23 Wend. 345 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1840
By the Court, Theplaintiff cannot recover the full amount of the judgment, without giving some account- of the bills. He should, at least, have produced and cancelled them on .the trial, or shown what had become of them. For aught that appears, they may have been paid by the drawee, or be now outstanding, and the defendant liable as drawer to some third person to whom the bills may have been negotiated.
*The plainliff insists that the onus lies on the defendant, and [ *347 ] that he must show the bills paid, before he can claim any deduction from the amount of the judgment. But I think otherwise. The drafts were all payable several years before the trial, and until they are accounted for, the reasonable presumption is, that they Avere either accepted and paid, or that the defendant has been discharged by the laches of the holder. Although, according to the terms of the receipt, the bills were not,to operate in satisfaction until paid, it Avas the duty of the plaintiff to present them, and until he shows such a state of facts as Avould authorize a recovery on the bills themselves, he cannot recover on the original consideration for which they Avere given.
In Jones v. Savage, 6 Wendell, 658, the bill was given for goods purchased, and the holder having neglected to present and give notice, it was held that he could neither recover on the bill, nor on the count for goods sold. Savage, C. J. said, it may be that the holder of the bill, when it fell due, made it his own by omitting to demand payment and give notice. It may be that the defendant had funds in the hands of the drawee, Avith Avhich it Avould have been paid if presented. He 'added, that it Avas not like the ordinary case of a note given for goods, Avhich may be cancelled on the trial, and recoA’ery had for the original consideration. It Avas said in this case that the bill Avas receiA'ed in payment for the goods, but I do not see that this can alter the principle. Whether received as payment, or on an agreement to apply the money Avhen collected, the duty of presenting the bill re-suits from the nature of the security. It purports to be a transfer of funds Avhich the draAver has in the hands of the drawee, and there is an implied undertaking on the part of the holder that he will take the proper steps to have those funds applied to the satisfaction of his debt.
It Was admitted in Tobey v. Barber, 5 Johns. R. 68, that the note of a third person, received on account of a pre-existing debt, may operate as pay-inept if the creditor parts with the note, or is guilty of laches in not present
It is, I think, settled upon .authority, that the plaintiff was bound to present the bills for payment and give notice if they were not paid, and that the burden lies on him of proving that due diligence has been used. The rule is right in principle. The defendant had a right to presume that the bills would be presented, and if he received no notice of their dishonor, he would naturally conclude that his funds in the hands of the drawee had been
If on another.trial the plaintiff can make'out due dilignce, or such facts as will excuse the want of presentment and notice, and the bills are produced and cancelled, he may then recover the balance of his judgment, after deducting the $50 paid in cash. But if he fails to make out such a case, there must be a further deduction from the judgment equal to the amount of the bills at the time they became payable.
Should it turn out that the bills were accepted and paid, other questions may arise which need not now be considered.
New trial granted.