State Bank v. Hamilton

2 Ind. 457
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Ind. 457 (State Bank v. Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Bank v. Hamilton, 2 Ind. 457 (Ind. 1851).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This was an action on the case brought by the plaintiff in error against the defendants in error. The declaration contains eight counts. The first count alleges that on, See., the defendants, fraudulently intending to deceive the plaintiff, and to induce the plaintiff to purchase the bills of exchange therein mentioned, addressed to Bethuel F. Morris, who was then cashier of the branch of the plaintiff at Indianapolis, a letter recommending the firm of McQueen and McKay, of Detroit, as a house of long standing and the highest respectability, &c.; that the plaintiff, confiding in the truth of the representations contained in said letter, which was presented to the said B. F. Morris and the other officers and directors of the branch of the plaintiff at Indianapolis, purchased twelve drafts, for 1,000 dollars each, drawn by McQueen and McKay on one James Hoyland, at New York, and in consideration thereof paid the agent of McQueen and McKay, 11,872 dollars; that said drafts were not paid; and that all the representations in the said letter were false and known so to be by the defendants, where[458]*458by the defendants are liable to pay said amount to the in consequence of their false and fraudulent representations.

Some of the counts omit the averment that the defendants knew their said representations to be false, but aver a fraudulent intent to deceive the plaintiff by withholding information respecting the situation of the firm of McQueen and McKay. Other of the counts aver that the defendants had been appointed agents to purchase produce for McQueen and McKay, and that the money procured by the sale or discount of the bills was to go to the defendants for that purpose, who were to receive compensation for their services as such agents. In other respects the remaining counts are, substantially, similar to the first.

The defendants pleaded not guilty, and on the trial of this issue they obtained a verdict and judgment.

Several instructions were given by the Court to the jury, and some instructions which the plaintiff requested the Court to give were refused.

The jury were instructed that if the plaintiff purchased the drafts, relying upon the truth of the representations contained in the letter of the defendants, and those representations, as to the standing and respectability of the firm of McQueen and McKay, were false, and were made fraudulently, with an intention to deceive and defraud the plaintiff, and the money advanced for the drafts was lost, the plaintiff should recover the amount so advanced with interest; but if the defendants, at the time they wrote and delivered the letter, had some information as to the matters stated in it, and from the information they had received they believed their statements to be true, and the letter was written without any fraudulent intention to deceive the plaintiff, the plaintiff would not be entitled to a verdict.

The plaintiff requested the Court to instruct the jury that if the representations were false, and the defendants did not know whether they were true or false, but made them recklessly and without any well grounded reason to [459]*459believe them to be true, that would be sufficient evidence of a fraudulent intention to deceive the plaintiff. The refusal to give this instruction and others containing a similar principle, namely, that the making of such representations recklessly, without probable grounds, or without such information as would create in the minds of persons of ordinary business capacity a reasonable and sincere belief of their truth would be sufficient evidence of a fraudulent intent, is the error complained of.

The evidence, which is very voluminous, is all set out in a bill of exceptions.

It appeared that the firm of McQueen and McKay commenced business in the spring of 1842. In February, 1844, that firm employed one Bushnell to purchase produce in this state. They furnished him with drafts on Hoyland to the amount of 36,000 dollars, and six letters of credit, each for 6,000 dollars, signed by Hoyland. They also furnished Bushnell with a power of attorney authorizing him to transact business for them, and with letters of introduction to Hamilton and Williams, the defendants, and several other persons:

Bushnell, as the agent of McQueen and McKay, then proceeded to Fort Wayne, called upon the defendants, and presented his letter of introduction.

Mr. Williams, one of the defendants, introduced Bushnell to the cashier of the branch of the plaintiff at Fort Wayne, to whom Bushnell offered his drafts. The said cashier told Bushnell, in ■ the presence of Hamilton, that said branch would have been glad to buy said drafts if its funds applicable to that kind of business were not already exhausted, and suggested the Indianapolis branch as one that would be likely to purchase. The defendants then, at Bushnell’s request, gave him letters to various persons, and among others the letter described in the plaintiff’s declaration, which was in the following words:

Fort Wayne, March 6th, 1844.
B. F. Morris, Esq., Cashier.
“ Dear sir: — This will be handed you by Mr. Daniel P. Bushnell, who is introduced to us by Messrs. McQueen and [460]*460McKay, of Detroit, as their confidential agent. This house is of long standing and the highest respectability. jYpr_ p> jias their drafts on New York which he wishes to use in th,e purchase of produce, and for which he may wish to procure Indiana funds; and as the branch here is not purchasing, he may visit your branch. Were we purchasing such drafts we should take them with the highest confidence of their being.promptly met.
“ Very respectfully, Hamilton and Williams.'”

About the 17th of March, Bushnell arrived at Indianapolis, presented the letter of the defendants to Mr. Morris, and offered his drafts for discount. Some three days afterwards the branch of the plaintiff at Indianapolis discounted or purchased twelve of the drafts, which were each for 1,000 dollars, and paid Bushnell the proceeds, interest being deducted. At the same time that Bushnell presented the letter to the defendants, he also presented a letter from Benbridge and Mix, a mercantile firm at Lafayette, in this state, which last mentioned letter was before the directors of the Indianapolis branch when they determined to purchase the drafts in question. It appeared, however, that the officers of the plaintiff were induced to purchase the drafts by the representations in the letter of the defendants as to the character of the house of McQueen and McKay, the defendants being well and very favorably known to them.

Hoyland accepted the drafts on their presentation to him in the city of New York, but before their maturity, and during the month of April, 1844, he absconded; and the drafts were protested for non-payment. About the same time that the drafts were protested the firm of McQueen and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Ind. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-bank-v-hamilton-ind-1851.