120 Ga. 622 | Ga. | 1904
This was an action 'by the payee of an inland bill of exchange against the drawer. The defense was, that the drawer had not been given notice of dishonor within a reasonable time after the refusal of the drawee to pay; that he had been notified by the holder that the bill had been paid; that he relied upon this statement and was thus lulled into security, as a consequence of which he sustained damage by reason of the fall in the market price of cotton which was held as a pledge to secure the payment of the bill; the amount of the*damage being in excess of the balance claimed to be due on the bill. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant, and error is assigned upon the refusal of the court to grant a motion for a new trial, filed by the plaintiff. The motion contains, among others, assignments of error upon extracts from the judge’s charge, and upon a ruling allowing the
In Holmes v. Pratt, 34 Ga. 558, it was held that demand and notice were not necessary to charge the drawer of a foreign bill of exchange. While there is an intimation that dSmand and notice would be necessary if the bill had been payable or intended to be negotiated at a chartered bank, there was, no direct ruling to this effect. In Hall v. Davis, 41 Ga. 614, which was a suit by the holder against the drawer of a foreign hill of exchange, it was held that notice of non-payment, to the drawer, was a condition precedent to his liability. This case is in line with Davies v. Byrne, supra. In the opinion Mr. Chief Justice Lochrane distinctly states, that the act of 1826, as contained in the code, applies only to indorsers, and does not alter, repeal, or annul the well-estabished principles of the law governing the liability of drawers and their rights with reference to notice of dishonor; in other words, that as to this matter the law merchant controls. This decision seems to be in conflict with the ruling in Holmes v. Pratt, supra; and if the two decisions are irreconcilable, the earlier decision would control. In Gilbert v. Seymour, 44 Ga. 63, the defendants were both drawers and indorsers of a domestic bill of exchange, not a bank paper; and it was held, that under the code they were
The purpose of the act of 1826, in abrogating the rule requiring notice of dishonor to indorsers, was by its very terms to place an indorser upon the same footing as a surety. The decisions above referred to, in reference to the right of the drawer of a domestic bill of exchange, have the same effect upon the rights of drawers as the act of 1826 has upon the rights of indorsers. The contract of the drawer is that if the drawee does not accept he will pay, and if the drawee does not pay after acceptance he will. See, in this connection, Manry v. Waxelbaum, 108 Ga. 17. After acceptance the contract of the drawer is one of suretyship (Davis v. Baker, 71 Ga. 33), and between the drawing and the acceptance it is one in the nature of suretyship. Not being entitled to notice of dishonor in either event, he is not entitled to be discharged from his Obligation to pay, except under those circumstances where a surety would be discharged, and then only to the extent of the injury he has sustained at the hands of the holder. The moment it appears that the bill has been drawn, that acceptance has been refused, or that there has been an acceptance and that payment according to the tenor of the bill has been refused, a prima facie case is made in favor of the holder against the diawer; and if for any reason the drawer has been discharged, the
Some portions of the charge upon which error was assigned were not in accord with the principles above laid down, and for that reason it is necessary to reverse the judgment refusing to grant a new trial. While the date of the statement made by Lamar, cashier of the Bank of Richland, to Nicholson, to the effect that the bill had been paid, would be material, it was not permissible to prove this date by the correspondence between Lamar and Council, cashier of the Americus bank, to which Nicholson was not a party and of which he had no notice. This correspondence might be used by Lamar to réfresh his memory, but it was not admissible to show the time when the statement was made. The
Judgment reversed.