bona fide holder, having no knowledge of the alteration. Wait v. Pomeroy, 20 Mich. 427; Holmes v. Trumper, 22 Mich. 429; Bradley v. Mann, 37 Mich. 1; First Nat. Bank of Cassopolis v. Carter, 138 Mich. 421, and the many cases there cited. These cases are not conclusive of the question involved here. An examination of the cases will not show one where part of the signatures were genuine and part forgeries, which had been placed thereon before the note was executed and delivered. Nor will they show a case where the alteration was made before the note was delivered. We think this is an important distinction.

Counsel for plaintiff contend that while the charge of the court might be good in a controversy between the original parties to the note, that it is not good law when-applied to a bona fide holder of the note.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 904, 149 Mich. 362, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-shaw-mich-1907.