Fox v. Fisk

7 Miss. 328
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Miss. 328 (Fox v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Fisk, 7 Miss. 328 (Mich. 1842).

Opinion

Opinion of the court, by

Mr. Chief Justice Sharkey.

The case has been discussed at great length, and the record is voluminous and presents a mass of testimony which has been examined with great care, with a view to ascertain the propriety of the grounds taken for reversing the judgment, and we are requested to give an opinion on all the points raised, with a view to a final settlement of the entire merits of the case. The first ground taken is that the action is misconceived; the second, that the agency was insufficient to bind Fisk; and the third is the bar created by the act of limitations. The force and application of these several points can be considered more conveniently by following the order adopted in the assignment of errors, the first of which is, that the court erred in excluding part of Fisk’s answer to Fox’s bill of discovery. Most of the answer excluded was objectionable, as it was argumentative and not responsive to the bill. There were small portions excluded which might have been properly admitted; such as the statements containing the substance of the letters received; but as the letters themselves were made a part of the answer, these statements were immaterial; the defendants lost nothing by rejecting them.

The second error is that the court improperly allowed Hoslip’s deposition to go to the jury. The ground of objection was, that the cross interrogations were not appended to the commission and forwarded. This was mainly owing to the fault of the defendant’s counsel, and I incline to think that the court did right; the question, however, is of little importance, and I shall not examine it.

Third, that the court erred in giving the several instructions asked for by the counsel of Fox. The correctness of this position must of course depend upon the instructions themselves, and our attention will be confined to such as may seem objectionable.

The court instructed the jury, “ that if they believed from the evidence that the property and notes may have been converted into money by the agent of A. Fisk & Co., they may presume such to have been the case, and in such case an action like this is the proper remedy.” The error consisted in telling the jury that if they [343]*343believed a certain thing might have been done, they had a right to presume that it had been done. By the bill of particulars, Fisk is charged with sundry notes of hand, without naming them, delivered to his agent by Kenneday, Elliott & Co. amounting to eight hundred and forty-four dollars; also with sundry “ book accounts on sundry persons, delivered by the same persons to the agent, amounting to three thousand five hundred and thirty-three dollars and forty-eight cents; also with three shares of stock in a steamboat company, amounting to three hundred dollars; and also with sundry receipts received by the agent, given by officers for claims deposited for collection, amounting to six hundred and four dollars and thirty-four cents. In order to recover for money had and received, the plaintiff will have to prove the receipt of money, or of something which may be readily turned into money. 4 Phil. Ev. (late ed.) 117. It is said that the receipt of stock will not be considered as the receipt of money. Promissory notes, it is true, may be given in evidence under the common counts, but this must be between the original parties. Id. 15. In such case the note is regarded as evidence that the maker received that much money from the payer, and in more recent cases it has been held that any holder of a negotiable note may give it in evidence against the maker under the money counts. But this action is for the amount of notes made by other persons, which were delivered by Fox to Fisk’s agent, in liquidating a claim due from Fox to Fisk. _ After diligent examination, I have not been able to find any case like this, in which the action for money had and received would lie, without proof that the notes had been converted into money, or received and used as such. In the case of Gillard v. Wise et. al. 5 B. & Cress. 134, the action was for money had and received for the notes of a banker deposited with the defendants, who were also bankers; but it was held to lie exclusively on the ground that ithe notes had been received as cash, and used as such by the defendants, by having them credited to their account in payment of the other bankers. So in the case of Peckard v. Banks, 13 East, 20, a stake holder whojiad received as cash country bank notes, and who had paid them over wrongfully, was held liable in this form of action; but it was only because they had been received and treated as money by all parties. Vide 2 J. J. Marshall, 69. But [344]*344even if the amount of the promissory notes could be recovered under the count for money had and received, still it must be perfectly clear that the book accounts, and the officers’ receipts, can furnish no ground for a recovery under this count without actual proof that the money was received for them. They are never negotiated as notes are, nor are they evidence of debts. They are not binding or conclusive on any one. The court therefore should have charged the jury that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover for these items, without proof that the money had been received on them.

Other instructions were given, which are less objectionable than that which we have just noticed, and we shall therefore proceed to the consideration of the remaining errors assigned.

Fourth. That the court erred in refusing to give the tenth instruction asked by the defendant’s counsel, to wit: “that if the jury believe from the testimony that there were no mutual accounts and mutual dealings between said Fisk & Co. and said plaintiff for more than six years before the commencement of this suit, then said action is barred by the statute of limitations of this state.” The question here presented is one about which there seems to have been much difference of opinion, both in England and the United States, and it seems to be still in an unsettled state. I incline to think the court was right in refusing it; but as it is not important in the case, I shall give no positive opinion.

Fifth. The next and only remaining error assigned is, that the court erred in refusing the defendant a new trial on the reasons set out in his motion, and in rendering judgment on the verdict against said Fisk. The two remaining grounds taken for reversing the judgment may be considered under this last assignment, to wit: that the agency of Caldwell and Findley did not bind Fisk to the extent claimed, and that the cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations.

Caldwell was first appointed agent of A. Fisk & Co. to receive payment of the debt due from Fox to Fisk, and his instructions were reduced to writing. His authority extended no further than the collection of the debt, either in money or its equivalent. Under this instruction he proceeded to Shannonsville, Tennessee, which was Fox’s place of business. He succeeded, to a limited [345]*345extent, in the object of his agency; but before he consummated an entire settlement he left the place, giving the business over into the hands of Findley, to whom Fox had made an assignment of certain effects for the benefit of Fisk. Caldwell could confer no greater power on Findley than he had himself, and Fisk never recognized the agency of Findley as extending beyond the mere collection of the debt due him. The correspondence shows this; in addition to which, Fisk was called on, by bill of discovery, to state whether Caldwell and Findley were not his agents.

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

Related

Darden v. Lines
2 Fla. 569 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1849)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Miss. 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-fisk-miss-1842.