Bishop v. Sniffen

1 Daly 155 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1861

By the Court.

Brady, J.

The question presented in this case, namely, whether in an action on a note payable on demand, interest is to be allowed from the date of the note, or the time of demand, has not been settled by any express adjndicaiiou in this state, although a rule which is controlling has been long recognized.

In Campbell v. Mesier (3 Johns Ch., Rep. 21), the chancellor said “ it is the settled rule in the law of this State, tlu’f iutmx-st *157is to be paid for money received or advanced for the use of another, after a default in payment,” and Spencer, Senator, in Renssellaer Glass Factory v. Reid, (5 Cowen, 611), adopts the rule thus stated, which he says is illustrated by the familiar case of a note payable on demand, where interest is never allowed but from the time of demand, made by suit or otherwise. The same rule is recognized in Purdy v. Phillips, 1 Kernan, 406 ; also in Edwards on Bills, 712 ; and in Smith’s Mercantile Law, p. 526. See also, Stowits v. Bank of Troy, 21 Wend. 186,and Day v. Belt, 6 Johns. 24.

Interest is given by the'courts as pecuniary damages upon a contract to pay money and a failure to pay at the tíme designatcd (Lord Mansfield, in Robinson v. Bland, 2 Burr, 1086); and when a sum is payable on demand, the damages do not arise until default is made. Predicating the right of the plaintiff to receive interest on this principal, it is clear that the judgment rendered below is wrong because there is no proof that the note was demanded on the day of its date.

In reference to the demand proved, and the questions arising from the proof of such demand, this case illustrates the troubles which are occasioned by the mode of trying cases in the inferior courts. If the plaintiff had been ashed whether at the time the demand was made the note had been endorsed, his answer might have secured to him the benefit of that deinand, as to interest, but inasmuch as the case does not disclose the fact whether the note was endorsed or not, the plaintiff was not entitled to interest but from the time of the commencemenk of this action. If the note had not been neeotiable, or being negotiable, had not in fact been negotiated, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover the interest from the time of the demand in 1858 (Pintard v. Tackington, 10 Johns. 104; Rowley v. Ball, 3 Cow. 303; McNair v. Gilbert, 3 Wend. 344 ; Blade v. Noland, 12 Wend. 174; Smith v. Rockwell, 2 Hill, 483); because in that case no indemnity could be demanded or required at the time of the demand, as no right of action would exist against the defendant in the hands of the stranger holding the note. The plaintiff failed, however, to make out a plain case. He did not show that at the time of the demand the note had not been endorsed, nor did he show that the defendont, when the demand was made, placed his refusal upon *158some other ground than the nonproduction of the note or a right of indemnity. The note being negotiable and being lost, the defendant was not bound to make payment of it upon a mere naked demand, and therefore made no default in Sept. 1858. Smith y. Rockwell, supra, and cases cited; Des Arts v. Leggett, 5 Duer, 156.

For these reasons the judgment should be reduced so that interest is allowed only from the commencement of the action, and should be affirmed for the balance, without costs to either party.

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