Bickley v. Commercial Bank

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This action has been before this court on appeal once before. The decision may be found in 39 S. C., 281, and by that decision a new trial was ordered. The complaint in the case was in three paragraphs, whereof the first alleged the corporate character of the defendant; the second alleged that on the 21st day of October, 1890, the plaintiff deposited with the defendant, and the defendant received from the plaintiff on deposit, the sum of eight hundred dollars, which the defendant agreed to pay to the plaintiff’s order one year after said date with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually from said date; and the third alleged that said sum of $800, and the interest thereon, was now due by the defendant to the plaintiff; that demand had been made therefor, but the defendant refuses to pay the same or any part thereof.

When the cause reached the Circuit Court, a motion was made by the plaintiff for leave to amend his complaint. This motion having been granted, the plaintiff served his amended complaint, wherein he retained the first two paragraphs of the original complaint, but having omitted the third paragraph, alleged as follows: “3. That before and at the time said sum of money was so deposited in said defendant bank by this plaintiff, one C. J. Iredell was the president of said bank, and the agent thereof to receive deposits, and issue interest-bearing certificates therefor, and, as such, advertised that said bank would receive deposits and issue interest-bearing certificates *531as evidence of such deposits. 4. That the plaintiff, with knowledge of said advertisement, went to said bank’s place of business on the 21st day of October, 1890, in the city of Columbia, S. C., for the purpose of depositing said sum of money, and made special inquiries of said Iredell with reference to said bank receiving deposits, and the rate of interest it allowed thereon, and the said Iredell represented to the plaintiff that he was authorized by said bank to receive deposits for it, and give interest thereon at the rate of six per cent, per annum, and induced this plaintiff to deposit his money in said bank. 5th. That the plaintiff, relying upon the representations so made by said Iredell, and believing that he was depositing his money in said bank, and that Iredell had the authority, as he represented, to receive the same, and relying upon the credit of said bank solely, and its ability to repay him, delivered the said sum of money to Iredell, who deposited it in said bank, and gave this plaintiff a certificate, of which the following is a copy: ‘Columbia, S. 0., October 21, 1890. I hereby certify that James D. Bickley deposited with O. J. Iredell, manager, eight hundred dollars, payable to his order, properly endorsed. It is agreed that said sum of money shall remain on deposit for one year from the date thereof, that interest on this amount shall be at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable semiannually. (Signed) C. J. Iredell, Manager.’ 6. That after the plaintiff had parted with his money, and the same had been deposited in said bank by said Iredell, the president and agent of said bank as aforesaid, the said Iredell fraudulently induced this plaintiff to receive said certificate as the certificate and obligation of said bank, and was in proper form, and as good as a printed certificate of said bank; that it was valid and binding upon the bank, aud it was responsible for it, and would pay the same; the plaintiff, relying upon such representation, and believing it to be true that the said paper was the certificate of the defendant, and was in proper form and valid, took the same. 7. That before the beginning of this action, and after said deposit was due and payable, the plaintiff presented said certificate to said defendant, in Columbia, S. 0., for payment, and the same was refused by the then president, W. *532G-. Childs, who was the successor of said Iredell, upon the ground that said certificate was not the obligation of-said bank, and that said bank was not responsible for it. 8. That said deposit was at the beginning of this action, and is now, in the possession of the defendant bank as the property and deposit of this plaintiff, and the plaintiff alleges that if the said certificate is not the obligation of said defendant bank, then this plaintiff was induced by the false and fraudulent representations of said Iredell, the president and agent of said bank, as hereinbefore alleged, to deposit the said sum of money with the said bank, and to receive the said certificate as the evidence thereof, and the said bank having now in its possession the said deposit so fraudulently received, is liable to the plaintiff therefor, and is now due the plaintiff thereon the sum of $800, with interest from the 21st day of October, 1890, at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually.” And the plaintiff prayed for judgment for $800 and interest, and costs.

To this amended complaint the defendant bank interposed its answer, wherein, after admitting its corporate capacity at the times alleged, and that C. J. Iredell was its president at such time, denied each and every other allegation.

