9 Me. 104 | Me. | 1832
delivered the opinion of the court.
Until the case of Bickerdike v. Bollman, 1. T. R. 405, it was a general rule strictly adhered to, that, without such notice, the drawer would in no event be liable. Since that case, the rule has been relaxed, and want of notice has been excused where the drawer had no effects, nor any ground to expect any in the hands of the drawee from the time the bill was drawn until it became payable, and where he had no other valid foundation to expect payment by the drawee. But as this is an exception to a general rule, it is incumbent on him, who would bring his case within the exception, to prove the facts necessary for that purpose. The drawer remains secure fi'bm any action on his dishonored bill until it is proved that he had seá^ sonable notice of the dishonor, Or that such notice was unnecessary by reason of his having no funds in the hands of the drawee. It is not sufficient for the holder to say to the drawer, you had no effects in the drawee’s hands wherewith to meet your bill, and therefore, you are not entitled to notice of its dishonor. The allegation must be proved by him, who makes it or it avails him nothing. 2 Stark. Ev. 261, note 1. Like every other fact, it must be established by competent proof and the best the nature of the case admits of. In this case the plaintiff relies upon the declarations of the drawee made at the time the order was presented, that when the order was drawn, and from thence until the time of its presentment and dishonor he had not in his hands any funds of the drawer, and had not received from him any consideration for the acceptance or payment of said order; and he contends that proof of this declaration is such evidence as will excuse him from giving notice to the drawer ; and 2 Stark. Ev. 262, is cited as authority for this position.
It is difficult to perceive how that case can be considered as supporting Starkie’s text. The action was on a bill of exchange by the indorsee against the drawer. Before the bill became due, application was made by the holder to the drawees, and the answer was that the drawer then had no effects in their hands $ but as the bill would not be due until the next day, it was probable that the drawer would be in and provide effects before that time. On the next day, when the bill became due, the drawer, in a conversation with the holder, said that he hoped the bill would be paid, that he would see what he could do, and would endeavor to provide effects, and would see the holder again. The bill was not presented to the drawees on the day it became due, but was on the day following, and the witness was about to state what passed between the draw-ees and himself on that occasion. But Lord Ellenborough held that he could not, as “ what passed between the drawee and holder after the bill had become due was not evidence, since he was no longer to be considered as the agent of the indorser.” It is not easy to understand what is meant by the concluding part of the sentence ; but the turning point of the case was not whether the drawees had funds, but whether the necessity of a presentment on the day the bill became due was superseded by what the drawer said to the holder on that day ; and whether what took place oil the day previous to the maturity of the bill amounted to a presentment and refusal to accept. And if, as the court decided, it did not, unquestionably what took place between the holder and drawees on the day after the bill became due could not affect the drawer. Lord Ellenborough, therefore, nonsuited the plaintiff, at the same time saying, “ the evidence shows that it was not likely that the drawees would accept the bill, but it was possible that they might change
It was said by Abbott, C. J. in Hill v. Heap, Dowl. & Ryl. N. P. cas. 57, that the conduct of the drawer formed no excuse for the nonpresentment for payment in Prideaux v. Collier, and that such was the decision of Lord Ellenborough in that case. Starkie, in his treatise on evidence, before cited, gives as the. reason why the mere declaration of the drawee is evidence ; because he is'for that purpose the agent of the drawer ; that is, he, is the agent for the purpose of declaring that he has no funds in his hands. What constituted him the agent ? Not entrusting him with funds, for he has none; not requesting him to perform a service, and a compliance on his part, for he refuses. If a person requests another to do a particular act and the latter does it, he may, in doing that act, be considered as the agent of the former, but if he refuse to do it, he refuses not as agent, but refuses to become the agent. The act of refusal is his own. Follow out the consequences of this doctrine of agency of the drawee and the effect of his declarations and to what will it lead ? Where the fact of agency has been proved, the act of the agent co-extensive with the authority, is the act of the principal, whose mere instrument he is; and then, whatever the agent says, within the scope of his authority, the principal says; and evidence may be given of such acts and declarations as if they had been actually done and made by the principal himself; and it makes no difference whether the declarations be true or false, for they
A merchant, having ample funds in the hand's of his correspondent, draws upon him, with confident expectation that his draft will be duly honored. On presentment the bills are dishonored, the drawee declaring that he had no funds of the drawer in his hands. Now if “the declarations of the. drawee as to the want of effects of the drawer in his hands is evidence of the fact, because he is for that purpose the agent of the drawer,” in what situation is the latter placed ? Can it be that he is so bound by this declaration as not to be entitled to notice of the dishonor of his bills j and that his liability to the holder is so fixed by this falsehood that the latter may lie by securely, without giving notice, until the drawee has become worthless, and the drawer remediless ? Such consequences must follow, if the drawee, in asserting the want of effects, acts as the agent of the drawer.
But the drawee has no such power. Whatever declarations he makes on the presentment of the bill, he makes as his own, and not as the instrument of another, and, of course, it will not be evidence. He may be a witness to prove the fact, but his mere assertion, not under oath, cannot be proof. 2 Stark. Ev. 59.
Lord Ellenborough, who sat at nisi prius, in the trial of Prideaux v. Collier, says, in giving an opinion in Legge v. Thorpe, 12 East. 176, “it has often happened to me to be obliged to take an account between the parties, in order to see whether there were any and what funds, or more properly speaking whether the drawer had probable funds left in the drawee’s hands to answer the bill.” But if the drawee is to be considered the agent of the drawer, and his declarations the declarations of the drawer, there could be no necessity for taking an account between the drawer and drawee to ascertain whether there were any funds, as proof of the denial by the latter would be sufficient, without notice, to fix the liability of the former.
It is believed that no case is to be found where such evidence has been received. In Bickerdike v. Bollman, the fact of want of
We think the decision of the court below was correct, and the exceptions are accordingly overruled and the nonsuit confirmed.