34 Me. 510 | Me. | 1852
The suit is upon a bill of exchange drawn by the defendant upon himself and payable to his own order. When offered in evidence it appeared to have been indorsed by him in blank and to have been indorsed by the president of the Franklin Bank to the cashier of the Suffolk Bank.
The plaintiff was permitted to erase the last indorsement.
There was an indorsement on the back of the bill made by the cashier of the Suffolk Bank, that the bill had been paid to that bank, by the plaintiff.
It is insisted, that such payment will prevent a recovery by the plaintiff.
The rule has been long established, that a bill or note may be negotiated after it has been paid, if no person would thereby be made liable upon it, who would otherwise be discharged. Callow v. Lawrence, 3 M. & S. 95; Hubbard v. Jackson, 4 Bing. 390; Mead v. Small, 2 Greenl. 207; Warren v. Gilman, 15 Maine, 70.
This bill having been indorsed in blank by the defendant became negotiated by delivery.
It appears from the testimony of Otis, that the plaintiff was to take the bill at his own risk as the immediate holder from the Franklin Bank, and that he was to pay it, if the defendant did not. Those banks appear to have been employed to collect it; and yet the Franklin Bank appears to have transmitted it to the Suffolk Bank as its own property and to have received credit for it. As the defendant failed to pay it, the plaintiff was obliged to pay it to regain possession of it. Such payment would not operate to discharge the defendant as drawer and indorser.
Otis does not appear to have been interested in the event of this suit, and he was properly admitted as a witness for the plaintiff.
The plaintiff is in a position no more favorable to a recovery, than the Franklin Bank would be; and it is insisted, that nothing was due to that bank, when this bill was drawn to pay a balance supposed to be due.
The rights of these parties are presented under very different circumstances. This bill was drawn to pay a balance found to be due to that bank, upon a settlement deliberately made between the cashier and the plaintiff acting for the bank and the defendant, which was signed by the cashier and the defendant on the books of the bank. The charges now alleged to have been improperly made by the bank were then entered upon its books and were admitted by the signature of the defendant. The cashier had deceased before this trial. The plaintiff could not testify. The grounds, upon which that settlement was made, are exhibited but very imperfectly. There may then have been letters, drafts, orders, vouchers, or other evidence, produced by the cashier, which satisfied the defendant, that those sums had been paid to H. K. Stevens in consequence of his letters authorizing it. With respect to the other charges, respecting which errors are alleged to have been made, the testimony is still less satisfactory. It is very uncertain, whether the bank was not justly entitled to make them.
By the settlement the whole burden of proof has been changed. The bank can no longer be called upon to establish its right to make the charges. The burden is now upon the defendant to prove clearly, that there were errors made in that settlement, and show distinctly, Avhat they were. It is not now sufficient for him to show, that certain charges were admitted by him upon insufficient proof, that they were
The testimony falls much short of this; and fails to prove clearly, whether there was or was not any error committed in that settlement. The defence therefore fails.
Defendant defaulted.