Horrigan v. First National Bank

68 Tenn. 137
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 Tenn. 137 (Horrigan v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horrigan v. First National Bank, 68 Tenn. 137 (Tenn. 1877).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action by Horrigan against the Bank and W. W. Thacher, individually, for deceit. Thacher was the cashier of the bank, and plaintiff applied .to him in 1872 for information as to the solvency of the firm of Toof, Phillips & Co., a business house in the city of Memphis. It is averred in the declaration that Thacher replied, assuring plaintiff that he was well advised and informed as to the condition of said firm, and on being informed that plaintiff purposed purchasing acceptances and bills of exchange on said firm, if assured of their solvency, Thacher told him the firm was solvent and in prosperous business and financial condition, and that such purchases would be, in the judgment of defendant, a prudent and safe investment» The gravamen of the declaration is, that plaintiff, relying on these assurances, from time to time purchased a large amount of bills and acceptances of said firm, amounting in all to $15,000, and that the statements made by defendant were not true and proved to be so, and that such investments were imprudent and risky, said house being known by defendants to be involved, and said representations were false, fraudulent and deceitful.

It is alleged that by reason of said representations plaintiff had thus been induced to buy, and had suf[139]*139fered a loss of an unpaid balance on bis purchases to the amount of $2,000.

We need not at present go into the testimony in the case, as it is clear no reversal can be had for want of evidence to sustain the verdict, if the law was correctly given to the jury by the court below. It is insisted, however, very earnestly that this was not done, and we proceed to examine the questions presented in argument in this view of the case, and determine whether such errors exist.

The leading principles on which this action is sustainable, are few and simple. The gist of the action is fraud and deceit in the party making the representations, and damage to the plaintiff by reason of such fraud and deceit in the representations made. 1 Metc., p. 6. As said in 13 Vesey, 133, cited in the above case: “ The proposition is not that if a man being asked whether a third person may be trusted/’' answers, “you may trust him; he is a very honest man and worthy of trust/’ an action lies if he proves otherwise. There must be knowledge at the time. That is the sound principle, that the defendant knowing that person to be dishonest, insolvent and unworthy of trust, made the representation.” The like principle is more fully stated by Judge Deaderick, after a very full review of the authorities in the case of Wynne & Co. v. Allen, MS. He says; TJhe result is, that if a party represents as true, that which he knows to be false in such a way and under such circumstances as to induce a reasonable man to believe that it is true and i<t is meant to be acted on, and [140]*140the person to whom the representation has been made believing it to be true acts upon the faith of it and by so acting sustains damages, such representation is fraudulent and will sustain an action by the party damaged.”

While these cases hold the party must know his representations to be false in order to make himself liable, and such is the general rule, there might be a case where a party would be liable for stating as true, with a view and purpose to influence another party to trust a third party, that which he did not know. The purpose to influence the action of the party, however, by such statement as to facts by which that other party was injured regardless of their truth, would be the essence of the liability in such a case. We need but say that an honest statement of a mere opinion, however erroneous, as to the solvency or reliability of another, could not furnish the grounds of an action of this character.

We have carefully examined the charge of the circuit judge in this case, and think it in its essential features is not only a correct statement of the principles of law applicable to the main facts of the case as against Thacher, but that it is even very favorable to the plaintiff, more so probably in some respects than was strictly accurate. For instance, he goes, in one part of his charge, on the idea and so tells the jury, that if Thacher knew plaintiff was buying Toof, Phillips & Co.’s paper on the faith of the representations made by him, and their circumstances had changed so that, as he says, “these representations had become [141]*141false,” it was Thacher’s duty to have notified plaintiff 'and put him on his guard, otherwise he would be liable. While this is sound morally, and under some circumstances might be sound law where the party trusting to the representations lived at a different point,, and might be assumed to rely entirely on the statements of his correspondent, yet it is very questionable whether the principle could be fairly applied to the case of parties all residing in the same town or city where the party buying paper might be expected, as a man engaged in such business, to look after his own interest, and had equal means of information or opportunities to acquire knowledge with any one else as to the changes in the situation of his debtor.

It could not fairly be assumed that where the cashier of a bank is applied to for information as to the solvency of a party and gives that information truly, that he thereby undertakes to watch over the interest of such party in the future; assumes a sort of guardianship over it and is expected to be responsible if he fails to give notice of change of circumstances or reverses in trade that may befall the party about whom he has given information. The more natural and sounder view of the question would be, that if any future information was wanted he would again be applied to under such circumstances, and if no application was made he might well assume that the party whose interest was at stake, like other business men, was able to take care of himself and was guarding his investment with the watchfulness of one most concerned in . the result. A party cannot be [142]*142held in such a case to have given a continuing guaranty against future contigencies, nor to have bound himself to notify the other of what he may well be assumed to be able to find out for himself. We do not deem it necessary to elaborately explain our approval of the correctness of the charge of the court below. It suffices, as we have said, that it is ’ most favorable to the plaintiff, and if erroneous it is in this aspect alone, of which plaintiff cannot complain.

We do not think the bank, in any aspect of the •case, could be held responsible for the represntations made by its cashier. There may be cases where such liability might be incurred by the corporation by reason of representations made by the agent, such as the president or cashier. It must, however, be on the principle stated by the Court of Exchequer in case of Barwick v Eng. Joint Stock Co., that the principal has placed the agent in his place to do that class of acts, and he is held to answer for the manner in which such agent has conducted himself in doing the business which it was the act of the principle to place ■ him in. See 2 Law Reports, 265.

Answering questions as to the solvency of parties is no part of the business of the cashier of a bank, nor fairly included within the scope of such business. It may be and probably is an accident of such a position but not an incident to it. The bank was not applied to for information in this ease, but Thacher.

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Bluebook (online)
68 Tenn. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horrigan-v-first-national-bank-tenn-1877.