Johnson v. Ramsey

43 N.J.L. 279
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 43 N.J.L. 279 (Johnson v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Ramsey, 43 N.J.L. 279 (N.J. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beasley, Chief Justice.

This case presents for consideration, in one of its aspects, the question how far the [281]*281written contract inherent in the endorsement of commercial paper, as between accommodation endorsers, can be controlled or affected by a cotemporaneous oral agreement. The plaintiff in the present suit is the first endorser on this note, and has paid part of the sum mentioned in it, and he now seeks to compel the defendant, who is the next endorser below him, to contribute one-half of this outlay, on the ground that at the time they signed the paper such was the understanding between them. As they stand upon the note these are successive endorsements, and unexplained, and considered intrinsically, they import a primary liability in the plaintiff; and, with respect to him, an entire irresponsibility on the part of the defendant. This is the legal effect of the signatures as they appear on the back of the note ; the inquiry is, whether another force can be given to them by virtue of an agreement between these parties, entered into at the time of making such endorsements.

In defining the legal rule on this general subject, Mr. By les, in his treatise on Bills, page 90, correctly says that no mere oral agreement can have any effect at law in contradicting the instrument, if cotemporaneous with the making of it.” This is the ordinary principle applicable to every species of written contracts; and although, in the main, it throws its protection around the agreement embodied in commercial paper, still it cannot be denied that in this latter case it has sometimes been thought to be subject to certain unusual limitations. That such supposed limitations have the sanction of high judicial authority I think is manifest, though these exceptions to the general rule are not so numerous as is sometimes supposed. I have not perceived that in any English case a different rule in this respect has been applied to commercial paper from that which protects the inviolability of other species of written undertakings. And such, too, is the general bent of the authorities in this country. Nevertheless, no one-can look into the American decisions and text-books without being painfully impressed with the idea that very great confusion in the use of principles prevails with regard to this topic; but [282]*282upon careful examination it will be found that this state of things is for the most part owing to mistake in the application of the law to particular facts, and not to any denial of the cardinal doctrine that these written commercial contracts, like other proofs of the same nature, are not liable to modification by inconsistent, cotemporaneous, oral understandings. Occasionally a case can be met with in which it may be thought, and upon very satisfactory grounds, that the written contract has been altered by the extraneous evidence, but upon careful scrutiny it will be ascertained that such evidence has been sanctioned for the reason that in the judgment of the court it is not out of harmony with the agreement, as contained in the instrument. So, sometimes, cases in which a want of consideration has been permitted to be shown have been regarded as exhibitions of instances of a departure from the rule in question, but it is plain that they do not evidence such a deviation, as the proof of such a defect is always, under ordinary circumstances, admissible, in order to invalidate a simple contract, though reduced to writing. In the same manner fraud and illegality are legitimate defences to suits on all other instruments, as well as, under certain conditions, to those founded on bills or notes. And when the commercial contract intended to be committed to writing has been only partly expressed, then, as in other similar cases, the residue may be proved by extrinsic evidence. This last rule is pointedly exemplified in that class of cases in which a note has been endorsed in blank by a third party, before the payee has put his name upon it. In the courts of this state such an endorsement is held to carry with it so incomplete and uncertain a meaning as to be, on the principle just referred to, open to the explanation of oral evidence. This has been ruled ano finally decided in the cases of Crozer v. Moore, Spenc. 256, Watkins v. Kirkpatrick, 2 Dutcher 84, and Chaddock v. Vanness, 6 Vroom 517, and in all these cases the fundamental rule that a written contract, having a complete import, must speak exclusively for itself, was fully admitted. And even in those states in which, under the same conditions, a different [283]*283result lias been reached—and such has been the case in the State of New York and elsewhere—such result has rested on the consideration that this particular kind of endorsement expresses, in its own terms, as affected by legal rules, a contract complete and intelligible, and on that account is not variable by the force of foreign testimony. It will be observed that neither of these lines of decisions is invasive of the rule under consideration. And it may be further remarked that in no jurisdiction has the rule that oral evidence is inadmissible thus to qualify a written contract, perfect with respect to its signification, been more uniformly and stringently enforced than within this state. The truth of this statement will conclusively appear by a reference to the cases collected in Stewart’s Dig., p. 502, pl. 439.

This being the established general rule, the question arises, how is this present offer of parol evidence to be legitimated?

These parties, as has been stated, are accommodation endorsers, and the name of the one stands before the other on the back of this note. The first inquiry, therefore, is as to the legal effect of that collocation ; does it form, by settled rules of law, an entire and definite understanding between these litigants ? If it does, to make the oral agreement admissible, which is here sought to be superinduced, it must rest on some exceptional ground, as such proof would be plainly excluded by the operation of the general principle above expressed.

In the ease of Johnson v. Martinus, 4 Halst. 144, this precise question was before this court for consideration, and it was then explicitly held that an endorsement in blank does not constitute a complete written contract, and that, therefore, the understanding that subsisted between endorser and endorsee could be shown aliunde in a suit between them. But in the opinion read in the Court of Errors in the before-cited case of Chaddock v. Vanness, this decision was emphatically disapproved, and as such criticism was not dissented from by any member of the court, so far as I know, it is not to be regarded as an absolute authority. Intrinsically considered, it is difficult to see how it can sustain itself. It is founded on the [284]*284broad doctrine that the usual blank endorsement on a note is inconclusive with respect to the terms of the contract between endorser and endorsee, and that that contract is subject to all the uncertainties that attend the admissibility of oral testimony. In the case reported by Halsted, the endorser signing the note in blank was allowed to stand, by forc$ of extraneous evidence, in the same position as though he had signed it without recourse.” Such a doctrine is not consistent either with public policy nor with the great current of authority both at home and abroad.

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46 U.S. 278 (Supreme Court, 1846)

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.J.L. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-ramsey-nj-1881.