Thereafter at the spring term, 1894, of the Court of Common Pleas for Bichland County, the action came on for trial before his honor, Judge Fraser, and a jury. After the plaintiff closed his testimony, the defendant moved for a nonsuit, which was refused. Defendant then introduced testimony, to which the plaintiff replied. Before the judge delivered his charge, certain requests to charge were made by defendant; some of these requests the Circuit Judge refused to charge and some were charged in a modified form. The jury having returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and after judgment was duly entered thereon, the defendant appealed from the same, and in his grounds of appeal he assails certain rulings of the Circuit Judge as to the competency of some testimony, also his refusal to grant the motion for nonsuit, also his action on requests to charge; and, finally, that he erred in failing to grant the motion for a new trial. We will consider these grounds of appeal in their natural order.

*5331 1. As to the alleged errors of the Circuit Judge in admitting certain testimony: (a) “Because the witness, T. J. Gibson, was allowed to testify, against the objection of the defendant, that he had been requested to solicit deposits for the defendant bank.” Now the defendant admitted in its answer that Mr. Iredell was its president at the period of time when the plaintiff alleged he made the deposit in question. The production of its by-laws showed that the directors of the defendant bank had authorized the president to receive deposits and pay interest thereon. The duty of the president of any corporation is to enforce the directions of its board of directors, if they are legal. Hence, if the president of the bank saw proper to employ means such as those of a soliciting agent for deposits to obtain such an advantage, and if it would throw any light upon the question as to whether the bank sought to obtain deposits for which interest was to be paid, it seems to us that the testimony of Mr. Gibson was, in that view, competent. We, therefore, overrule this exception.

2 (b) Exceptions from b to h, inclusive (2 to 7, inclusive), raise the question whether it is competent by parol testimony to show that the contract sued on was the contract of the defendant bank. An exact copy of this alleged certificate of deposit is set out in the complaint already incorporated in this opinion, and, therefore, need not be reproduced just now. An inspection of that instrument will disclose the fact that the defendant’s name nowhere appears there. But that it is in its body, and the signature thereto, the certificate of “O. J. Iredell, Manager.” In the former decision of this court in this case, the court held: “The cases cited to show that a receipt may be explained by parol evidence, have no application, as the paper in question, an ordinary certificate of deposit, has none of the elements of a receipt, but, on the contrary, is more like an ordinary promissory note; for it is certainly an obligation to pay a specified sum of money at a time stated, with interest at a specified rate. In Miller v. Austin, 13 How., 218, a paper practically identical in form with this, was held 'to be a note upon which the endorser was held liable as in ease of an ordinary note.”

*534So that, as a beginning to this investigation, the character of this certificate is fixed. It will be remembered, that by the pleading of the plaintiff it is contended that this certificate of the deposit is that of the defendant, but the defendant denies this proposition. Thus an issue of fact is squarely presented. The plaintiff admits that the certificate is not signed by the president or cashier of the defendant bank as such officers, and, also, that there is no reference to the defendant bank in the body of the certificate or the signature thereto. He contends, however, that his money was paid to C. J. Iredell, who was then president of the bank, in the building devoted to the business of the bank; where its officers had their offices and their desks; where money was deposited in said bank; and that this money, after being paid over to C. J. Iredell, was by him at once paid into the bank; and that the certificate in question was written out by C. J. Iredell after he had paid over the money into the bank; and that when the plaintiff was handed the certificate so'prepared by the said Iredell, he complained to him that it was not on the usual printed form of certificates of deposit, and to this remonstrance of the plaintiff, the said Iredell replied that such printed forms were out, but that the bank was responsible for the deposit and would pay it; that he contracted with Iredell as president of the defendant bank touching said deposit, and that the certificate issued to him was issued to him by said Iredell as president of the bank, and though signed by “C. J. Iredell, Manager,” it is the certificate of the bank, and that he should be allowed to show such state of facts. It will be noticed that Iredell does not pretend that it is an obligation personal to himself; he styles the transaction as one with himself as “Manager.”

