Supreme Court of Canada
Mazur v.
Imperial Investment Corporation, [1963] S.C.R. 281
Date:
1963-05-01
John Mazur (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Imperial Investment Corporation Ltd. (Plaintiff)
Respondent.
1963: January 23; 1963: May 1.
Present: Cartwright, Fauteux, Martland, Judson and Hall JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF ALBERTA, APPELLATE
DIVISION.
Bills and notes—Promissory note signed in
blank—Authority given holder to complete—Holder in due course—Bills of Exchange
Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 15, ss. 31, 32.
K told S, the
manager of a car sales agency, that he wished to raise money on a truck of
which he was the owner. S inquired of the plaintiff finance company, who
informed him that K was not a suitable risk. S then
suggested the use of an accommodation party and K asked
the defendant M to let him use his name and credit to obtain a loan. The latter
so agreed and signed a blank form of conditional sale contract and a blank form
of promissory note which were presented by S to the plaintiff. The conditional
sale contract purported to sell the truck for a price of $18,500, with a down
payment of $6,500, leaving an unpaid cash balance of $12,000. Finance charges
were added, bringing the total up to $14,326.96, which was to be paid in
specified instalments. S filled in the first part of the document down to the
$12,000 balance on the purchase price, and the rest of the document was filled
in by the plaintiff who. also filled in the promissory note. The plaintiff
discounted the note and paid S $8,000 by cheque and retained $4,000 in S's
holdback account.
After M had signed the documents, K found
that he could raise the money from another finance company and thereupon told S
to call off the deal with M and the plaintiff. However S fraudulently retained
the moneys received from the plaintiff and concealed this fact from both M and
K. In an action brought on the promissory note, the plaintiff obtained judgment
at trial and this judgment was affirmed on appeal with an increase in amount.
The defendant appealed to this Court.
Held (Cartwright and Hall JJ. dissenting): The appeal
should be dismissed.
Per Fauteux, Martland and Judson JJ.: The plaintiff
took the note for full value and was a holder in due course. It was not open to
this Court to draw inferences of a conditional delivery and failure to fill in
the document in accordance with the authority given, in the face of the
evidence and the unanimous findings which were at the basis of the judgments of
the trial judge and the Court of Appeal. Nor was there any substance in the
defence that the documents were delivered conditionally upon the understanding
that K would get the proceeds. This was the understanding,
but it presupposed use of the documents as honest documents; S converted the
money after they had been used for the purpose for which they were intended.
Per Cartwright and Hall JJ., dissenting: While
the matter was not spelled out in detail, in any one sentence in the evidence,
a reading of all the record made it clear that M entered into the deal on the
stated under-
[Page 282]
standing that (i) the liability to the
plaintiff which he would be assuming would be secured by a hen on K’s truck,
(ii) that the proceeds of the deal would be paid to K, and (iii) that
the total amount raised was to be $10,000. The third of these items was alone
decisive of this appeal. The note was filled up for $14,326.96, which was the
amount required to yield not $10,000 but $12,000. Accordingly, the note, not
having been filled up strictly in accordance with the authority given (contrary
to the requirements of s. 32 of the Bills of Exchange Act) but
actually in contravention of that authority in respect of the amount to be
raised, never became an enforceable note at all.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court of Alberta,
dismissing an appeal from a judgment of Riley J. Appeal dismissed, Cartwright
and Hall JJ. dissenting.
J. W. K. Shortreed, Q.C., for the
defendant, appellant.
J. E. Redmond, for the plaintiff,
respondent.
The judgment of Fauteux, Martland and Judson JJ. was
delivered by
Judson J.:—Imperial
Investment Corporation Ltd., which is a company engaged in financing the
purchase of cars, sued the appellant John Mazur on a promissory note. The
finance company obtained judgment at trial and this judgment was affirmed on
appeal
with an increase in amount. The maker of the note now appeals.
