12 Tex. 118 | Tex. | 1854
This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant, on a draft given by the appellant’s intestate, and set forth in the plaintiff’s petition, as follows, i. e.:
$430 95-100. Marshall, Texas, Sept. 1, 1849.
At one day’s sight, pay to the order of A. Wintercost the sum of four hundred and thirty 95-100 dollars, and charge the same to the account of
Your ob’t servant,
D. J. COLE.
To Alfred Keeley & Co., Shreveport, La.
In the petition it is alleged, that the draft was presented and payment refused, and notice to the defendant. It further alleges, that at the date of the drawing of the draft, that Cole had no assetts or funds in the hands of Alfred Kerley & Co., to satisfy the same, nor had he any effects in their hands at
To fix the liability of the drawers it is necessary, on the ■ part of the plaintiff, to prove presentation for payment, refusal to pay and notice to the drawer, and this legal diligence ■ can only be dispensed with, by proof that the drawer had no funds or effects in the hands of the drawees at the time the-said draft was payable. Or that he had promised subsequently to pay the debt. There was no proof of presentment, and-non-acceptance of the draft, nor of non-payment, and there-was no allegation in the petition of a subsequent promise, and the liability of the drawer must depend on the question of' funds or no funds in the hands of the drawee at the time of' presentation or date of payment. Judge Story, in his work on Bills of Exchange, says, “if the drawer has no right- “ whatsoever to draw the bill, or no reasonable ground to ex- “ pect the bill to be accepted, he is not deemed entitled to “notice of the dishonor thereof, for it was his own fault to- “ draw the same ; and, correctly speaking, he cannot be said. “ to have suffered any loss by the want of notice. Thus, for “ example, ordinarily if the drawer draws the bill without “ having funds in the hands of the drawee, or expectation of' “ funds, or any arrangement or agreement on the part of the “ drawee, to accept the bill, he will not be entitled to notice, “ and not be discharged,,by the want thereof. But, although “ the drawer has no funds in the hands of the drawee, yet, iff “ he has a right to expect to have funds in the hands of the “ drawee to meet the bill, or has a right to expect the bill to- “ be accepted by the drawee, in consequence of an agreement “ or arrangement with him, or if upon taking up the bill, he “ would be entitled to sue the drawee, or any other party to. “ the bill, then and in every such case, he is entitled to strict- “ notice of the dishonor.” (Story on Bills of Exchange, Sec. 311.) The learned and honorable author, in the same section,.
Having shown what the law requires, to excuse a want of that notice to the drawer, we will next examine the evidence presented in the statement of facts, to see how far the plaintiff' in the Court below succeeded in bringing himself within these rules. It appears that the plaintiff first read to the jury the draft sued on, and then introduced as a witness William H. Cobb, who testified that he never saw or heard of the draft sued on until the moment of his testifying; that in the latter part of the year 1850, or the first of the year 1851, i. e. in December, 1850, or January, 1851, the plaintiff gave to witness his draft draw on D. J. Cole, the intestate of the defendant, for about the amount of the draft sued on, which witness soon afterwards presented to said Cole, when Cole told witness that he was not prepared to pay; that he owed the amount of the draft, for goods bought from the plaintiff, and he. was, by the contract, not to be pressed for the payment until the goods were sold, and they were not sold; that he had cotton in the hands of Alfred Kerley & Co., of Shreveport, but was apprehensive that he would not be able to make it available, as he understood that the said house of' Alfred Kerley & Co. was in a doubtful condition. Witness further said that neither plaintiff or defendant ever mentioned the draft sued on to him ; that in the latter part of the year 1850, or beginning of 1851, said house was suspected to be in a failing condition, and in the year 1851 did make an assignment of their assetts and go into liquidation.
Had there been an averment of a subsequent promise to pay the bill, (which there was not,) the evidence would have been wholly insufficient to support the averment. The admission of the defendant’s intestate has no direct reference to the bill, and taking the admission altogether, as made, the presumption that it was the same debt is repudiated. He says that he owed the debt for which plaintiff had drawn on him, for the purchase of goods, and by the contract, he was not to be pressed for payment until the goods were sold, and that they had not been sold. This could not be the debt, acknowledged to be due and intended to be secured by the draft drawn more than fifteen months before, at one day’s sight.
It is assigned for error, further, that the Court erred in its charge to the jury. The charge is as.follows, i. e.: “If you “ conclude from the testimony, that, at the time of drawing the
It seems to us that the last clause of the charge is erroneous. It would seem to be the opinion of the Court, that it was necessary to show by proof, the fact that the drawer had funds or means of paying the bill in the hands of the drawee. Now, it is the law, that when the holder of the bill undertakes to excuse himself from the rule requiring strict notice of non-acceptance and non-payment, on the ground that the bill was drawn without funds, the burthen of proof is upon him, and he assumes the laboring oar, to bring himself within the exception. And it is a presumption of law, that the drawer had funds in the hands of the drawee, when the bill was drawn ; and when the plaintiff has shown the fact of a want of funds, he has made out a prima facie case in his favor, but it is only prima facie, and the defendant, the drawer, may then show that notwithstanding the want of funds, his bill was drawn in good faith, and that he was entitled to strict notice. (Story of Bills of Exchange, Sec. 312.)
Because, then, the Court erred in its charge, and also erred in overruling the motion for a new' trial; the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.