For awhile in the history of this State, we apprehend it must have been owing to the strictness observed in the courts of law as opposed to that of equity — when the principal was disclosed in the obligation signed by the agent, a recovery could not be had against the principal thereon. Fash v. Ross, 2 Hill, 294, and some cases followed in its wake. However, in the case of Robertson v. Pope, 1 Rich., 503, is was settled that -when the' principal was disclosed in the obligation made by his agent, the *535principal was in law responsible on the contract. In Tarver v. Garlington, 27 S. C., 107, the note sued on in that case was as follows: “$460. On the first day of November next, I promise to pay Samuel J. Tarver, or order, four hundred and sixty dollars, for value received, with interest from date, at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. Witness my hand and seal, this March 22, 1864. S. D. Garlington, Agent.” Action was commenced by Tarver against Mrs. Garlington and George F. Young, alleging that the said note was made by them through S. D. Garlington, as their agent. The former did not answer, but George F. Young appeared in the action and demurred on the ground that the plaintiffs’ complaint failed to state a sufficient cause of action. Under the rules for the construction of pleadings, said Young thereby admitted the truth of the facts as alleged in the complaint. The Circuit Judge sustained the demurrer, but this court on appeal reversed such judgment, holding that Young having admitted thatS. D. Garlington had made the contract as his agent, would be held bound by the same rule of law that governs those cases where the agent in-the contract itself discloses who his principal is. And in the opinion of the court it is intimated that there may be exceptions to the rule that when the contract as written fails to disclose who is the principal, no recovery can be had against such principal thereop. In the case of Barclay v. Tarrant, 20 S. C., this court deemed the name of the payee in a sealed note, which sealed note failed to disclose the name of any payee, to be proved by parol testimony. In the case of Rapley v. Klugh, 40 S. C., 134, this court allowed the terms the “R. H. Wardlaw homestead” and “and others” in a deed to be proved by parol testimony. In the case of Willis v. Hammond, 41 S. C., 153, this court held that when a written contract fails to express the consideration, or uses terms requiring explanation to be understood and applied, or is only a part of a general whole, it is competent to supply the missing facts by evidence of all the precedent oral agreements of the parties.

Now, in the case at bar, if you depend upon the contract— certificate of deposit — which states that the plaintiff deposited $800 with “C. J. Iredell, Manager,” and is signed by “O. J. *536Iredell, Manager,” how can you ever learn of whom, or what, he, Iredell, is “manager?” It is trae, sometimes it is held that the word “agent,” or any other word implying agency, when added by the maker of a note, is treated as surplusage, and the contract is held to be that of the person signing his name to the obligation. But we apprehend that such a conclusion in a court of justice is always based upon the fact that no agency exists. Here the issue is squarely made by the plaintiff, that Iredell acted in the transaction for the defendant bank, while the defendant seeks to establish that Iredell acted in the transaction as the manager of a different principal than the bank, and that the plaintiff so understood at the time he accepted the certificate of deposit now in question. We are obliged to hold that parol testimony is competent in such a case to show for what principal Mr. Iredell signed such certificate as “manager.” And that this question of fact is one as to agency, and must be passed upon by the jury.

But the defendant insists that this question has been decided adversely to the plaintiff by this court in its former decision in this case. It' was for the purpose of showing how differently the pleadings now before the court were from those in the first hearing, that we reproduce the allegations of the amended complaint. Besides, the Chief Justice, who rendered judgment in the first hearing in this court of this case, was exceedingly careful to preserve the rights of the parties. At page 291, he said: “It is very possible that if the parol testimony in question had been offered to show of what or for whom C. J. Iredell was manager, it would have been competent (inasmuch as the terms of the paper did not disclose that fact) under the cases of Mechanics’ Bank of Alexandria v. The Bank of Columbia, 5 Wheat., 326; Baldwin v. Bank of Newbury, 1 Wall., 234; Ligon v. Irvine, 1 Rich., 502; DuPont v. Mt. Pleasant Ferry Co., 9 Rich., 255. But here the evidence was offered for no such purpose. On the contrary, it was offered for the purpose of showing that the contract upon which the plaintiff sued was with an entirely different person from the one named in the paper delivered to the plaintiff as evidence of said contract — the paper showing that the contract was made with C. J. Iredell, manager, while *537the parol testimony objected to was intended to show that it was made with the chartered bank through its president, and that, too, without the slightest evidence tending to shoio that the president had any authority whatever to make such a contract, or had ever in any instance signed his name as manager of the chartered bank, or had in any way ever been designated as such” (italics ours). The testimony offered showed that in several instances the president received the money to be deposited in the defendant bank, gave certificates therefor bearing six per cent, interest thereon, payable semi-annually, and that the defendant bank paid such certificates. The by-laws of the bank showed that Mr. Iredell as president was authorized to receive deposits on interest. The testimony of Mr1. Bickley and Mrs. Jumper tended to show that Mr. Iredell as president of the defendant bank held out to them his agency for the bank in their transactions with the bank touching this deposit of $800. These exceptions must be overruled.

