Isham v. . Post

35 N.E. 1084, 141 N.Y. 100, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 656, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1103
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 35 N.E. 1084 (Isham v. . Post) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isham v. . Post, 35 N.E. 1084, 141 N.Y. 100, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 656, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1103 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The relation between the parties to this controversy must be regarded as that of principal and agent. Post was a banker; not a member of the Stock Exchange and so .bound by its rules, but familiar with its customs and usages and controlled by them to some extent whenever dealing with stocks in the "Wall street market. He held himself out to *105 the business world in that character. By his circulars he advertised himself as dealing in choice stocks ” and promised his customers “ careful attention ” in all their financial transactions. Those who dealt with him contracted for and had a right to expect a degree of care commensurate with the importance and the risks of the business to be done, and a skill and capacity adequate to its performance. That care and skill is such as should characterize a banker operating for others in a financial center, and different in kind from the ordinary diligence and capacity of the ordinary citizen. The banker is employed exactly for that reason. Without it there might cease to be motives for employing him at all.

Isham was the trustee of an express trust, but in this dispute must be.regarded simply as an individual, and without reference to his trust character. For the trial court has found as a fact that, iñ employing the banker to loan for him twenty-five thousand dollars, he gave no notice of the trust character attaching to the money, contracted apparently for himself, and left Post to believe and be justified in believing that the money was his own. The evidence on the subject adniits of some difference of opinion, but on this appeal the finding must control.

In the same way the question whether Post’s services in making the loan were or were not to be gratuitous must be deemed settled. The. finding is that those services were to be without compensation; and on that ground the appellant claims that Post was a gratuitous mandatary and liable only for gross negligence. But, while no compensation as such was to be paid, it does not follow that the banker was freed from the obligation of such diligence as he had promised to those who dealt with him, or was at liberty to withhold from his agency the exercise of the skill and knowledge which he held himself out to possess. Nothing in general is more unsatisfactory than attempts to define and formulate the different degrees of negligence, but even where the neglect -which charges the mandatary is described as “ gross,” it is still true that if his situation or employment imjfiies ordinary skill or *106 knowledge adequate to the undertaking, he will be responsible for any losses or injuries resulting from the want of the exercise of such skill or knowledge. (Story on Bailments, § 182 a ; Shiells v. Blackburne, 1 II. Black. 158 ; Foster v. Essex Bank, 17 Mass. 479; First Nat. Bank v. Ocean Nat. Bank, 60 N. Y. 295.) In the latter case it ivas said that ordinary care as Avell as gross negligence, the one being in contrast Avith the other, must be graded by the nature and value of the property and the risks to Ai-hicli it is exposed. Post, therefore, was required to exercise the skill and knoAvledge of a banker engaged in loaning money for himself and for his customers, because of the peculiar character and scope of his agency, because of his promise of careful attention, and because the contract Aras made in reliance upon his business character and skill.

We should next consider upon aaIioiu rested the burden- of proof. The plaintiff alleged and proved that he put into Post’s hands, as his banker and agent, to be loaned upon demand at the high rates of interest prevailing and in the mode approved by custom and usage, the sum of tAventy-five. thousand dollars, Avhich sum Post had not returned, but refused to return upon proper demand, and so had converted the same to his ovni use. That made out plaintiff’s case. Judgment for him must necessarily follow, unless Post'in-answer has established an affirmatÍAre defense. That which he pleaded and sought to prove Avas that the money Avas lost without his fault and through an event for Avhich he was altogether blameless. In other words, he Avas bound to show that he did his duty fully and faithfully and without negligence or misconduct, so that the resultant loss Avas not his, but must justly fall upon the plaintiff. (Marvin v. Brooks, 94 N. Y. 75; Ouderkirk v. C. N. Bank, 119 id. 267.) With that burden resting upon him, we must examine his defense and the evidence given in its support, and determine Avliether or not it is our duty to sustain the adverse conclusion, to reArerse which he brings this appeal.

The trial court has found that Post Avas negligent in making *107 the loan upon the security of the certificates of stock taken as collateral, which had been raised Jby a forgery to indicate a larger number of shares than was the actual truth. Negligence is usually a mixed question of law and fact, and is never purely one of law unless the facts are wholly undisputed and admit of no conflicting inferences. (Filer v. N. Y. C. R. R. Co., 49 N. Y. 47.) In the face of the finding referred to we cannot reverse this judgment unless it clearly appears that- upon no possible view of the facts, and upon no inferences deducible from them, can proof of negligence be found, or unless, in reaching the result, some material error in the admission or exclusion of evidence has affected the judgment rendered.

The finding of negligence, by its terms, rests upon three omissions. The admitted cause of the loss was a forgery of the number of shares of the stock given as collateral on the loan by raising that number in one certificate from seven shares to seventy, in another from eight to eighty and - in a third from three to ninety-three. The certificates were the genuine and lawful certificates of the company when issued, signed and attested by the proper officers, and defective only in the forgery which raised the number of the shares. The loan was made to Mills, ¡Robeson & Smith, who were in good repute and standing at the time, but failed íavo days later for a very large amount. The trial court asserted Post’s liability upon the ground that he took the certificates without examination, Avithout presenting them for verification at the office of issue or of registry, and Avithout inquiry as to the solvency of the borroAving firm.

Assuming, as the court held, and as the facts of the agency appear to justify, that Post Avas bound to exercise in making the loan ordinary care, such as belonged to his business as a banker and to the duty he attempted to perform, we must consider the alleged omissions upon the facts disclosed in the record. In so doing Ave may dismiss the claim of negligence as inferred from the omission to inquire as to the solvency of the borrowers. There is no proof that inquiry Avould or could have developed any different information from that which *108 Post already had. There is no hint of any unfavorable rumors preceding the failure, or of any doubt in any quarter of the solvency of the borrowing firm; but, on the contrary, the undisputed evidence is that they were reputed to be solvent and responsible when the loan was made.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.E. 1084, 141 N.Y. 100, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 656, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/isham-v-post-ny-1894.