The defences submitted on behalf of the maker were (1) that
the finance company was not a holder in due course, and (2) that the note was
signed in blank, delivered subject to conditions which were not fulfilled, and
was not filled in in accordance with the authority given.
Mazur signed the note as maker for the accommodation of one
Karraja. Karraja was the owner of a 12-ton Mack tandem truck. Early in 1958, he
told one James Sheddy, who operated a company known as A. C. Car Sales &
Service Ltd., that he wished to raise money on this truck. Sheddy inquired of
the finance company, who informed him that Karraja was not a suitable risk. It
does not appear from the evidence what legal arrangements were to be made to
put through this proposed loan. Sheddy then suggested the use of an
accommodation party and Karraja asked Mazur to let him use his name and credit
to obtain a loan.
[Page 283]
The finance company approved of Mazur as a suitable risk.
Mazur then went to Sheddy's office where he signed a customer's statement
giving particulars of his assets, a conditional sale contract and a promissory
note. Mazur said, on discovery, that he did not recollect whether there was any
writing on the conditional sale contract when he signed it. On
cross-examination at the trial, he said there was nothing on it. As to the
promissory note, he said at the trial that it was in blank, that he did not
read it but just signed on the line for his signature. He did admit that he
knew what he was signing. He was in the transport business himself and had had
many dealings with finance companies.
Sheddy presented the conditional sale contract and the
promissory note to the finance company. The conditional sale contract purports
to sell the truck for a price of $18,500, with a down payment in cash of
$6,500, leaving an unpaid cash balance of $12,000. The finance charges are then
added, bringing the total up to $14,326.96, which was to be payable in 17
instalments of $797, and a final instalment of $777.96. I do not think that
there is any doubt that Sheddy filled in the first part of the document down to
the $12,000 balance on the purchase price, and that the rest of the document
was filled in in the office of the finance company. The promissory note is
filled in in typewriting in accordance with the conditional sale contract, and
everything points to this having been done in the office of the finance
company.
Mazur said in evidence:
Q. In your discussions with Mr. Sheddy when you were at his
office to sign whatever it was that you signed, did you tell Mr. Sheddy what
you wanted him to do with those documents?
A. No I did not.
Q. Did he tell you what he was going to do with them; that is,
did he tell you anything about where he would take them or what he would write
on them, anything of that sort?
A. No.
On discovery he had said:
Q. That was not the question, the question was did you know
that this transaction was set up to describe you as purchaser of this vehicle
from A. C. Car Sales and Service?
A. I will answer yes to that.
Nowhere in the record is there any evidence of any attempt
to have these documents conform to reality. These documents appear to indicate
a bona fide sale but the sale
[Page 284]
was entirely fictitious to the knowledge of all three
participants in a scheme to induce the finance company to discount a note. The
fraud of all three is obvious but, in addition, Sheddy kept the proceeds of the
discount for his own use.
The learned trial judge spoke harshly of Sheddy and refused
to believe his evidence when he said that the finance company knew that it was
an accommodation transaction. But willingness to engage in this trickery is an
equal reflection on the other two. The note was discounted on January 20, 1958.
Mazur said that about three weeks later he received a booklet from the finance
company showing the payments to be made and that he made the first three
payments with money supplied by Sheddy. He knew exactly how the documents had
been used when he received this booklet and he did nothing about it for three
months. Then he went to Sheddy, who said that he would cancel the contract.
Mazur then produced his copy of the contract, which contained all the details,
including the finance charges, and Sheddy then wrote the word
"cancelled" on Mazur's copy.
Karraja had no further interest in the transaction. He did
not sign anything and he had not parted with his truck. He says that he had
told Sheddy that he was no longer interested in this transaction because he was
making arrangements to get the money elsewhere. Sheddy says that he was only
told this after the transaction had gone through. There is no evidence that
Karraja ever communicated with Mazur to tell him before the documents were used
to get them back because they were not needed. There is evidence from Sheddy
that his company had no money to acquire the truck from Karraja and it is to be
remembered that he had a substantial equity in his truck. It is clear that he never
intended to part with it.