3 The next division of the appeal comprehends the two questions relating to the denial of the motion for nonsuit. 1. The appellant suggests that, as the certificate of deposit negatives the idea of a contract between the plaintiff and defendant, and there being no proof of misrepresentation or fraud on the part of the defendant bank or any one for whom it was responsible in that respect, therefore, the motion should have been granted. The rule is fixed, that if there exists any competent testimony responsive to the issues in a cause, the action must be submitted to the jury, for it is no part of a judge’s duty to decide upon the sufficiency of the testimony. When, therefore, it appears, as there appears in this cause, that the question of agency or no agency of the defendant in the certificate of deposit signed by “C. J. Iredell, Manager,” is squarely presented by testimony thereon submitted by the plaintiff, the motion for nonsuit ought not to be granted.

4 2. Again, the appellant suggests that the presiding judge, in refusing the nonsuit, was controlled by the idea that the term “manager” was synonimous with “agent,” and that this was error. The law wisely seeks substance and not form. It matters little how one, who is acting in a business mat*538ter for another who is his principal, characterizes such agency. The primal question is, in what capacity did he act? The technical name for such agent may be “president,” “cashier,” “teller,” “manager,” “agent,” <&c. But if, in the discharge of an authorized act for his principal, the person who acts for such principal mistakes or mis-states his technical name as to his capacity to act for his principal, such mistake or mis-statement will not be allowed to prejudice the rights of third persons against the principal. This is the principle of law we understand the Circuit Judge had in his mind when he used the language complained of. From this standpoint, the Circuit Judge did not err.

5 3. We may dispose of exception 10 in this connection; for it seems that while the testimony of defendant’s witness, Mr. C. J. Iredell, was being taken by commission, the plaintiff in his cross-interrogatories 3, 5, 7, and 9, embodied page after page of questions of counsel and answers of this witness in another action pending in court; and now the appellant claims “that it was not competent in such manner to incorporate the evidence of the witness in another cause into this cause.” It does not seem to us that we should lay down as law a rule which may tend to cripple a party who may wish on a cross-examination to show what the witness has sworn in another cause on the same matters, to test, it may be, his credibility. The Circuit Judge is wisely vested with considerable discretion in the examination of witnesses; but inasmuch as he did not view the matter complained of as the appellant does, we are not inclined to hold that the Circuit Judge was in error in this matter. This exception is overruled.

6 4. The eleventh exception complains that plaintiff’s counsel were allowed to comment upon the said cross-interrogatories numbers 3, 5, 7, and 9, as the testimony of the witness, C. J. Iredell, after in his replies thereto he had not. admitted or denied the same. Now in the “Case” we find not the faintest allusion to any objection by defendant’s counsel to any matter embraced in the argument of plaintiff’s counsel. The “Case” states: “At the conclusion of the arguments, the presiding judge delivered the following charge.” Surely, at *539this day, it is not necessary to say that this court will refuse to consider on appeal a matter to which the attention of the Circuit Judge was never called, or upon which he made no ruling one way or the other. This exception is overruled.

3 The third division of the grounds of appeal may be said to consist of that exception relating to the refusal of the Circuit Judge at the close of argument to dismiss the complaint. The exception is in these words: “12. Because after the close of the testimony, in the argument of counsel, his honor, the presiding judge, refused the motion of defendant to dismiss the complaint, because the evidence had established that there was no cause of action on the part of the plaintiff against the defendant.” In his argument, the defendant treats this twelfth ground of appeal as a motion for a nonsuit. It is usually the case, in jury trials, that a motion for nonsuit follows immediately after the close of plaintiff’s testimony. The appellant lays stress upon the character of the certificate of deposit — the fact, as he urges, that by its very terms it negatives any contract between plaintiff and defendant, as his ground for this motion for nonsuit. Having already considered this matter in disposing of the eighth ground of appeal, we will content ourselves with the observation that we are still satisfied with the views there expressed. We overrule this exception.

