63 N.H. 353 | N.H. | 1885
At the time of the service of the plaintiffs' writ upon the trustee, July 19, 1884, the trustee was indebted to the defendant upon a sight draft, payable to the order of the defendant at the office of the trustee in the city of New York. The draft, being a negotiable instrument not payable in this state, and one of the parties to it not residing in this state, was not subject to the trustee process, and the plaintiffs took nothing by the attempted attachment. G. L., c. 249, s. 15.
Prior to 1842 negotiable paper was not liable to trustee process in this state. Stone v. Dean,
In Horn v. Thompson,
The process of foreign attachment being unknown to the common law, does not extend beyond the express provisions of the statute; and under the present statute negotiable paper is subject to the trustee process when made and payable in this state, or when the parties reside in the state at the time of making the same, and not otherwise. In Orcutt v. Hough,
The case finds that the draft was given by the special agent of the trustee who adjusted the defendant's loss, in settlement and payment of the loss, and that the defendant had surrendered his policy and all claims under it. This is an express finding that the draft was given in payment of the loss and in discharge of the claims under the policy. The plaintiffs suggest that it does not appear that the agent was authorized to give the draft. This objection should have been made at the trial. The plaintiffs claimed to hold the fund in the hands of the trustee by force of an attachment, and it was incumbent on them to show that the fund was liable to attachment by trustee process. Consequently the burden was on them to show that the draft was unauthorized, if such was the fact. The case does not show that any question was raised at the trial as to the agent's authority, the trustee does not dispute it, and it is to be assumed that he acted within the scope of his authority.
Trustee discharged.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *355