5 Barb. 490 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1849
The conditional nature of the endorser’s contract is not denied in this case, nor is it denied that to make the endorser liable, the holder of the note must prove on the trial, that the payment of the note was properly demanded of the maker, and refused or neglected by him; or, in other words, that the note was dishonored by the maker, and that the requisite notice was given to the endorser. The demand and non-payment were sufficiently proved before the justice, and the only question for our consideration relates to the sufficiency of the notice to the éndorser. The notice was a written notice subscribed by Gold, the holder of the note, addressed to the endorser, dated and served the day the note became due, and stated that the note, describing it, was due that day and had not been paid, and that the subscriber was the owner and holder of the note, and looked to the endorser for the payment of the same. This presents the question whether it was necessary that the notice should inform the endorser that 'payment of the note had been demanded of the maker. In this state, the sufficiency of the notice, when there is no dispute about the facts, is a question of law, to be determined by the court. (Vanhoesen v. Alstyne, 3 Wend. 75. The Bank of Utica v. Bender, 21 Id. 643. Renter v.JJoioner, 23 Id. 620. Ransom v. Mack, 2 Hill, 587. Spencer v. Bank of Salina, 3 Id. 520.)
This being the settled law, the question of the sufficiency of the notice cannot be avoided by the court, under any pretence of submitting it to a jury, to say whether the party could understand what was meant, or whether he was misled by it or not. It is true, there may be many facts connected with the question of proper diligence in giving notice—such as the residence of the parties, the course of communication between them, &c.-—which must be submitted to a jury; but the notice, however and whenever sent, must speak for itself. In a case like the one under consideration, there are no extrinsic facts for the jury to find. The notice was properly Sent, and shows upon its face what information it gave the endorser, and the court must decide whether it is sufficient or not. The necessity of giving notice to the endorser, grows out of the legal construction of the obligation which he assumes by endorsing the note. Mr. Justice Story, in his Treatise on Promissory Notes, section 135, says: “ The endorsement of a note,- in contemplation of law, amounts to a contract on the part of the endorser, with and in favor of the endorsee, and every subsequent holder to whom the note is transferred, first, that the instrument itself and the antecedent signatures thereon are genuine; second,
In his Commentaries on the Law of Promissory Notes, section 348, Mr. Justice Story says: “It is indispensable that the notice should either expressly or by just and natural implication, contain in substance the following requisites: 1st. A true description of the note, so as to ascertain its identity. 2d. An assertion that it has been duly presented to the maker at its 'maturity, and dishonored. 3d. That the holder or other person giving the notice, looks to the person to whom the notice is given, for payment and indemnity.”
The second requisite is the only one in question in this case. The counsel for the defendant in error insists, that it is not necessary in the notice to the endorser, to inform him that payment of the note had been demanded of the maker, and he relies principally upon the case of Mills v. The Bank of the United,
But whatever may be considered as decided in the case of Mills v. The Bank of the United States, the opinion of the court was delivered by Mr. Justice Story, in February, 1826, and before the particular requisites of a notice to an endorser had been a subject of much judicial discussion. About this time the particular point now under consideration became a subject of extensive litigation in the English courts, which occupied their attention for several years. In 1825, it was decided by the king’s bench, in Hartly v. Case, Abbott, Oh. J. delivering the opinion, that a notice from the holder of a bill of exchange to the endorser, in the following form: “lam desired to apply to you for the payment of thé sum of £150, due to myself on a draft drawn by Mr. 8. on Mr. Case, which I hope you will, on receipt, discharge, to prevent the necessity of law proceedings, which otherwise will immediately take place,” was insufficient to charge the endorser, because it did not apprize the party of the fact of dishonor. The Oh. J. says that no particular form of words is necessary in such á notice, but the language used must be such as to convey notice to the party W’hat the bill is, and that payment of it has beeri refused by the acceptor. (4 Barn. & Cress. 339 ; S. C. Dowl. & Ryl. 505. 10 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 350.) About the same time the great case of Solarte v. Palmer, originated in the commori pleas. Lord Tenterden, at nisi pfius, had instructed the jury that a letter
The next case in point of time is that of Boulton v. Welch, decided in the common pleas, in 1837. Park, J. at nisi prius, had decided that a notice from the holder to the endorser of a promissory note, describing the note by its amount, the maker’s name, its date and the time of its payment, and stating that it was endorsed by him, and that “ it became due yesterday, and was returned to him (the holder) unpaid,” and requesting payment forthwith, was not sufficient. A verdict, however, was taken for the plaintiff, with leave to the defendant to move for a nonsuit. On the bearing of the rule nisi for a nonsuit, Tindal, Oh. J. said: “It did not appear from the letter, (notice,) by necessary inference, that the note had been dishonored. The rule requires that either expressly or by necessary inference, the notice should disclose that the bill or note had been dishonored; here the notice only states that the note had become due and had been returned unpaid. I think, therefore, that the notice is insufficient, and that this rule must be made absolute.” Park, Bosanquet, and Coltman, justices, expressly concurred, on the authority of Hartly v. Case, and Solarte v. Palmer, (3 Bing. N. C. 683; 32 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 283.) In the case of Phillips v. Gould, Patteson, J. at the sittings in London, in 1838, ruled that notice from the holder to the endorser of a bill of exchange, stating that a bill of exchange (describing it) “ lies at my office due and unpaid,” was not a good notice of the dishonor of the bill, and referred to the case of Solarte v. Palmer, as decided by the house of lords, (8 Car. & Payne, 335. 34 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 425.)
