Valiquette v. Clark Bros. Coal Mining Co.

77 A. 869, 83 Vt. 538, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 77 A. 869 (Valiquette v. Clark Bros. Coal Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valiquette v. Clark Bros. Coal Mining Co., 77 A. 869, 83 Vt. 538, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 228 (Vt. 1910).

Opinions

Rowell, C. J.

It is objected that the action can not be maintained in the name of the plaintiff because his name does not appear on the face of the draft'in suit, which is drawn in favor of the "Berwick Hotel,” of which the plaintiff was sole proprietor at the time in question; and Bank of United States v. Lyman, in the Federal Circuit Court for the District of Vermont, 20 Vt. 666, is relied upon in support of the objection; and it does support it, for it holds precisely that. But such is not the law of this State, and has not been since the case of Arlington v. Kinds, 1 D. Chip. 431, decided in 1824, in which the contrary was held, and which has been followed by this Court ever since. Thus, in Rutland & Burlington R. R. Co. v. Cole, 24 Vt. 33, the note sued upon was payable "to the order of Samuel Henshaw, Treasurer.” Henshaw was the plaintiff’s treasurer, and the note was given for assessments on shares of the plaintiff’s capital stock owned by the defendant, and was declared upon as payable to the plaintiff. The same objection wás made there as is made here, but it was held that as the consideration moved from the plaintiff, and the note was in effect given to it, the action was maintainable in its name. There are many other cases in this State to the same effect, and among them is United States National Bank v. Burton & Sowles, 58 Vt. 426. That was assumpsit on a draft, and it was objected that the plaintiff could not maintain the action because the draft was indorsed to its cashier instead of to itself. But it was held to be the settled law of this State, contrary to the general commercial law, that an action upon a promissory note or a draft can be maintained in the name of the party beneficially interested, when the instrument is in terms made payable or indorsed to his agent as treasurer, cashier, and the like. We hold, therefore, that this action is maintainable in the name of the plaintiff, who is the party beneficially interested, and indeed the only party that can sue, for "Berwick Hotel” is not a legal entity, but only a name by which the plaintiff’s hostelry is designated.

[543]*543It is further'objected that general assumpsit will not lie, but that the plaintiff should have declared specially. This question was not raised on trial, and therefore can not be raised here, unless it is involved in the judgment, which was rendered on agreed facts, and to the rendition of which the only exception in the case was taken. But the question is not involved in the judgment, for its decision was not necessary to the validity of the judgment, and therefore the exception to the judgment does not raise the question. Farrant v. Bates, 60 Vt. 37; In re Hall’s Estate, 70 Vt. 458; Baker v. Sherman, 73 Vt. 26. The objection is one that could be waived, and was waived by not being made on trial, for it did not go to the jurisdiction, but only to a matter of pleading and procedure. Even objections to the form of action are waived if not made on trial. Bliss v. Allard, 49 Vt. 350. And see Hammond v. Wilder, 25 Vt. 342; Chaffee v. Hooper, 54 Vt. 513. Bickford v. Gibbs, 8 Cush. 154, was assumpsit against guarantors of a note who were sued, as makers. It was objected above for the first time that the guaranty should have been specially declared upon. But it was held that the objection came too late, and the plaintiff had judgment.

As to the merits of the case. It is agreed that Scott had no authority to draw the draft in suit on the defendant, unless its acceptance of the three prior drafts was, in law, an implied authority, and we think it was, for it appears that those drafts were drawn without authority, and their payment was virtually holding Scott out to the plaintiff and accrediting him as having authority to draw the draft in suit. It was an approval of a series of like prior acts that well might have induced the plaintiff to believe that such authority existed, and to take the draft on the faith of it; and that he was thus induced, and did thus take the draft, is not questioned in argument except as hereinafter stated.

If-the defendant, after having accepted and paid the third draft, did not want to be bound by a fourth, it should have notified the plaintiff to that effect; and as it did not, it is to be taken as assenting thereto. This is the doctrine of Keyes & Co. v. Union Pacific Tea Co. 81 Vt. 420, and it is applicable here.

But the defendant says that it was the duty of the plaintiff to ascertain the extent of Scott’s authority, and not having done it, he took the draft at his peril. But that principle does not [544]*544apply here, for the defendant is estopped by its acts and culpable silence to deny the authority. Locklin v. Davis, 71 Vt. 321. There the plaintiff was taken to have intended the natural consequence of her silence, on the ground that if one by words, conduct, or culpable silence, though not intending to defraud, leads another who acts prudently, to believe that a certain state of things exists, and who acts upon that belief, he is estopped to deny the existence of that state of things if the other party would be prejudiced thereby; for such a denial would be a breach of good faith, and therefore fraudulent.

But the defendant says that in order to an estoppel it must have admitted funds in its hands, or other obligation to accept, upon which the plaintiff relied, not knowing the truth; but as there was no such admission, the plaintiff could have relied on no such, and therefore no estoppel. But the defendant’s conduct and silence amounted to an admission of authority in Scott to draw, and that was an admission of an obligation to accept.

The defendant further says that an occasional recognition of paper drawn as here is not enough, and refers to Bank of Deer Lodge v. Hope Mining Co. 3 Mont. 146, 35 Am. Rep. 458, as showing that one instance is not enough; and the court does so hold, but on the ground that no inference of original authority could be drawn from one ratification, because such ratification did not operate as presumptive, evidence of prior authority, but only as a ratification of the unauthorized act. But the court said that if there had been repeated acts like the one in dispute that the defendant had ratified, the plaintiff could have inferred authority to draw the bill. In support of its holding that no inference could be drawn from one instance, the court referred to Commercial Bank v. Warren, 15 N. Y. 577. But that case does not hold that. There it was contended that the ratification operated merely as presumptive evidence of prior authority. But the court said that its operation was not confined to that, but worked, per se, a confirmation of the act.

In further support of its holding, the court referred to Cook v. Baldwin, 120 Mass. 317, 21 Am. Rep. 517, as showing that part payment of a bill of exchange is not such a recognition by the drawee as will bind him to pay the rest. And that was the holding. But the court said that such payment might have been accompanied by a positive refusal to pay more; that no indorse[545]*545ment of the payment was made by the drawee, and the fact that he made the payment was simply to be taken in connection with other evidence in determining whether he recognized the bill as one accepted by him and which he was bound to pay.

Paige v. Stone, 10 Met.

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 869, 83 Vt. 538, 1910 Vt. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valiquette-v-clark-bros-coal-mining-co-vt-1910.