Howard v. Duncan
This text of 3 Lans. 174 (Howard v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the Court —
It was conceded on the trial that the defendant, Smith Duncan, had not signed the note on which the action is brought, and it was submitted to the jury to say whether, when he told Starring, the payee of the note, that it was all right, he intended thereby to admit that he had authorized his son, or any other person, to affix his name to the note, and the jury found he did not.
The only other ground upon which it can be claimed the defendant, Smith Duncan, could be made liable as maker of the note, was by ratifying or adopting the act of signing by his son or other person as his own after the transfer of the note to Starring. The judge charged the jury that he could not be made liable by such a ratification, and to this charge the plaintiffs’ counsel excepted.
In the Union Bank v. Mott (33 Conn., 95) it -was held that a person, whose name was signed to or indorsed upon negotiable paper without his authority, might afterward ratify the act, and thus make himself liable thereon.
In Thorne v. Bell (Lalor Supplement, 430) it was said by Bradley, J., that the defendant might be made liable on the forged indorsements, by ratifying them.
[176]*176These are the only cases I find bearing directly on the question of ratification. I cannot perceive any reason why a person whose name has been forged may not adopt and affirm the signature as his own act, and thereby subject himself to whatever civil liability may follow from it.
I am in favor of reversing the judgment and granting a new trial, costs to abide the event.
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.
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3 Lans. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-duncan-nysupct-1870.