40 Conn. 349 | Conn. | 1873
The first question in this case is whether the writing sued upon is a promissory note within the meaning of those words in the statute of limitations. The statute is as follows : “No action shall be brought on any bond or writing obligatory, contract under seal, or promissory note not negotiable, but within seventeen years next after an action shall accrue.” The instrument sued upon is as follows:
“ Bridgeport, Jan. 22d, 1863. 117.14. Due Currier & Barker seventeen dollars and fourteen cents, value received.
Frederick Lockwood.”
Promissory notes not negotiable are by the statute above recited put upon the footing of specialties in regard to the period of limitation, and for most other purposes such notes have been regarded as specialties in Connecticut. The instrument however to which this distinction has been attached is the simple express promise to pay money in the stereotyped
In that ease the words “ on demand” were held to import and to be an express promise to pay. ij That case adopts the correct principle, namely, that To constitute a promissory note there must he an express as contra-distinguished from an implied promise, i The words “ on demand ” are here wanting. The words “ value received,” which are in the writing signed by the defendant, cannot he regarded as equivalent to the words “ on demand.” The case of Smith v. Allen went to the extreme limit in holding the writing there given to he a promissory note, and we do not feel at liberty to go further in that direction than the court then went.
The writing then not being a promissory note, the plaintiff’s action is barred by the six years clause of the statute, unless revived by a now promise to pay.
The offer of the defendant to give a ton of dpal for the note -was not accepted. It was a mere offer of compromise, and clearly no acknowledgment to take the case out of the statute.
The other conversation between the parties, recited in the motion, taken together as one transaction, was held by the Court of Common Pleas not to be sufficient evidence of a new promise. The result of the interview was a refusal to pay. The opening of the conversation on the part of the defendant would seem to admit the justice of the plaintiff’s demand.
A new trial is not advised.
In this opinion Park and Carpenter, Js., concurred.
I- .Foster, J. That the paper before us is more correctly described as a due bill, than as a promissory note, is unquestionable. That it would be regarded among business men, in the daily transactions of life, as conferring the same rights, and imposing the same liabilities, as a promissory note, seems to me equally unquestionable. It was so regarded by the parties to it; it was so treated and so spoken of whenever it was alluded to. This is manifest from the record; “ The defendant came into the store of said Barker, (one of the plaintiffs,) and said to him, ‘ Have you that note ?’ or, ‘ Where is that note ’ and that he ‘ wished to settle it-.’ ' Barker told him ‘the note was in Mr. Stevens’s hands, &c.’ ” Any writing importing a debt, and an obligation to pay it, especially if it contains the words “ for value received,” is, in the popular judgment, a note. This instrument is clearly of that character. It was clearly the intent of the parties so to make it, and it is evident that they supposed they had so made it. To hold otherwise would seem to be contrary to the understanding and intent of the parties.
But it is claimed that this instrument is not, in law, a promissory note, and that the legislature, in passing the statutes of limitation, could never have intended to put such contracts on a footing with specialties.