The learned trial judge made very clear findings of fact
which, in my respectful opinion, are fully supported by the evidence. He said:
The evidence of the defendant was that he gave no instructions
to Sheddy as to what should be done with the note, nor did Sheddy tell him what
was to be done with the note. There is no evidence that anything which may have
passed between Sheddy and Karraja at the time of execu-
[Page 285]
tion of the documents or later was communicated to Mazur,
and there is every indication that it was not. Therefore, the prima facie authority
to complete the note given by sec. 31 must operate in this case.
The Court of Appeal came to the same conclusion:
I have given consideration to the question of whether it was
established by the filling in of material parts of the conditional sale
agreement by the plaintiff that the conditional sale agreement became void to
the knowledge of the plaintiff. If it did so become void to the knowledge of
the plaintiff, it would be necessary to consider the application of the
decision in the Supreme Court of Canada in Traders Finance Corp. v.
Casselman, 22 D.L.R. (2d) 177, [1960] S.C.R. 242, in the facts of this case
to the question of whether the promissory note is enforceable. I have
considered such cases as Tayler v. Great Indian Peninsula R. Co. (1859), 4 De G. & J. 559, 45 E.R. 217; Société Générale de Paris v. Walker et al. (1885),
11 App. Cas. 20; Swan v. North British Australasian Co.
(1863), 2 H. & C. 175, 159 E.R. 73; and Wilson & Meeson v.
Pickering, [1946]. 1 K.B. 423. I have reached the conclusion that the
defendant impliedly authorized the filling in of the conditional sale agreement
for the purpose of assisting in the raising of money for Karraja, and that
therefore it cannot be found that that agreement became void to the knowledge
of the plaintiff by reason of the filling in of particulars which the defendant
must have known would have to be filled in.
Nowhere can I find that these conclusions lack foundation
and that Mazur's signature of the documents was conditional upon the finance
company having a lien on the truck and that the total net amount was to be
limited to $10,000. The figure of $10,000 was mentioned, according to Karraja,
in his first conversation with Sheddy. Sheddy says that the figure mentioned
was $10,000 or $12,000. Mazur said that he understood that the figure was
$10,000 but, against this, he was in possession of the completed contract and
the booklet of payments showing that the figure was $12,000 and he made no
protest.
I do not think that it is open to this Court to draw
inferences of a conditional delivery and failure to fill in the document in
accordance with the authority given in the face of this evidence and the
unanimous findings which are at the basis of the judgments of the trial judge
and the Court of Appeal. Nor is there any substance in the defence that the
documents were delivered conditionally upon the understanding that Karraja
would get the proceeds. Of course this was the understanding but it presupposes
use of the documents as honest documents. Sheddy converted the money after they
had been used for the purpose for which they were intended.
[Page 286]
The finance company took this note for full value. It paid
Sheddy $8,000 by cheque and retained $4,000 in Sheddy's account, called a
holdback account. At the time of the transaction, Sheddy was overdrawn in this
account by $1,362.02. After the $4,000 was credited, he had a credit balance of
$2,637.98.
Much of the evidence at trial was directed to show that the
finance company did not take this note in good faith because it knew that the
transaction was fictitious or had sufficient knowledge of the facts to bring
home to it knowledge of its nature. With a note taken for full value and the
rejection of Sheddy's evidence, any attack on the judgment on this ground must
fail.
The judgment of the trial judge awarded the finance company
only $5,600, namely, $8,000 less the 3 payments of $800 made. The plaintiff
cross-appealed and asked that its judgment be increased to $9,600. This
cross-appeal was allowed and, in my opinion, correctly. Why the plaintiff did
not cross-appeal for judgment for the face value of the note, namely,
$14,326.96 less the 3 payments, I do not know.
The plaintiff is a holder in due course of this note. I
would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal and dismiss this appeal with
costs.
Cartwright J.
