Sayre v. Nichols

7 Cal. 535
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 7 Cal. 535 (Sayre v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayre v. Nichols, 7 Cal. 535 (Cal. 1857).

Opinion

Burnett, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court—Terry, J., • concurring.

This case was before this Court at the October Term, 1855, 5 Cal. Rep., 487, when the judgment of the District Court was reversed and the cause remanded. Another trial was had, and a verdict apd judgment given for defendant, from which the plaintiff again appeals to this Court. A copy of the bill is given in the report of the ease, which is correct except in one particular. Instead of the word “ agent,” at the end of Michols' name, it [538]*538should have been thus: “ C. P. Nichols, per George W. Corey, agents.”

It was decided by this Court, when the case was up before, that the word “ agent,” appended to the name of the agent, had always been held as merely descriptio persones, and in no respect affected his liability. The current of decisions certainly supports this view. But I confess I could never understand the reason upon which this rule was founded. When a party appends to his name the place of his residence, as, for example, Charles Carroll, of Carrolton, or affixes a letter to his name, as John Smith, T., I can well understand that he intends by this a description of the person 3 but when he appends the term, agent, or other term of like import, I cannot understand it as a description of the person, but I take it to be a clear designation of the capacity in which the party acts. To use the general word agent, as descriptive of a particular person, would seem to be entirely improper. And as the sole object of a Court in construing written instruments, is to arrive at the true intention of the parties, it would seem that this rule has been established by explaining the true meaning of the instrument entirely away, contrary to the good sense of the thing, and the evident intent of the parties. For I cannot believe that a person signing his name and appending the word “agent” to it, ever did intend any thing else than a designation of the capacity in which he acted. If a party sign a promissory note, and append to his name the word security,” or surety,” he only means to bind himself as such and not as a principal. Bryan v. Berry, October Term, 1856 3 Lightstone v. Laurencel & Sainsevain, 4 Cal. Rep., 277. So, if a" party append to his name the word agent,” he clearly designates the capacity in which he acts, and he thus designates such capacity for the evident purpose of showing that he intends to bind himself only in that capacity. By assuming to act as agent he does guaranty his authority thus to act, and no more. The party who takes the paper is not bound to take it in that form. He is bound to know the contents of the paper, and knowing the contents, he is bound by the express intention of the party signing it. There can be no difference in principal, as there is no difference in the interest, between the case of a surety appending the word “ surety ” to his name, and the ease of an agent appending the word “ agent.” And to use the forcible language of this Court in the case of Bryan v. Berry: “ Is not the meaning, sense, and information, conveyed alike in both cases ? ” And I must think that this rule, which seems to do entire justice to the plain intention of the parties, has forced the Courts to admit parol testimony in many cases, to explain or vary the terms of written instruments, in violation of that statutory rule, that when the meaning can be collected from the writing, that meaning must prevail. The rule that the word [539]*539‘‘ agent,” appended to the name of the agent, is merely a¿description of the person, is not, in my view, sustainefi>_by coítí» .. mon sense; and when a rule is not sustained by common sense; well understood and legitimately applied, it is certain to be wrong.

But conceding the rule to exist, as laid down in the former opinion in this case, will it apply to the bill upon which this suit is brought ?

The case of Stackpole v. Arnold, 11 Mass. R., 207, has been cited and relied upon by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, and seems to lay down the proper rule upon this subject. The notes, in that case were executed by Cook & Foster, who signed their own names, without any qualification. There was nothing upon the face of the notes to show that they executed them as agents, or for the defendant. The fact that they were agents of defendant, and the transaction was for his benefit, was indeed proved, by parol, but this proof made the notes different instruments from what they purported to be upon their face; and the clear and intelligible rule established by the Court, in that case, is well expressed in the syllabus :

“ When one makes a written contract, intending to act therein as the agent of another, and to bind his principal, it is necessary that it should appear in the contract itself, that he acts as such agent.”
Oral testimony is not admissible to contradict, vary, or materially affect, by way of explanation, any written contract, whether within the Statute of Frauds or not, provided the contract is perfect within itself, and is capable of a clear and intelligible exposition, from the terms of which it is composed.”

The same intelligible principle was also held in the subsequent case of Mayhew et al. v. Prince, 11 Mass. R., 53. In this case the bills of exchange were drawn by the defendant, on Higginson, Dodge & Co., a mercantile house of Hew York, of which Stephen Higginson, Jr., of Boston, was the principal partner, and the bills were payable to plaintiffs, or their order, and by the tenor of them, were to be placed to the debit of Stephen Higginson, Jr., when paid. It was fully proved, by parol, that defendant was acting as the agent of Stephen Higginson, Jr., and that plaintiffs knew that fact, at the time of taking the bills, but those facts were not permitted to vary the meaning of the parties, as expressed in the bills themselves, and the defendant was held as the responsible drawer,” because he put “ his own name to them, without any qualification.” And the circumstance that, in the body of the bills, the drawees were directed to charge the amount paid upon the bills to Stephen Higginson, Jr., was not sufficient to show, upon the face of them, that the defendant only acted as the agent of Stephen Higginson, Jr. So far as the bills, upon their face, went to show the relation ex[540]*540isting between Prince and Higginson, they were indefinite and uncertain. It might well have been the fact that Higginson was indebted to Prince, and Higginson, Dodge & Co. to Higginson, and that, by mutual agreement, Prince was authorized to draw the bills, as a mode of payment. In such case, he would not be liable upon the bills, to repay the drawees, as the amount paid upon the bills was, by his express directions, to be charged to Higginson, and not to him. And Justice Parker, in delivering the opinion of the Court, very justly said :

“ It seems to be a general principle that the signer of any contract, if he intends to prevent a resort to himself personally, should express in the contract the quality in which he acts.”

The true result of these cases would then seem to be this : that the capacity in which the party acted in signing his name to an instrument, must appear alone upon the face of the instrument itself; and.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Cal. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayre-v-nichols-cal-1857.