7 The last division of appellant’s exceptions will embrace those relating to the alleged errors of the Circuit Judge in disposing of the defendant’s request to charge. The 13th exception is as follows: “Because his honor, the presiding judge, refused plaintiff’s 7th request to charge, to wit: ‘that the instrument sued on is conclusive evidence that the contract was not made with defendant bank, unless it is proven to the satisfaction of the jury that the plaintiff was induced to take it by the fraudulent representations of C. J. Iredell,’ but modified the same by adding thereto: ‘Well, that which is prima facie is always conclusive unless you remove it; therefore, it is conclusive evidence it was made with C. J. Iredell and not with the bank, unless you are satisfied that Iredell had the right to act for the bank. With these explanations, that proposition of law is correct7 — defendant urging as error that the said modifica*540tion was calculated to lead the jury to believe that it was not necessary for the plaintiff to prove that there was fraud or misrepresentation on the part of the witness, C. J. Iredell, but upon simply proving that he had authority to act for the bank, they might find for the plaintiff.”

After reflection, we are not able to agree with the appellant, that the modification of the request to charge, as made by the Circuit Judge, would or might cause the jury to believe that it was not necessary for plaintiff to prove that there was fraud or misrepresentation on the part of the witness, C. J. Iredell, but if the plaintiff proved that Iredell had authority to act for the bank, that would justify the jury in rendering a verdict for the plaintiff. A judge, like any one else, inlaw must be judged to have meant what he actually said, or what is naturally and directly deducible from what he did say. What he did say was, that prima facie the certificate of deposit in this cause was to be held as that of Charles J. Iredell as an individual, until such prima facie view of it was removed by testimony here offered that Charles J. Iredell acted for the bank (defendant) in making the certificate of deposit. There is no duty in a judge to charge upon abstract propositions of law; he must mean them to fit the facts in testimony. This testimony did not stop at simply stating that Mr. Iredell was authorized by the bank, as its president, to receive deposits, but that he as such president and under such authority did receive deposits, not only for the plaintiff, but from other depositors in said bank. The Circuit Judge nowhere restricted the jury to an inquiry as to whether the bank had merely authorized its president, Mr. Iredell, to receive deposits. Let the exception be overruled.

8 The 14th exception was: “Because his honor modified plaintiff’s 7th request to charge, by indicating his opinion that it did not have much to do with the case.” There is nothing to indicate that the judge ever uttered one word that could be tortured into an opinion that the 7th request did not have much to do with the case. This exception is overruled.

*5419 *540The 15th exception is: “Because his honor refused defend*541ant’s 10th request to charge: ‘That this being an action at law, founded upon contract, it cannot be sustained by proof that the money in question was deposited by Iredell to his credit as manager of the partnership bank — that is, by the old bank — even by breach of trust, unless the jury believe that Iredell had, or was held out by the bank, the defendant in this case, to have authority to receive deposits, and that the deposit was actually made with the defendant bank,’ but modified the same by adding thereto: ‘That is the law as modified. If Iredell had no connection with the bank whatever, and fraudulently got this money from the plaintiff in this case, and deposited it in this bank, the bank would not be liable in an action at law; this would be an action on the equity side of the court’ — thus indicating that, in his opinion, the fact that Iredell was president of the defendant bank, would establish a different rule and would sustain the present action, even though the deposit was not actually made with it.”