(dissenting):—This is an appeal from a unanimous judgment of the
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta dismissing an appeal from the
judgment of Riley J. and allowing a cross-appeal whereby the judgment was
increased from $5,600 to $9,600 together with interest and costs.
The facts are not complicated. The learned trial judge has
stated that Sheddy is unworthy of belief, but he has made no similar
observation as to either Mazur or Karraja and, after a careful perusal of the
whole record, I am unable to find any reason that the evidence of these two
witnesses where it is uncontradicted, unshaken on cross-examination and not
inherently improbable should not be acted on.
In January 1958, one Karraja approached James Sheddy, the
manager of A. C. Car Sales & Service Ltd. seeking to borrow $10,000 on a
12-ton truck owned by Karraja.
[Page 287]
Sheddy asked the respondent whether it would make the
advance requested and, after the respondent had made some investigation as to
the credit of Karraja, he was advised that it would not. Sheddy suggested to
Karraja that if he knew anyone whose credit rating was good and who was willing
to assist him the matter could be arranged.
Karraja then asked the appellant if he would allow his name
to be used to enable Karraja to obtain the advance and the appellant consented.
Following this Mazur and Karraja went together to Sheddy's
office. Karraja stated that he wanted $10,000 "to himself", that is
to say, clear after payment of financing and other charges.
It was agreed that Sheddy would prepare a conditional sale
agreement under the terms of which A. C. Car Sales & Service Ltd. would
sell Karraja's truck to Mazur. Mazur would sign this agreement as purchaser and
would also sign a promissory note for the balance due under the agreement. The
conditional sale agreement and the note would be transferred to the respondent
and it would make the necessary advance to A. C. Car Sales & Service Ltd.
which in turn would pay it over to Karraja. Both Mazur and Karraja were
familiar with the practice of purchasing trucks under conditional sale
agreement.
There was nothing either fraudulent or unlawful in this
proposal and it could have been carried out by Karraja transferring the title
to his truck to A. C. Car Sales and by that company, in turn, making the sale
to Mazur, it being agreed as between Mazur and Karraja that Mazur would not in
fact be called upon to pay as the payments would be made by Karraja. But for
the other arrangement made by Karraja, to be referred to later, there is no
reason to suppose that it would not have been carried out.
While the matter is not spelled out in detail, in any one
sentence in the evidence, a reading of all the record appears to me to make it
clear that Mazur entered into the deal on the stated understanding that (i) the
liability to the respondent which he would be assuming would be secured by a
lien on Karraja's truck, (ii) that the proceeds of the deal would be paid to
Karraja, and (iii) that the total net amount raised was to
be $10,000. While each of these three
[Page 288]
items was no doubt of importance to Mazur it is the third
which, in my opinion, is decisive of this appeal and which alone requires
further consideration.
On this understanding Mazur signed a printed form of
conditional sale agreement and a printed form of promissory note. I agree with
the finding of Smith C.J.A. that:
It seems probable that the conditional sale agreement and
the promissory note were entirely blank when they were signed by Mazur.
On the argument before us it was conceded that the
promissory note was signed in blank and that all the blanks were later filled
up by employees of the respondent.
Sheddy inserted in the form of conditional sale agreement
which Mazur had signed the description of the truck, a figure of $18,500 as
sale price, a figure of $6,500 as cash payment and an apparent unpaid cash
price balance of $12,000.
Sheddy then took the documents to the respondent.
The respondent inserted in the conditional sale agreement
the cost of insurance, the registration fee and the "finance charge"
and added these to the unpaid cash price balance, making a total of $14,326.96.
The respondent also filled in blanks so as to provide for payment of seventeen
instalments of $797 each and a final instalment of $777.97, the first being
payable on February 20, 1958, and the remainder on the 20th of each successive
month. In the promissory note the respondent filled in $14,326.96 as the sum
payable, and inserted the same dates and amounts of instalments.
