Spraights v. . Hawley , 7 Trans. App. 14 ( 1868 )


Menu:
  • [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 443 The facts in this case show title in the plaintiff to the property in question, and a disposition thereof by the defendant avowedly and solely as agent for Eugenia Ashby, the former owner and one of the mortgagors.

    The defendant's answer avers that he acted as such agent, without any interest or claim of interest in the same, or its proceeds. The referee finds as a fact that he acted simply as the agent of Charles Ashby, or of Charles Ashby and his said wife.

    The title of the plaintiff was valid, both upon the facts found, and upon the legal conclusions stated by the referee.

    It follows that the disposition of the property by Ashby and wife was a tortious conversion thereof, and so the referee finds. *Page 444

    No question of fraud in the mortgage to the plaintiff or otherwise, nor any failure to place his mortgage on file pursuant to the statute, was deemed by the referee or by the Supreme Court, nor by the counsel for the appellant, to arise in the case; because, as against the mortgagors and their mere agent, the bona fides of the mortgage and the filing thereof were regarded as wholly immaterial, and as against them the mortgage was held valid, even though made to defraud creditors, and whether filed or not. It is, however, more satisfactory to say that both good faith and due filing, and renewal of the mortgage, are facts in the case duly proved and found.

    The case, therefore, raises the single question, whether the possession of the mortgagors is such evidence of ownership or of authority to make sale of the property, that the defendant, acting in good faith as their agent, in the belief that they were owners, is protected thereby against the claim of the plaintiff to recover for a sale and disposition thereof. Some stress was laid upon the fact that this transaction was more than a year after the mortgage debt became payable, and the continued possession of the mortgagors during that time is claimed to belaches on the part of the plaintiff, warranting the defendant in trusting to their apparent ownership and executing their direction to sell the property.

    This reasoning, sought to be applied to this case, seems to me to overlook the fact found by the referee, that for more than a year of that period the plaintiff had been in the actual prosecution of an action to enforce his rights against the mortgagors; and the further circumstance that the defendant is in no wise shown to have been affected by or to have had any knowledge whether the mortgagors had been in the possession of the property one year or one day. He was not misled into any trusting to a long continued possession, for it does not appear that he ever saw or heard of the property until the day on which it was brought to him for sale.

    I do not, however, attach importance to this, for I am not aware of any principle or any authority which makes such mere possession, in the absence of fraud, amount to a justification *Page 445 to the agent in a fraudulent disposition of the property.

    It is placed by the appellants upon some general idea that because the mortgagors had possession, and the defendant honestly believed they were owners, and in that belief, innocent of any wrongful intent, sold the property and paid over the proceeds, it is not just that he should be held responsible. In other words, it is as to the defendant a hard case.

    Now all this would be very well, if it were true that mere possession of personal property was such evidence of ownership or of authority to dispose thereof, that all persons were at liberty to assume such ownership or authority, and act in reliance thereon. Unfortunately for the appellant this is not so. Indeed, the cases in which possession imports such authority, are very few, and the mere fact of possession, unaccompanied by other circumstances, giving it a specific character, indicative of authority, never does.

    Indeed, every consideration which is urged for the protection of the defendant, would have appealed as strongly in his behalf if it had appeared that Ashby had stolen the property from the plaintiff. Ashby's possession would have borne the same aspect of apparent ownership, and the defendant's sincere good faith and innocence of wrong would have been equally deserving of consideration.

    True, in such case, the possession of Ashby would have been against the will of the plaintiff; but even then, why should it not be said that the plaintiff should have taken care that his property be not stolen and not suffer the innocent defendant to become a sufferer?

    But take a stronger case; suppose the property had been loaned by the plaintiff to Ashby; it would not in that case be claimed, any more than if stolen by the latter, that Ashby's possession would protect the defendant, and yet the hardship of holding him responsible would be in all respects the same as in this case.

    I consider that it is hard in one sense that the defendant should be compelled to indemnify the plaintiff. It is so, because it is not easy always to be perfectly safe in one's dealing. *Page 446

    But chattels are not negotiable. Possession is not, as in the case of mercantile paper and money, assurance of title or of authority to dispose of. The servant intrusted with the possession of his master's property, does not thereby give authority to sell it or to authorize another to sell it. The borrower of a chattel, or the ordinary bailee, does not by his possession gain any such power. And, in short, the rule that no one can be deprived of his title without his own consent, has no such exception as is sought to be created in this case. And the converse rule, that he who assumes to deal or intermeddle with personal property which is not his own, must see to it that he has a warrant therefor from some one who is authorized to give it, has no such qualification. (Anderson v. Nicholas, 5 Bosw. 130, and cases cited.) If he buys from or consents to act by direction of another, he must see to it that in the resposibility of such other he can find indemnity if his confidence is misplaced.

