Smith v. Morrill

54 Me. 48
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 54 Me. 48 (Smith v. Morrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Morrill, 54 Me. 48 (Me. 1866).

Opinion

WaltoN, J.

The indorsement of a note in blank is prima facie evidence of a contract between the indorser and the indorsee, the terms of which are tolerably well defined in law, and generally understood among business men. There are many dicta to the effect that the contract implied in a blank indorsement is to be regarded as a written contract, not to be varied by parol evidence 5 but an examination of adjudged cases will show that this is true only to a limited extent. Prima facie the instrument is presumed to exhibit truly the rights and liabilities of all the parties to it, but this presumption is not always conclusive: it may sometimes be controlled by evidence, written or verbal, dehors the instrument. Perhaps it would have been better, had it been uniformly held, that blank indorsements, like contracts written out in full, have a fixed legal character, not depending, for their meaning, upon the vague and often uncertain recollection of witnesses, and imperfect understanding of the parties. But this has not been done. A strong desire to decide each particular case according to its [50]*50apparent equity, has had the effect to establish a different doctrine ; namely, " that, as between the immediate parties, a blank indorsement is prima facie evidence only of the contract which they have made.”

In Smith v. Barber, 1 Root, 207, the first question made was whether parol evidence might be admitted to explain the blank indorsement and the intent of the parties therein, and the Court held the evidence admissible; that a blank indorsement, until it is filled up, has no certain import; that it may be for one purpose or another, or none at all. In Brewster v. Dana, 1 Root, 267, it is said by the Court, that a blank indorsement has no certain import until filled up. In Barker v. Prentiss, 6 Mass., 430, the indorsement was in blank, which implies, prima facie, an absolute transfer of the note, but the Court held that parol evidence was admissible to show what the real contract was, and that the note was indorsed for collection only. The same doctrine was advanced in Herrick v. Carman, 10 Johns., 224. Same in Lawrence v. Stonington Bank, 6 Con., 521. In Boyd v. Cleveland, 4 Pick., 525, the plaintiff was permitted to show by parol evidence that, at the time of the in-dorsement of the note to him, the defendant agreed to pay it if the maker did not, and that the implied conditions requiring demand and notice were dispensed with. Same in this State; Fullerton v. Rundlett, 27 Maine, 31.

In Weston v. Chamberlain, 7 Cush., 404, the precise question was determined which is raised in this case; namely, whether a prior indorser of a promissory note, can maintain an action for contribution against a subsequent indorser, on proving that, by an oral agreement between the indorsers at the time of indorsing the note, they were, as between themselves, co-sureties; and the Court held that he could. The same doctrine was affirmed in Clap v. Rice, 13 Gray, 403. Also in Phillips v. Preston, 5 How., U. S. R., 278; (16 Curtis, 396.) And in Talcott v. Cogswell, 3 Day, 512, where a note already indorsed by the payee for the accommodation of the maker, was objected to without another [51]*51name on the back, and the plaintiff thereupon indorsed his name under that of the payee, and the note was afterwards discounted at a bank, and the maker failed to take it up, and both indorsers wrnre notified, and each went separately to the bank and paid one half of the note, and the second indorser sued the first to recover the one half of the amount of the note which ho had paid, the Court were of opinion that the circumstances of the case furnished sufficient evidence that the indorsement was joint; and that each having paid what, in that case, each would be compellable to pay, the verdict ought to be for the defendant. The jury, however, although sent out three times, persisted in finding a verdict for the plaintiff.

It is idle to attempt to reconcile these decisions with the doctrine that a blank indorsement is in effect a contract in writing not to be varied by parol, and that in these cases it is not varied. In all these cases the contracts, implied in the blank indorsements, are varied, in fact swallowed up and extinguished, so far as they are in conflict, by the express verbal agreements. So far as both are alike, or not in conflict, both are permitted to stand. But when they are in conflict, the implied contract yields, and the express contract, whether written or verbal, prevails.

In Taunton Bank v. Richardson, 5 Pick., 436, the plaintiffs offered to prove'that, by a verbal agreement, made prior to the indorsement of the note in suit, demand and notice had been dispensed with. This was resisted upon the ground that it would vary the written contract created by the blank indorsement. The answer of the Court was "that the evidence did not attempt to change the contract, but to show that a condition beneficial for the defendants had been waived by them; that they lmd agreed to dispense with notice, not that by the contract itself notice would not bo necessary.” It is not surprising that legal minds should not rest satisfied with the logic of this decision. If by a previous or contemporaneous verbal agreement an important condition of a written contract is waived, is not the written con[52]*52tract varied by the verbal agreement ? And is not the rule violated, which holds that all previous and contemporaneous negotiation and discussion on the subject, are merged, or extinguished, by the writing, and cannot be shown to vary it? If not, then one condition after another might in tin's way be waived, until nothing would be left of the written contract, and yet the rule referred to would not be violated. Conditions in written contracts may unquestionably be waived by subsequent verbal agreements, without violating any rule of law, but not by previous or contemporaneous ones; a distinction which seems to have been overlooked in the case just noticed.

The only rational ground on which to. justify the admission of evidence of a verbal agreement to control the contract implied by law in a blank indorsement, is that laid down by Mr. Justice WASHINGTON in Susquehanna Bridge Co. v. Evans, 4 Wash. C. C. 480, (U. S. D. p. 396, § 2132,) namely, " The reasons which forbid the admission of parol evidence, to alter or explain written agreements and other instruments, do not apply to those contracts implied by operation of law, such as that which the law implies in respect to the indorser of a note of hand.” " The evidence is offered in conformity with the familiar rule, that the law does not imply a contract where an express one has been made. Expressum facii, cessare taciturn” Perkins v. Catlin, 11 Conn., on page, 226, a case in which this question is very fully and ably discussed, and the conclusion reached that a blank indorsement is not a contract in writing : that the law implies a contract, as in a great variety of other cases, simply because the parties have failed to make an express one, and because otherwise-the indorsement would be meaningless; that a blank indorsement. is only prima facie evidence of the contract implied by law; and that it is competent, as between the parties to the indorsement, to prove, by parol evidence, 'the agreement which was in fact made, at the time of the indorsement.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Me. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-morrill-me-1866.