6 Wend. 610 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1831
One ground of objection urged to a recovery in this case is, that the note was void in its origin. The receiver, it is said, was a purely ministerial officer, and had nothing to do, and, without direction from the court of chancery, could do nothing but receive the money from Hildreth, or proceed with the attachment to enforce its payment. If this objection could be well made, it does not appear very gracious, coming as it does from the defendant, if he was, as he contends, a party to the agreement, and claims the benefit of that part of it which reserved a resort to the attachment,. Without deciding that if the receiver had act
The defendant has not shewn that he was a partj1 to that paz t of the arrangement by which the proceedings relative to the attachment were kept on foot, and the rightto "enforce the order of the chanceller reversed, if the note should not be paid ; he is therefore to be viewed in no other light than as an endorser. We were referred to many authorities shewing the duties of a creditor towards the surely of his debtor. Most of the positions contended-for by the defendant are not denied, but it is believed they are but partially applicable to this case. The defendant asks for the unlimited application of the doctrine of the case of Pain v. Packard, 13 Johns. R. 174, which is, that if an obligee or holder of a note is requested by the surety to proceed without delay and collect the money of the principal, who is then solvent, and he neglects to comply with
The inquiry does not properly arise in this case, how far the equitable principle, that a surety, who pays the debt of his principal, is entitled to be substituted in the place of the creditor, as to all the securities and means possessed by him to compel payment by the principal debtor, is applicable to an endorser. If a surety and an endorser stand on the same ground, the defendant here has no just reasons to complain that these securities or means have been wit held from him. The equitable principle is, that the surety must indemnify the creditor for the costs and expenses to which he may be exposed, by the use of the creditors security and means for his benefit. 4 Johns. Ch. R. 132. If a court of chancery would
Another ground of defence assumed on the argument was, that the validity of the proceedings for an attachment were rendered unavailable to the defendant by the transfer of the note. There are two answers to this objection. The defendant cannot interpose such objection, if it was understood when the note was given that the payee was at liberty to negotiate it; and the fact that the note was made negotiable, unless countervailed by some proof of an understanding to the contrary, establishes the payee’s right and a permission to transfer it. If he might do so before it was due, that right was not impaired by his keeping it till after its maturity, before he exercised it. But the more conclusive answer to this part of the defence is, that the transfer is merely nominal; the absolute interests of the parties have not been
New trial denied.