8 F. 534 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York | 1881
This suit was brought against the Cayuga Lake Eailroad Company as maker, and the defendant Morgan as indorser, of two instruments in writing which the complaint calls promissory notes. Each defendant answered separately. At the trial, before the court and a.jury, the plaintiff had a verdict for $30,787.89. The defendant Morgan now moves for a new trial, on a bill of exceptions made by him. The instruments were alike in form, except that one was payable five months after date and the other six months after date.. The form was this:
*535 “ §10,000. Auiioka, N. Y ., May 1,1873.
“Five months after date, the Cayuga Lake Eailroad Company promises to pay to the order of Henry Morgan, President, $10,000, at the office of'.Leonard, Sheldon & Foster, No. 10 Wall street, New York city, value received, with interest. The Cayuga Lake Kailboad COMPANY,
( Seal of the Cayuga Lake ) ¿ Eailroad Company, f
“ By Hunky MORGAN, President.
“T. JDelah’ield, Treasurer.”
Across the back of each instrument was written the indorsement “Henry Morgan, President. ” The signatures to the two instruments were the duly-authorized signatures of the Cayuga Lake Eailroad Company, by the defendant Henry Morgan, as its president. The said instruments were sealed with the seal of the company, which was duly impressed thereupon by the president and treasurer of said company, by its authority, at the time such signatures were made, and at that same time the indorsements upon the back of said instruments of the words “Henry Morgan, President,” were made by the said Morgan. He was, at that time, the president of said company. There was due demand of payment and refusal, and due notice thereof was given to said Morgan. At the time of the commencement of this action, September 16, 1879, the plaintiff was a citizen of Connecticut, and said Morgan was a citizen of New York. Said company was a local corporation in tho interior of New York, having its line of road on the shore of Cayuga lake. The said notes were so made and indorsed for the purpose of being taken to the city of New York to raise money upon for the use of the company. For such purpose they were delivered to Mr. James E. Cox, as special agent of the company, who took them to Now York and there had them cashed 'by Mr. James E. Stillman. Said Cox. received the money from said Stillman, took it home with him, and paid it over to the company for its use.
At the trial the 'defendant Morgan proved that the said instruments were, on or about the third of May, 1873, transferred by the agent and attorney in fact of said company to one James Stillman, who then was, and ever since has been, and still is, a citizen of New York, who discounted said instruments, and paid the proceeds thereof to said agent, who paid over the same to the treasurer of said company; that the defendant Morgan was, on the said third of May, 1873, and still is, a citizen of New York; that, some time after tho maturity of said instruments, they were sold and transferred by said Stillman to the plaintiff, and that the defendant had no benefit of any part of the proceeds of said instruments. The defendant there
The question of jurisdiction is a controlling one, for, if this court has no jurisdiction of this action, the other questions raised are immaterial. It is provided by section 1 of the act of March 3, 1875, (18 St. at Large, 470,) that no circuit court shall “have cognizance of any suit founded on contract in favor of an assignee, unless a suit might have been prosecuted in Such court to recover thereon if no assignment had been made, except in cases of promissory notes negotiable by the law merchant and bills of exchange.” This suit is one founded on a contract made by the defendant Morgan. It is in
The instruments, aside from the seal of the company, have all the qualities of promissory notes, and of promissory notes made by the company as a corporation. They are in the name of the company, it promises to pay, and it signs them by its president. But they were sealed with the seal of the company, and it was a corporation ; and said seal was duly impressed on them by its president and treasurer, by its authority, at the time the notes were signed by it. From what appears in the bill of exceptions, it may properly be inferred that the seal referred to was the corporate seal of the corporation, and that the words “Seal of the Cayuga Lake Railroad Company” appear impressed on the face of each instrument as the impression of the seal referred to, though these facts are not thus distinctly stated in the bill of exceptions. The answer of the defendant Morgan states that the company was a corporation, and had and used a corporate seal, and that the said instruments were executed by it under its corporate seal. The instruments do not, m words, refer to a seal otherwise than as said impressions contain the words they do.
In order to be within the exceptions in the statute the instrument must not only be a promissory note, but must be one negotiable by the law merchant. There is no distinction made by the statute between a promissory note made by an individual and a promissory
It is not enough that the instrument be negotiable, but it must be la promissory note, and one negotiable by the law merchant. The Statute does not say a negotiable instrument, or a negotiable bond, or a negotiable chose in action. The prior statute (Rev. St. § 629) provided that no circuit court should “have cognizance of any suit to recover the contents of any promissory note or other chose in action, in favor of an assignee, unless a suit might have been prosecuted in ¡such court to recover the said contents if no assignment had been ■made, except in cases of foreign bills of exchange.” In the prior statute the thing out of which the exception is carved is a “suit to recover ¡the contents of any promissory note or other chose in action.” In the new statute the thing out of which the exception is carved is a ¡“suit founded on contract.” In the prior statute the exception is one “in cases of foreign bills of exchange.” In the new statute the exception is one “in cases of promissory notes negotiable by the law mer
I am satisfied that, on the ground of want of jurisdiction, a verdict for the defendant Morgan ought to have been directed, and that, for that reason, a new trial must be granted.