There is room just here for some nice distinctions, but we do not know that we would be justified in entering upon any field save that selected by the appellants, as indicated by the substance of this exception. To business, then: The appellant sought by his request to charge, to have the Circuit Judge announce as the law governing this case, that here being a contract in the shape of a certificate of deposit, an action cannot be sustained thereon upon proof that the money was deposited by Iredell to his credit in defendant bank, as manager of the old partnership bank, unless the further facts are believed to exist, namely: that Iredell, as president, was held out by the defendant as clothed by it with authority to receive deposits, and that the deposit by plaintiff was actually made in this bank. How the judge sustained the request, except he stated that if Iredell had no connection with the bank whatever, and fraudulently got this money from the plaintiff and deposited this money in this bank, the bank.would not be liable in law, but would be in equity. Again, we cannot say that the modification as made by the Circuit Judge, when construed carefully, would naturally lead to the conclusion that the judge thought the fact that Iredell was president of the bank would establish *542a different rule, and would sustain the present action, even though the deposit was not made with it. It is quite true, that if Mr. Iredell had not been president of this bank when he deposited, as alleged, the money of the plaintiff to his, Iredell’s, credit as manager in said bank, and there was no privity between the plaintiff and the defendant, the plaintiff could not at law have sued the bank for that money; for the bank would have owed him no duty enforeible at law, touching a deposit entered by another person as his own; a resort to equity would have been necessary to show a duty of the defendant to the plaintiff, arising from some breach of duty on the part of the depositor. Now, all the judge did, was to preserve this distinction in the law. No ill effect could flow to the defendants therefrom. The exception must, therefore, be overruled.

10 The next exception — the 16th — isas follows: “Because his honor refused defendant’s 12th request to charge: ‘That neither of the resolutions of the board of directors, introduced in evidence, authorized Iredell, as president, to receive deposits except in the manner prescribed for the management of the bank,’ but modified the same by saying: ‘What I have to say is this: The Supreme Court has ruled on it, and I will have to follow it, whatever my views may be; but if the president was authorized by that resolution to establish a savings department, and borrow money at four per cent., then, if the resolution did not go any further to say by whom it was done, if the president represented himself to outsiders that he had authority to borrow at six per cent., I think the bank would be liable. The question, then, would be not between outsiders and the bank, but between the bank and its president, whether he was transcending the authority which he had, if they gave him authority to borrow money, or receive deposits and pay interest, that is enough to justify outsiders without further notice; therefore, I cannot charge that request, except as modified' — thereby indicating that the question was to be determined solely by the representations made by the president, Iredell, as to his authority to borrow money.” We do not think that the deduction of the appellant, that thereby the Circuit Judge indicated that the question was to be deter*543mined solely by the representations made by the president, Iredell, as to his authority to borrow money [is correct]. Certainly the Circuit Judge nowhere says any such thiDg. On the contrary, in the supposed case, if the bank authorized the establishment of a savings department with interest for depositors, and no particular person as a bank official was charged by the bank with this work, then if the president held himself out to others as clothed with this power, and they took him at bis word and deposited their money with the bank, the bank would be liable therefor to such depositors. This is good law. Let the exception be overruled.

11 The next exception is the 17th, which is as follows: “17. Because his honor refused defendant’s 13th request to charge ‘that the answer of the witness, C. J. Iredell, to the 11th direct interrogatory, that the money was placed on deposit in the name of J. D. Bickley, and he took the certificate, is shown by the context, and his answer to the 13th interrogatory to have referred to a deposit in the Depositors’ Co-operative Association, not to a deposit in defendant bank.’ ” The judge was clearly right in refusing to make any such charge, for he would have charged upon the facts if he had undertaken to do so; and this he was inhibited by the Constitution from doing.

12 • The last exception is the 18th: “Because his honor, the presiding judge, refused defendant’s motion for a new trial in said cause, based upon the alleged errors of his honor in the admission of testimony, and upon the failure of the plaintiff to introduce any testimony to show that by the use of the term ‘manager,’ Iredell was authorized or intended to bind the bank.” As will be seen, this involves two propositions. The first, relating as it does to alleged errors in the Circuit Judge in the admission of testimony, we have already seen is untenable. The second refers to the failure of the plaintiff to introduce any testimony that the use of the term “manager” by Iredell was authorized or intended to bind the bank. No doubt, the presiding judge conceived that the defendant had been accorded a fair trial; that a jury of the vicinage had found the issue against it; and that the same idea can be conveyed both by direct and by indirect means; in other *544words, to enlarge the last somewhat, a man may directly and positively appoint A his agent, and give public notice thereof. The same man may, without any direct and positive appointment of A as his agent, just as effectually in law make such appointment by indirect meaos, such as allowing A to assert that he is such agent, allowing him while claiming to be such agent to occupy the principal’s place of business, conduct while there the principal’s business — all of which is fully ratified by said principal. The Circuit Judge did not err here.

It is the judgment of this court, that- the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.