Snyder v. Van Doren

46 Wis. 602
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 46 Wis. 602 (Snyder v. Van Doren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Van Doren, 46 Wis. 602 (Wis. 1879).

Opinion

Tayloe, J.

This action is brought to recover the amount of a promissory note bearing date June 5, 1875, payable to the plaintiff or bearer, two years after date, with interest at ten per cent, per annum. The note on its face purports to be signed by all the defendants in the following order:

A. J. Vast Doeen
J. D. Van Doeen
I. O. Van Doeen.

The note is the joint note of the makers.

The evidence shows that the appellant, I. O. Van Doren, and J. D. Van Doren, signed the note in blank something over a year before the date of the same. The note when signed by the appellant was a printed form, blank as to date, amount, time of payment, rate of interest and payee, and there was also a blank to be filled for the purpose of making it a joint or several note. The evidence also shows that the note was so signed in blank by the appellant for the purpose of enabling J. D. Van Doren to raise money on the same for his own use, and that the appellant was simply an accommodation maker. It also shows that before the note was negotiated or delivered to the plaintiff, it was filled up and signed as it appeared at the trial; and for the purposes of this case it must be held that the plaintiff knew that the name of A. J. Van Doren was not signed to the note at the time it was signed by the appellant and J. D. Van Doren. The evidence also shows that there was no express authority given by the appellant that the note might be so signed before the same was negotiated.

Upon this evidence the learned counsel for the appellant insists that there can be no recovery against the appellant. Counsel admits that, by signing the note in blank for the accommodation of J. D. Van Doren, the appellant authorized him to add the date, amount, time of payment, rate of interest and name of payee, to make it a joint and several or joint [606]*606or several note, and to make it negotiable or otherwise; but denies that by so doing he authorized him to procure any third person or persons to sign the same as joint or several makers with him.

The real question to be determined in this case is, whether a person who signs a note in blank as maker, for the accommodation of the person to whom he delivers it, must be held, as between him and a ■bona, fide holder for value, to have impliedly authorized the person to whom the same is delivered, to have the same signed by another party or parties as joint makers with him. We think, both upon principle and authority, that the person for whose accommodation such note is signed, may, before the same is negotiated by him, procure the same to be so signed by another person or persons, without vitiating such note in the hands of a bona fide holder. If the party signing the note in blank expressly stipulates that the same shall not be signed by any other person, there is probably no doubt but that the note would be void in the hands of any one who took the same so signed by another, knowing that the accommodation maker had expressly stipulated against such further signature.

We think the rule is, that a party who signs a note in blank makes the person to whom it is delivered for negotiation his agent, not only for the purpose of filling the blanks in the note, but to do any other thing necessary to make the note so signed accomplish the purpose for which it was intended, with the limitation that he shall not insert in such note any contract or stipulation not usually found in a promissory note. It was not even argued by the learned counsel for the appellant, that in such case the party holding the note could not, for the purpose of negotiating the same, have it indorsed by a third person or persons, or have a third person guaranty the payment of the same by a written guaranty on the back thereof; and it seems to us that if he may do that, [607]*607there is no objection to his accomplishing the same purpose by having such third person sign the same as a joint or several maker.

It is not a question of alteration of the note, but a question of implied agency on the part of the holder. The note in the hands of the holder, before negotiation by him, is not a binding contract between him and the accommodation maker. To have any validity as a contract, it must be negotiated by the holder; and until such negotiation takes place, the contract is imperfect, and may be filled up and perfected in any manner, by such holder, which is not inconsistent with the implied agency given by the accommodation maker. There can be no doubt that the holder might fill up the same with an amount, date and time of payment, and then alter the same in either of these respects before he negotiated the same,, without vitiating the note in the hands of a bona fi&& holder. The person to whom the same was delivered in blank being agent of the maker for the purposes above specified, any alteration made by him in that respect, before negotiation, would no more affect the validity of the note than if made by the maker himself. Ohitty on Bills of Exchange, 215. The cases cited below show the extent of the implied agency of the party to whom a bill of exchange or promissory note, signed in blank, is delivered. There are two classes of cases illustrative of the subject. Eirst, the cases in which a party writes his name on a piece of blank paper, and delivers it to another person with intent that such other person may use such name as the drawer of a bill of exchange or maker of a promissory note, or where the name is so written as to indicate that the writer is to be the indorser of a promissory note or the acceptor of a bill of exchange, and with the understanding that a promissory note or bill of exchange may be written on such blank paper. In such cases, the courts hold that a note or bill of exchange, for any amount, in favor of any person, and payable at anv time, may be written over such name, and, when [608]*608negotiated, a hona fide holder may recover on the same; and that in such case it is no defense that the party to whom the same was delivered in blank, exceeded his actual authority. The same rule applies in the case of a person signing as an indorser or acceptor. In the case of Russel v. Langstaffe, 2 Douglas R., 514, Lord Mansfield says: “ The indorsement on a blank note is a letter of credit for an indefinite sum. The defendant said, ‘ Trust Gaily to any amount, and I will be his security.’ It does not lie in his mouth to say the indorse-ments were not regular.” In the case of Violett v. Patton, 5 Cranch (U. S.), 142, which was the case of an indorsement upon a blank piece of paper, Chief Justice Maesiiall says: “ The objection certainly comes with a very bad grace from the month of Yiolett. He indorsed the paper with the intent that the promissory note should be written on the other side; and that he should be considered as the indorser of the note. It was the shape he intended to give the transaction; and he is now concluded from saying or proving that it was not filled up when he indorsed it. It would be to protect himself from the effect of his promise by alleging a fraudulent combination between himself and another to obtain money for that other from a third person.”

The case of Putnam et al. v. Sullivan et al.,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

First Union National Bank v. Turner
40 Va. Cir. 25 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 1995)
Milwaukee Petroleum Co. v. Glembin
278 N.W.2d 471 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1979)
Norman F. Thiex, Inc. v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.
259 N.W. 855 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1935)
Clark v. Macon Telegraph Publishing Co.
84 S.E. 577 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1915)
Smith v. Willing
68 L.R.A. 940 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1904)
Johnson v. Weed & Gumaer Manufacturing Co.
79 N.W. 236 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1899)
Thomas Ludlow & Rodgers v. Berry
22 N.W. 140 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1885)
Johnston Harvester Co v. McLean
15 N.W. 177 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1883)
Nielson v. Schuckman
11 N.W. 44 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1881)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Wis. 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-van-doren-wis-1879.