21 Wash. 36 | Wash. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff and appellant seeks by this action-to recover the amount alleged to he due on a promissory-note made by the defendants and respondents, of which, the following is a copy:
“$1,970.30. Seattle, April 20, 1891. Three months, after date we promise to pay to the order of E. Holland & Co. nineteen hundred seventy 30-100 dollars, at 17 6’ Horth Water St., Bochester, H. Y, value received. Toklas,, Singerman & Co.”
The sole question to be determined upon this appeal is whether the payment of the second note by the MacDougall & Southwick Company constituted, in law, a payment of the note in suit. The learned counsel for the respondents contend, and, as we have observed, the trial court held, that the payment made by the MacDougall & Southwick Company should have been applied by the appellant in satisfaction of the note under consideration, and that the application of such payment to the satisfaction of the second note was a wrongful diversion of such payment; and, in support of their contention, counsel cite the case of Commercial Bank v. MacDougall & Southwick Co. reported in 40 N. Y. Supp., at page 189, which they claim is decisive of this question. It seems that the appellant instituted an action in the state of New York against the MacDougall & Southwick Company to recover the amount of the note sued on in this case, on the theory that it evidenced an obligation of Toklas, Singerman & Co., which the MacDougall & Southwick Company had agreed to pay, and, it appearing that the MacDougall & Southwick Company had previously paid all that Toklas, Singerman & Go. owed Holland & Co. at the time it assumed the payment of the debts of Toklas, Singerman & Co., the supreme court of that state very properly held that the action could not be maintained.
“ To constitute a payment, money or some other valuable thing must he delivered by the debtor to the creditor for the purpose of extinguishing the debt, and the creditor must receive it for the same purpose.” 18 Am. & Eng. Ene. Law, p. 150.
Assuming that the authorities above cited correctly announce the general rule of law on the subject of payment, we fail to find anything in the evidence to support the plea of payment. The first note was paid by Mr. Southwick for the MacDougall & Southwick Company, without the slightest knowledge on his part of the existence of the note sued on herein, and the money was received in payment of the second note only. How, then, can it he said that this note has been paid? In fact, it is not claimed that the money was paid or received for the express purpose of discharging this note. The real ground of complaint on the part of the respondents, as stated in the argument and hifief of counsel, is that the hank, by surrendering the second note and suing on the first, has deprived the respondents of the right which they would have, in an action on the second note, of making the defense that the debt for which it was pledged was paid by Holland & Co. before payment was made by the MacDougall & Southwick Company.
But, granting that the respondents, in an action involving that issue, might he able to show that the appellant received more than it should have received on the second note, still we are at a loss to comprehend how it can he said that the question is within the issues presented by the pleadings in this case. We do not undertake to say that such an issue could not have been presented by thé respond
“ The makers of the note were precluded by the rules of law applicable to negotiable paper from setting up, as a defense to an action by a bona fide purchaser for value, the wrongful diversion of the note.”
When the respondents executed and delivered these notes to Holland & Co. they put it in their power to divert them from the purpose for which they were intended, and, in the view of the law, promised, as we have already intimated, to pay them to any bona fide holder to whom Holland & Co. might wrongfully and fraudulently negotiate them. That they were fraudulently diverted is a misfortune of the respondents, for which no relief can be granted in this action. The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below, with instructions to enter a judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount of the note, together with interest thereon from the date of maturity.
Gordon, C. J., and Dunbar and Heavis, JJ., concur.