Now if we examine the various works on bills of exchange and promissory notes, we do not find that the learned authors of those treatises agree upon any exact and precise definition of a promissory note. Chitty, Bayley, Byles, Story, and Parsons, however, all agree that no particular words are neces
These definitions imply that a note must contain an express promise to pay. And Mr. Justice Story says: “ But it seems that, to constitute a good promissory note, there must be an express promise upon tlie face of the instrument to pay the money; for a mere promise implied by law, founded upon an acknowledged indebtment, will not be sufficient.” Story on Prom. Notes, 14. Courts of tlie highest authority, however, hotli in England and in tills country, hold otherwise ; nor are all the text-writers so to be understood. “ No precise words of contract are necessary in a promissory note, provided they amount, in legal effect, to a promise to pay.” Byles on Bills, 8. “ It is settled that a note need not contain the words ‘ promise to pay,’ if there are other words of equivalent import.” 1 Parsons on Notes & Bills, 24. What words are of “ equivalent import,” and are sufficient to raise a promise to pay, has occasioned much discussion. “ Tho distinction between tlie cases on this point,” says Mr. Justice Story, in a note on the section above quoted, “ is extremely nice, not to say sometimes very unsatisfactory.” As long ago as 1795, Chief Justice Eyre, sitting at Nisi Prius, held an “ I. O. U. eight guineas,” to be merely an acknowledgment of a debt, and neither a promissory note, nor a receipt. Fisher v. Leslie, 1 Esp., 425. In 1800, in the case of Guy v. Harris, reported in Chitty on Bills, 526, Lord Eldon, whose authority is certainly not inferior to that of Chief Justice Eyre, held a similar paper to be a promissory note, and ruled it out when offered in evidence, because it had not a stamp. “ I owe my father £ 470. Jas. Israel:” — This paper was offered in evidence before Lord Ellenborough, and he said: “ I entertain some doubts whether this paper ought not to have been
The cases are numerous where an instrument has been held to be a good note without an express promise to pay. “ I do acknowledge myself to be indebted to A. in £ , to be paid on demand for value received.” On demurrer to the declaration, the court, after solemn argument, held that this was a^ good note within the statute. Casborne v. Dutton, 1 Selwyn, Nisi Prius, In the case of Morris v. Lee, the words were, “ I promise to be accountable to J. S., or order, for £ 50, value received by me,” and it was held a good promissory note. The court say they “ will take the word accountable as much as if it had been pay.” They also notice the words value received. Fortescue, J. said, “ This is a debt, being for value received, and not said on account.” 8 Mod., 362; 1 Strange, 629; 2 Ld. Raym., 1396; S. C.
Turning to the American cases, we find in our own court the case of Smith v. Allen, 5 Day, 337. This was brought on a paper in these words: “ Due John Allen $94.91, on demand.” The declaration counted on á promissory note, and alleged a promise to pay in the usual form, setting out the note in the declaration. The defendants demurred, and the Superior Court held the declaration sufficient. On.writ of error brought, the Court of Errors sustained the decision.
Here was manifestly no express promise to pay; but the court held that there was one implied, and - so sustained the
Passing from this decision in our own court to the courts of New York, where we are accustomed to find questions of mercantile and commercial law as ably discussed and as intelligently decided as in any of our sister states, wo find the case of Russell v. Whipple, 2 Cow., 536. The suit was on this paper, “ Due S., or bearer, $ 10.” This differs from the case at bar in adding the words “ or bearer,” and omits the words “ value received.” The court said it was a promissory note, and that the case was too plain for argument.
In Kimball v. Huntington, 10 Wend., 675, this paper, “ Due R. $325, payable on demand,” was held admissible in evidence asa promissory note. # Judge Nelson says: “The acknowledgment of indebtedness, on its face, implies a promise to pay the plaintiffs, and the payment by its terms is to be in money, absolutely, on demand.”
In Luqueer v. Prosser, 1 Hill, 259, Judge Cowan says: “If there be in legal effect an absolute promise that money shall be paid, all the rest is a dispute about words. * * * The whole inquiry is, does the paper import an engagement that
In Sackett v. Spencer, 29 Barb., 180, this paper, “Due S. or bearer, $340, for value received with interest,” the court say “ is a good promissory note, and if it specifies no time of payment, it is, in legal effect, payable immediately, and without grace.”
In Franklin v. March, 6 N. Hamp., 364, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire held this paper, “ Good to R. C. or order, for $30, borrowed money,” to be a good promissory note.
In addition to the cases above cited, the following are very strong authorities to sustain the claim that this is a promissory note. Cummings v. Freeman, 2 Humph., 143; Harrow v. Dugan, 6 Dana, 341; Fleming v. Burge, 6 Ala., 373; Finney v. Shirley, 7 Missou., 42; McGowan v. West, id., 569; Lorne v. Murphy, 9 Geo., 338; In Johnson v. Johnson, 1 Ala., 263, the court say: “ The acknowledgment of a debt, due for a valuable consideration, clearly implies a promise to pay it on request.”
The record discloses the fact that the paper before us was given for the purchase of clothing, and that the price of it has never been paid. Our statute of limitation bars all right of action upon it, unless it is recognized as a promissory note. So to recognize it will in my opinion do much less violence to law, than will be done to justice if we permit this defendant thus to escape the payment of an honest debt for the necessaries of life.
I would admit the paper offered in evidence in support of the first count in the declaration.
In this opinion Phelps, J., concurred.