Walsh v. Hunt

52 P. 115, 120 Cal. 46, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 708
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1898
DocketS. F. No. 710
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 52 P. 115 (Walsh v. Hunt) 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
Walsh v. Hunt, 52 P. 115, 120 Cal. 46, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 708 (Cal. 1898).

Opinion

VAN FLEET, J.

Action to foreclose a mortgage. The findings show that defendant, who resided in San Francisco, hut owned certain premises in San Jose upon which there was a [48]*48mortgage for five hundred dollars, some time prior to October 3, 1893, authorized one Hughes, a real estate agent and notary-public in San Jose, to negotiate a loan of five hundred dollars on said premises, at a rate of interest not to exceed eight per cent per annum, with the proceeds of which to pay off said mortgage; that, being notified by Hughes that he had found a person willing to make the loan, defendant, on October 3, 1893, went to his office in San Jose to execute the necessary note and mortgage; she was informed by Hughes that the loan could not be had for less than nine per cent, which rate she consented to pay, and thereupon Hughes presented for her signature a note and mortgage prepared by him, which defendant, after reading, signed and executed, the mortgage being acknowledged before Hughes as notary. The note was in these words:

“$500. San Jose, Cal, October 3, 1893.
“Two 3rears after date, for value received, I promise to pay to Mrs. Margaret Walsh, or order, at the office of G-. C. Hughes, the sum of five hundred ($500) dollars, with interest thereon from date until payment at the rate of nine (9) per centum per annum, payable quarterly, and, if not so paid, then to be added to and become a part of the principal and bear a like interest, said principal and interest to be paid in United States gold coin only. If any interest on this note be not paid within two months after it becomes due, then the whole principal and interest shall, at the option of the payee, become and be immediately due and payable. Privilege to pay at any time by paying three months’ interest extra. This note secured by mortgage.
“MES. EMMA E. HUNT.”

The mortgage was in the usual form, setting out at length a copy of the note, etc.

It is found “that, after signing the said note and mortgage as aforesaid, the said defendant left the same with the said Hughes for delivery to the said plaintiff, and returned to her home in San Francisco. That the principal sum of said note wherever expressed in said note and mortgage, and the rate of interest wherever specified therein, had been -written in pencil by said Hughes at the time he prepared said note and mortgage, and prior to the said visit of said defendant to the office of said Hughes on. said third day of October, 1893. That after said defendant had. [49]*49left said office of said Hughes as aforesaid, the said Hughes erased" said pencil words and figures expressing the principal sum of said promissory note and mortgage and the rate of interest thereon, and wrote in lieu thereof with pen and ink the necessary words and figures to make the principal sum of said note and mortgage twelve hundred dollars instead of five hundred dollars, and the rate of interest ten per cent instead of nine per cent.”

In all other respects than as thus changed the note and mortgage remained as when executed by defendant. Thereafter, on the same day, Hughes delivered both instruments as thus altered by him to the plaintiff, and in return received from her the sum of twelve hundred dollars in gold coin, five hundred dollars of which he paid in satisfaction of said prior mortgage, and the balance of seven hundred dollars he retained and fraudulently converted to his own use. Both plaintiff and defendant were ignorant of the alteration of said instruments until about one year after their execution, when Hughes absconded, and they subsequently met for the first time.

Upon these facts the court below gave judgment for plaintiff foreclosing her mortgage for the full amount of said note, principal and interest as expressed therein after such alteration, and from this judgment and an order denying her a new trial defendant appeals.

It appears from the briefs and arguments of counsel that the considerations actuating the court below in reaching its conclusion were: 1. That Hughes being the agent of defendant in the transaction, the latter is bound by his acts, whether expressly authorized or not; 2. That defendant was guilty of such negligence in the execution of the note and mortgage as that Hughes was enabled to perpetrate the fraud which deceived the plaintiff, and that defendant is therefore estopped from setting up such fraud as a defense: and these are the two substantive propositions upon which respondent now relies to sustain the judgment.

Heither proposition, as it seems to us, receives any adequate support from the findings. Hughes was defendant's agent, it is true, and for his acts as such she is bound; but what was the extent of that agency? He was authorized to find a party willing to make the loan, which he did, and thereupon, as found by the [50]*50court, the note and mortgage complete in all their parts were executed by defendant and left by her with Hughes “for delivery to the said plaintiff'’’; this, then, was the extent of his express authority as to those instruments, that of a mere bailee for delivery. There is certainly no express finding of any authority to alter or tamper with the instruments in any respect, and as eer-r tainly there is nothing in the facts from which such authority could be implied. Where there is no express authority in the person to whom a note or other instrument is intrusted or delivered to make'alterations therein, it is only where such writing is patently incomplete in some respect, such as an omitted date, or a blank space required to be filled to make the contract express the intent of the parties, that there is any implied authority to insert new matter, or make any material addition thereto. Even in such a case the implication must very plainly arise from the circumstances, or the maker will not be bound. This is upon the very obvious principle that any unauthorized change in a material respect destroys the integrity of the instrument as the contract which the maker has executed; it ceases to be his contract and is avoided, even in the hands of an innocent holder for value. These principles are thoroughly well settled, not only as to deeds and other sealed instruments, but as to commercial paper as well. (Angle v. Northwestern etc. Ins. Co., 92 U. S. 330; McGrath v. Clarke, 56 N. Y. 34; 15 Am. Rep. 372; Bruce v. Wescott, 3 Barb. 374; Woods v. Steele, 6 Wall. 80; Greenfield Sav. Bank v. Stowell, 123 Mass. 196; 25 Am. Rep. 67.)

Nor can it make any difference that the alteration is made before delivery of the instrument. (Wood v. Steele, supra.) Manifestly, whether made before or after that fact, if the alteration be effected by other than the party to be bound, and without his knowledge or consent, it involves the same question of ostensible agency as when made after delivery. In either case the question is whether, under the circumstances, the person making the alteration is to be deemed the agent of the one whose contract is affected. Here, while Hughes was admittedly the agent of defendant for certain purposes, as found by the court, it would be absurd to hold that there was upon the facts any implied or ostensible authority conferred upon him to commit a forgery—the plain legal effect of his act—and bind the defendant thereby.

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Bluebook (online)
52 P. 115, 120 Cal. 46, 1898 Cal. LEXIS 708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-hunt-cal-1898.