A. C. Car Sales Ltd. assigned the conditional sale agreement
and endorsed the promissory note to the respondent which then issued a cheque
to A. C. Car Sales & Service Ltd. for $8,000 and placed $4,000 to its
credit in a "holdback" account.
When he had been advised by Sheddy that the respondent would
not make the advance to him Karraja had commenced negotiations with another
finance company and after Mazur had signed the forms referred to above Karraja
found that this company would advance $10,000 on his truck. He thereupon told
Sheddy to call off the deal with Mazur and the respondent. Sheddy says that at
this time, he had already turned over the documents to the respondent and
received the $8,000; whether or not this is so does
[Page 289]
not appear to me to be of importance. Sheddy, as has been
found, fraudulently retained the moneys received from the respondent and
concealed this fact from both Mazur and Karraja.
The action is brought on the promissory note. It was blank
in all material particulars when received by the respondent and the blanks were
filled in by the respondent. In my view, the respondent can succeed in the
action only if it was entitled to fill in these blanks under ss. 31 and 32 of
the Bills of Exchange Act, which read as follows:
31. Where a simple signature on a blank paper is delivered
by the signer in order that it may be converted into a bill, it operates as a
prima facie authority to fill it up as a complete bill for any amount, using
the signature for that of the drawer or acceptor, or an endorser; and, in like
manner, when a bill is wanting in any material particular, the person in
possession of it has a prima facie authority to fill up the omission in any way
he thinks fit.
32. (1) In order that any such instrument when completed may
be enforceable against any person who became a party thereto prior to its
completion, it must be filled up within a reasonable time, and strictly in
accordance with the authority given; but where any such instrument, after
completion, is negotiated to a holder in due course, it shall be valid and
effectual for all purposes in his hands, and he may enforce it as if it had
been filled up within a reasonable time and strictly in accordance with the
authority given.
(2) Reasonable time within the meaning of this section is a
question of fact.
It is clear that Mazur placed his signature on the blank
printed form of note and delivered it to Sheddy in order that it might be
converted into a promissory note. It is also clear that Mazur became a party to
the note prior to its completion and consequently he is liable on it only if it
was filled up within a reasonable time and "strictly in accordance with
the authority given". It was, no doubt, filled up within a reasonable time
but it seems to me that the authority given by Mazur to Sheddy was limited to
filling it up (and also filling up the conditional sale agreement which Mazur
had signed in blank) for such amount as was necessary to yield $10,000 to
Karraja. In fact the note was filled up for $14,326.96, which was the amount
required to yield not $10,000 but $12,000.
The note, not having been filled up strictly in accordance
with the authority given but actually in contravention thereof in the respect
just mentioned, never became an enforceable note at all.
[Page 290]
The situation would, of course, have been different if
Sheddy had filled that note up and then negotiated it to the respondent. Had
that happened, the finding of the learned trial judge concurred in by the Court
of Appeal that, whether or not it was negligent, the respondent acted honestly
and took the note in good faith and for value, would have entitled it to
succeed.
In the case at bar, however, the respondent itself filled up
the note. In doing so, I will assume that it was acting honestly in the sense
that, relying on Sheddy, it believed that it was entitled to fill up the note
as it did but this does not assist it when, in fact, the note was filled up in
a manner which was not in accordance with the authority given by Mazur.
I do not find it necessary to review the authorities which
were discussed in the full and helpful arguments addressed to us by both
counsel. Once it is established that all the blanks in the note were filled up
by the respondent itself the only question requiring decision is whether they
were filled up strictly in accordance with the authority given. If there has
been a de facto exceeding of the authority that is an end of the matter.
Authority to fill up a note for the amount of $10,000 plus incidental charges,
is exceeded when the note is filled up for the amount of $12,000 plus
incidental charges.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the appeal should be
allowed, the judgments below set aside and the action dismissed with costs
throughout.
Hall J. (dissenting):—The
facts have been set out in the reasons for judgment of my brother Cartwright
which I have had the advantage of reading and with which judgment I concur.