In the case of Strange v. Price, decided in the common pleas, in 1839, that court, on the authority of Hartly v. Case and Solarte v. Palmer, decided that a notice in substance as follows : “ Messrs. S. & Co. inform Mr. P. that Mr. B.’s acceptance,
In the case of Messenger v. Southey, decided in the common pleas, in 1840, the question of the requisites of a notice to an endorser of a bill of exchange again came before the court for consideration. The notice was in this form: “Sir; This is to inform you that the bill I took of you, £15 2s. 6d., is not took up, and 4s. 6d. expenses, and the money I must have immediately. My son will be in London on Friday morning”—was, within the previous decisions, insufficient. Tindale, J. delivering the opinion of the court. (1 Man. & Gran. Rep. 76; 39 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 360.)
The last English case to which I am able to refer, is that of Furze v. Sharwood, decided in the king’s bench, in 1841, in which, after a review of all the previous cases, it was determined in substance that a notice of the dishonor of a bill, by whatever party given, is insufficient if it merely state that the bill has not been paid when due. (2 Ad. & Ellis Rep. N. S. 338; 42 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 726.) Thus, after a kind of judicial obstinacy on the part of some of the judges of the common pleas, for about sixteen years, it is finally settled by all the courts, with the express concurrence of the ablest judges of one of the most commercial nations on earth, that when there is no dispute about the facts, the sufficiency of notice to an endorser of a bill or note is a question of law, and that the notice must, by its language, directly or by reasonable implication, inform the endorser that the paper has been dishonored, or the court will declare it insufficient. The same principle was adopted by the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts, in 1842, in the case of Gilbert v. Dennis, (3 Met. Rep. 495,) and adhered to by the same court in 1845, in the case of Pinkhum v. Macy, (9 Id. 174.) In this last case, Shaw, C. J. reasserts the rule that the “ notice must be such as to inform the endorser, either in terms or by reasonable implication, that the note is dishonored, that
It appears by the digests that the same rule is adopted in several of the other states, but I have not time to refer to the decisions.
In 1845, after these repeated and almost annual adjudications of the English, and some of the highest American courts, for twenty years, the same learned jurist, who delivered the opinion in the case of Mills v. The Bank of the United States, in his Commentaries on Promissory Notes, not only states the “ indispensable requisites” of the notice to an endorser, as above quoted from § 348, but in § 350, as to the statement in the notice, that the note has been duly presented and dishonored, says—“ This statement is essential to establish the claim or right of the holder, or other party giving notice, for otherwise he will not be entitled to any payment from the endorser. It will be sufficient, indeed, if the notice sent, necessarily, or even fairly, implies by its terms that there has been a due presentment and dishonor at the maturity of the note, but mere notice of the fact that the note has not been paid, affords no proof whatever that it has been presented in due season, or even that it has been presented at all.” And in § 354, the same learned author, after remarking that the rule adopted in the American courts upon the subject, is far more liberal than that generally maintained in the English courts, says—“ If, however, there be no statement of the dishonor of the note, nor any thing from which it can fairly be implied that due presentment has been made, the notice would seem to be fatally defective.” This rule requires only that the endorser should have notice of the dishonor of the note. Whatever will show the dishonor, is sufficient. Where a note is made payable at a bank, or other particular place, it is the business of the maker to have funds there at the time to take it up, and if he neglect to do so, he dishonors his note, and it is sufficient to inform the endorser of that fact. No personal demand of the maker is necessary. But the maker of a negotiable promissory note, payable at large, which may be transferred ad infiwitwm, without his knowledge, does
It was suggested on the argument that the rule contended for is too inflexible and unvarying for practical business purposes ; that the activity of commercial pursuits could not safely be cramped by fixed rules on this subject. If it is necessaiy that this subject should be regulated by law, it is highly proper that that law, however liberal and expanded it may be, should be
Judgment reversed.