Nash v. Fugate

34 Am. Rep. 780, 73 Va. 595, 32 Gratt. 595
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 34 Am. Rep. 780 (Nash v. Fugate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Fugate, 34 Am. Rep. 780, 73 Va. 595, 32 Gratt. 595 (Va. 1880).

Opinion

Staples, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was before the court at the July term, 1873, held in Wytheville, and is reported in 24 Gratt. 202.

After the case was remanded to the circuit court, for a new trial to be had in conformity with the views of this court, the defendants tendered five pleas in writing, two of which were objected to by the plaintiff; but the objection was overruled by the court, and the pleas filed. The parties then proceeded to trial on the issues joined on the five pleas so filed.

When the evidence was concluded, the defendants asked for two instructions, to which the plaintiff objected ; but ■ the objection was overruled, and the instructions given; and the plaintiff again excepted.

In order to properly understand the bearing of these instructions, it is necessary briefly to advert to the point settled by the former decision of this court. No question was then raised as to the completeness of the instrument. It was assumed both in the pleadings and in the instructions given by the circuit court, that the bond in controversy at the time of its delivery to the obligee by the principal obligor, was in form a complete and perfect instrument, and that the obligee had no notice of the al[601]*601leged condition upon which the sureties had signed the b r ° same.

This court held, that where the surety intrusts the to the principal obligor, and there is nothing on the face of the paper to indicate that others are also to sign as sureties, the obligee cannot be affected by any agreement or understanding between the principal obligor and the surety, that others were also to sign before delivery, unless it was made to appear that the obligee at the time that he received the bond had notice of the condition upon which the surety had so signed.

This decision was based mainly upon the ground that as the surety gave confidence to the representations of the principal obligor, he must stand the hazard of their performance, and he cannot implicate the obligee in any responsibility in the matter unless the latter is guilty of fraud or gross negligence in accepting the security.

The instructions, already alluded to, given by the circuit court on the last trial, were intended to present to the consideration of the jury questions relating to the signing and delivery of the bond in controversy not passed upon by this court in the former decision.

One of these instructions, known in the record as the sixth, declares that if the bond in controversy was signed by the defendants as sureties, and delivered to the principal obligor, on condition that other persons were also to sign as sureties, and that if the principal obligor delivered the bond to the plaintiff without such other persons having so signed, and the plaintiff, at the time he received the bond, had notice of the condition, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.

This instruction, it will be perceived, assumes that the bond is a complete and perfect instrument upon its face, but that it is invalid in the hands of the obligee, if he had notice of the condition on which it was signed by the defendants.

[602]*602The other instruction, known as the seventh, affirms that if the defendants signed the bond on condition that other persons besides the defendants were also to sign as sureties, and such persons did not in fact so sign, and if, at the time of the delivery of the bond to the plaintiff, there were scrolls on the bond, so placed as to indicate that others were to sign as co-obligors, but to which no names were attached, the condition not being complied with on which the defendant signed the bond, the instrument, as to them, is invalid, and the plaintiff cannot recover.

It will be observed that this instruction says nothing of the alleged notice to the plaintiff of a conditional delivery. The proposition asserted is, that the mere fact that there are seals on the paper, to which no names are attached, plainly indicate ihat the instrument, on its face, is incomplete and of itself sufficient to raise a presumption- that others were to sign it beside the defendants; and this warrants the admission of testimony that such was the agreement of the parties, although the obligee may in fact have been ignorant of the condition.

These two instructions were based on the sixth and seventh pleas. The pleas and instructions may, therefore, be considered together. In so considering them, it will be more convenient, first, to examine the proposition contained in the last instruction; and that is, a bond perfect in form, apparently duly executed by all whose names appear thereon, but which has on it scrolls to which no names are attached, is, on its face, an incomplete and imperfect instrument.

This precise question has never been decided by this court; at least there is no reported case. In Hicks v. Goode, 12 Leigh, 479, 492, Judge Cabell, in delivering the opinion of the court, did not place the decision on the ground that the instrument contained a scroll to which no name was attached. He does not even advert to the fact as material. It was to the language of the instrument, [603]*603and to the fact that the name of one of the parties who did. not sign was inserted in the body of the bond, he looked exclusively. From this he came to the conclusion that the-instrument was incomplete, and plainly indicated on its face that some other person was to sign it before it could take effect as a valid obligation.

The decision in Ward et als. v. Churn, 18 Gratt. 801, proceeded substantially on the same ground. The incompleteness of the instrument there was inferred from its language, from the whole tenor of the writing, and not from the fact that there was a scroll without a name attached.

In the case before us, the names of none of the contracting parties are inserted in the body of the bond. It is signed by the principal obligor and nine others, claiming to be sureties. It is the joint and several obligation of all executing it. As to them, it is a complete and perfect instrument. There is nothing in its form or language to indicate that other persons were to sign it before it could take effect as to parties who have signed. Does the fact that there are scrolls to which there are no names render the instrument incomplete, or even tend to show an agreement that other parties were to sign, in order to give effect to the bond? It may be a circumstance to be considered, in connection with other evidence, showing that the obligee had actual knowledge of the agreement, but of itself is not sufficient to put him upon enquiry, or even to create a suspicion of the existence of such an agreement. The scrolls may indicate that, at the time the instrument was prepared, the obligee required that number of securities, or that the principal obligor expected or intended to procure them. Sometimes the bond is prepared by the obligee himself, and sometimes by the principal obligor.

Upon a contemplated loan of money or sale of property, quite often, as otherwise, the number of seals is purely accidental—attached to the writing simply with the view of [604]*604procuring a sufficient number of obligors to make the se- . . ° curity satisfactory to the obligee.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Am. Rep. 780, 73 Va. 595, 32 Gratt. 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-fugate-va-1880.