    All there is, therefore, of hardship to the defendant is that he has undertaken to execute a commission for Ashby or Ashby and wife, and, if, in consequence of acting upon the fraud or misrepresentation, he is subjected to liability to the plaintiff, he will have to look to them for indemnity. Perhaps the finding of the referee indicates that Ashby is insolvent; if so, that makes the hardship. But even that is not a peculiar case; it is most common in the affairs of business; and having, as the referee finds, heard that Ashby was insolvent when he undertook the commission, he might have known that his recourse to him for indemnity might fail.

    The doctrine of the cases cited in the prevailing opinion in the Supreme Court does not appear to be controverted by the counsel for the appellant, and yet they seem to me decisive in this case of the principle that the agent, in a tortious conversion of another's property, is liable when his principal is guilty of the tort; and even though the agent act innocently in good faith, relying on the possession and apparent authority (if possession be deemed such) of his principal (Perkins v.Smith, 5 Wils. 328.) An innocent clerk sold goods for the use of his master (Stephens v. Elwell, 4 M. S. 259); an innocent *Page 447 clerk received goods from his master's agent and sent them to his master abroad. In this case the observation of Lord ELLENBOROUGH covers this whole case: "The only question is whether this is a converson in the clerk which undoubtedly was so in the master. The clerk acted under an unavoidable ignorance and for his master's benefit when he sent the goods to his master, but nevertheless, his acts may amount to a conversion, for a person is guilty of a converson who intermeddles with my property and disposes of it, and it is no answer that he acted under the authority of another who had himself no authority to dispose of it." (McCombie v. Davis, 6 East, 358; Baldwin v. Cole, 6 Mod. 212; Throop v. Bussing, 11 Johns. 285; Farrar v.Chauffitch, 5 Denio, 527; Pierson v. Graham, 33 E.C.L. 468;Everett v. Coffin, 6 Wend. 609; Spencer v. Blackman, id. 167; Williams v. Merle, 11 id. 80.)

    And these cases recognize and affirm the more general rule above stated, that he who intermeddles with personal property not his own must see to it that he is protected by the authority of one who is himself, by ownership or otherwise, clothed with the authority he attempts to confer.

    Recurring again to the able and ingenious argument in support of the appeal, and to the point that the plaintiff was guilty oflaches, and that, by supposing the mortgagors to be in possession, he enabled them to deceive the defendant and produce the result. This assumes that it is negligence in the owner of personal property to permit it to be in the possession of another. I am not aware of any warrant for such assumption. So long as it is true that a mortgage given in good faith and for sufficient consideration is valid, notwithstanding possession may be in the mortgagor, so long such possession no more involves culpable negligence or laches in the mortgage, then the possession of a servant, hirer, or other bailee, imports negligence in the owner. In truth, so long as mere possession does not import authority to sell, the negligence, if any, is on the part of him who relies upon it and not on the owner who permits it.

    And the suggestion gains no strength from the observation *Page 448 that if the plaintiff had not supposed the mortgagors to be in possession, it would not have been in their power to deceive the defendant, and where one of two innocent persons must suffer by the wrong of another, the one who enables such other to commit the wrong must bear the consequences. How did the mere possession of the mortgagors enable them to commit the wrong? Only by giving them physical power to deliver the property. The maxim is not true in the sense in which it is sought to be here applied. If it were, then, as in the other cases above referred to, whenever an owner suffers his property to go out of his manual keeping or presence, he is liable to lose it by the same means employed here, and is exposed to the maxim here invoked for the defendant's protection. It is only when the owner has parted with the legal title upon some secret trust or condition, or has done something calculated to mislead, upon which a third person has a right to rely, and on which he does rely as evidence of authority, that such maxim could have any application. And the attempt to apply it here begs the whole question. (See COWAN, J., in Ash v. Fulman, 1 Hill, 307.) Mere possession of another's property is not such evidence of ownership or authority to sell, that third persons have a right, as against the true owner, to rely thereon.

    They may act in faith thereof, if they please, but they must rely upon the party with whom they deal, and look to him for indemnity if the title fails, or they be deceived or defrauded into a condition of responsibility.

    This is the defendant's situation; he has trusted the representations of Ashby. He has been deceived thereby, and he must look to him for indemnity.

    The order of the General Term of the Supreme Court, granting a new trial, should be affirmed, and in pursuance of the defendant's stipulation, judgment absolute for the plaintiff must be rendered.

    All concur.

    Order of General Term affirmed, and judgment absolute for plaintiff, with costs. *Page 449