66 N.Y. 14 | NY | 1876
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *16 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *18 But two questions are presented upon this appeal: First, whether the instruments which are the subjects of the controversy are negotiable promises for the payment of money, and therefore subject to the same rules as bank bills or other negotiable instruments, so that one who acquires title in the usual course of business and in good faith, although from one who has obtained them feloniously, may withhold them from the true owner; and secondly, whether they were dishonored at the time of the purchase of them by the plaintiff.
The rule of caveat emptor does not apply to negotiable instruments payable in money and to the bearer; and a purchaser in good faith from one who has stolen them acquires a valid title. (Spooner v. Holmes,
The coupons of the Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western Railway Company are, in terms, distinct promises to pay the bearer the amount specified therein at a day and place named, and are, within the authorities, promissory notes for the payment of money to the holder, and transferable by delivery, although detached from the bonds to which they refer. The fact that they are declared to be for interest upon bonds specified by their numbers, does not destroy their negotiability when separated from the bond, or impair the title of one purchasing from another without production of the bond. The bonds themselves, although under the seal of the company, are negotiable instruments within the repeated decisions of our courts. (White v. V. and M.Railroad Co., 21 How. [U.S.], 575; Gelpcke v. Dubuque, 1 Wall, 175; Clark v. Iowa City, 20 id., 583; Brainerd v.New York and Harlem Railroad Co.,
The coupons of the Danville, Urbana, Bloomington and Pekin Railroad Company, termed upon their face "interest warrants," are in somewhat different form. Whether they are within that description of property to which a title may be acquired by abona fide transferree for value, notwithstanding a defect of title in the transferror, depends upon their negotiability. If they are not negotiable instruments, and as such representatives of money, the plaintiff acquired no better title than the party from whom he purchased them had; i.e., he took them subject to all the defects of his title and subject to the claims of the true owner. The instruments are not, upon their face, negotiable; they are not payable to any person by name, or his order, or to the bearer, or to the order of a fictitious person. In all the cases to which reference has already been made, the coupons contained distinct promises to pay the bearer the sums named therein at a time and place specified. They were perfect negotiable instruments, independent of the bond from which they had been severed, and were not only negotiable within the statutes upon that subject and the Law Merchant, but were intended by the parties to be negotiable. The negotiability of instruments depends somewhat upon statute. The statute of this State (1 R.S., 768) embodies, substantially, the law, and declares, as understood at the time, what instruments shall be negotiable. To bring an instrument within this statute there must be a promise to pay to the order of the maker, or some other person or his order, or to the order of a fictitious person, or to the bearer, a sum certain absolutely. Whether the parties to an instrument can give it a negotiable character with all the incidents pertaining to negotiable paper, when it is not in terms within the class of instruments known to the law as negotiable, may be questioned. (Crouch v. Credit Foncier of England, L.R., 8 Q.B., 374.)
It is for the interest of corporations issuing bonds for the payment of money that they should be negotiable; and they *20
are, ordinarily, made so upon their face; and such bonds, as well as the coupons attached thereto, have been held negotiable when payable to bearer; for the reason that they are promises to pay money in the form which, by the Law Merchant, would make them negotiable as representatives of money, the same as ordinary commercial instruments. (In re Imperial Land Company ofMarseilles, L.R., 11 Eq. Cases, 478.) While it may be for the interest of the company issuing bonds, with a view to their ready negotiation, that they should be negotiable by delivery, there may not be the same reasons for making the coupons for the installments of interest negotiable when detached from the bonds. The object of the interest warrants before us may be fully accomplished by regarding them as authority to the financial agent of the company to pay the amount named therein upon presentation, although detached from the bonds. It is possible that as between such agent and the debtor corporation the possession and presentment of the interest warrants at maturity would be evidence of an authority to receive the money by the person presenting it, even as against the true owner. But if this be conceded, it does not make them negotiable as between third persons. In this, as in other contracts, its negotiability depends upon its terms; and the rule is, with certain exceptions not applicable to this case, that in instruments for the payment of money, if no one be designed as payee, either by name or as bearer, the instrument is not a promissory note. If these warrants are not promissory notes they are not negotiable; they are neither checks nor bills of exchange. (1 Parsons on Bills, 33, and note; Brown v. Gilman,
The contract embodied in these interest warrants, so far as any contract can be implied, cannot, upon principle or within any well-considered authority, be made an exception to the *22 general rules by which the negotiability of promises for the payment of money is determined. There is no usage or custom proved that would give these warrants a negotiable character, even if custom and usage so recent as one applicable to these instruments would be, could change their legal effect. The plaintiff, therefore, acquired no better title to them than his vendor had and could convey, and the transaction was the same in legal effect as the purchase of any article of merchandise from one having no title or authority to sell.
The coupons of the Indianapolis, Bloomington and Western Railway Company, being promissory notes, they necessarily had all the characteristics of such instruments, and were entitled to the benefit of the days of grace allowable on bills and notes payable at a given day or on time. Having every other quality they cannot be excepted from the general rule which, by commercial usage, sanctioned by law, is applied to every instrument, negotiable in its character, coming within the ordinary definition of bills of exchange or promissory notes. (Story on Bills, § 342; Story on Promissory Notes, § 215; Hodges v. Shuler, supra.) In the case last cited, the bond itself, to which interest warrants had been attached, was presented at maturity, on the third day of grace, at the place of payment, and upon payment being refused the defendants, as indorsers, were notified of the dishonor, and the court held that they were properly charged; all the judges agreeing that the instrument in suit was a promissory note. It does not seem to have been doubted, that, being a promissory note, although something more, it was within the rule allowing days of grace to commercial instruments of that character. If the coupons were not, for the purposes of days of grace, as as well as for other purposes, promissory notes, but were payable at a day certain without grace, then, at the time of the purchase by the plaintiff, they were overdue, and the holder conveyed no better title to the plaintiff than he had himself. (Chester v.Dorr,
Judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.