However, I would like to comment on an important aspect of the case which I
think influenced the learned trial judge and the Court of Appeal and was absent
in this Court, and which, accepting the findings of the learned trial judge as
to credibility, brings me to a conclusion opposite to that reached in the
Courts below. The crucial fact in this case, in my judgment, is that the
promissory note sued on bore only the signature of the appellant, Mazur, when
it came into the possession of the respondent. It is obvious from reading the
judgment of Riley J. that he predicated his finding that the respondent became
the
[Page 291]
holder in due course of the note upon
the view that the appellant had not satisfied the onus of proving that the note
was not complete and regular on its face when delivered to the respondent, for
he says in part:
The Defendant has not satisfied the onus of proving that the
note was not complete and regular on its face when delivered to the Plaintiff.
The only evidence of the condition of the note when delivered to the Plaintiff
is that of Sheddy, who says that he did not do the typewriting. Sheddy was a
most unsatisfactory witness. In cross-examination he admitted retaining the
moneys advanced by the Plaintiff although he had promised Karraja that he would
obtain money for him. He also admitted numerous other falsehoods, including his
statements to Karraja that he would cancel the arrangement, his promise to
Mazur that he would cancel the arrangement, along with numerous other similar
representations. These admissions establish that Sheddy was not a credible
witness, that his evidence should not be believed, and that therefore in the
absence of evidence satisfying the court that the note was not complete and
regular on the face of it when delivered to the Plaintiff, the Defendant has
failed to satisfy the onus and the Plaintiff must be found to be a holder in
due course of the note entitled to recover upon it.
There was still an element of uncertainty on this very point
when the case was before the Court of Appeal which the Chief Justice of Alberta
dealt with as follows:
It seems probable that the conditional sale agreement and
the promissory note were entirely blank when they were signed by Mazur.
On the argument before this Court, it was conceded that the
document bore only the signature of the appellant when it came into the
possession of the respondent. It is perhaps because this outright admission was
not made to Riley J. and to the Court of Appeal that both Riley J. and the
Chief Justice of Alberta relied so strongly on s. 31 of the Bills of
Exchange Act and not on s. 32(1) which reads:
32. (1) In order that any such instrument when completed may
be enforceable against any person who became a party thereto prior to its
completion, it must be filled up within a reasonable time, and strictly in
accordance with the authority given; but where any such instrument, after
completion, is negotiated to a holder in due course, it shall be valid and
effectual for all purposes in his hands, and he may enforce it as if it had
been filled up within a reasonable time and strictly in accordance with the
authority given.
(The italics are mine.)
While Riley J. disbelieved Sheddy and said that Sheddy was
not a credible witness, he made no adverse findings as to the credibility of
Karraja or the appellant. Their evidence establishes, as my brother Cartwright
has pointed out, that when the appellant put his signature on the blank
[Page 292]
promissory note form he did so on certain conditions, one of
those being that a loan to yield $10,000 to Karraja was to be obtained. The
note was actually filled in to yield $12,000 and not $10,000 and therefore not
strictly in accordance with the authority given Riley J. appears to have dealt
with the appellant as an innocent party as well as the respondent. He quotes
from London and South Western Bank v. Wentworth:
This language [i.e., the term 'estoppel'] might be not
improperly applied to the present case, but, for our own part, we should prefer
not to use the word 'estoppel', which seems to imply that a person by his
conduct is excluded from showing what are the true facts, but rather to say
that the question is whether, when all the facts are admitted, the acceptor is
not liable upon the well-known principle that where one of two innocent persons
must suffer from the fraud of a third, the loss should be borne by him who
enabled the third person to commit the fraud.
indicating he did not consider the appellant in the
same category as Sheddy or a party to Sheddy's fraud.
Appeal dismissed with costs, Cartwright and Hall JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the defendant, appellant:
Shortreed, Short-reed, Stainton & Enright, Edmonton.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, respondent: Bishop, McKenzie, Jackson, Latta, Redmond & Johnson, Edmonton.