39 Barb. 645 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1863
By the Court,
At the time James Bigler left the note of the Houston and Texas Central Rail Road Company with the Park Bank, the defendant, for collection, he was not a joint owner thereof as copartner with D. Farrington & Son. That relation and interest had existed at the time the note was made. The note had, however, been discounted at the Bank of Newburgh and the proceeds carried to James Bigler’s credit. When it fell due it was protested, and remained unpaid by the makers. It was afterwards paid by D. Farrington & Son, with their own means, and pledged by James Bigler to them, to secure thé repayment of the molrey advanced, to take it out of the Bank of Newburgh. This fact is found by the referee and is not open to dispute upon this appeal. So that for all the purposes of this action Farrington & Son are to be deemed to have been the sole owners of the note at the time it was delivered over to the Park Bank? This view frees the case from some complication and leaves the result to depend upon the consideration of a single question, and that is the power of James Bigler to transfer the note to the Park Bank, so as to give it a title thereto, and to the proceeds thereof, superior to the right and title of D. Farrington & Son.
The object of the action is to recover the proceeds of the note. The referee has found that the note remained in the Bank of Newburgh until the 10th of April, 1859, when it
Two material facts are established by the finding of the referee. 1st. That Farrington & Son were the owners of the note of the rail road company, and that the Park Bank acquired whatever title they have to the same as purchasers or pledgees from Bigler in good faith and for value. We
Brown, Scrugham and Lott, Justices.]
protested for non-payment, as the note of the Houston and Texas Central Eail Eoad Company was. Such a note, although it passes by delivery and an action may be maintainéd upon it by the holder, subject to the equities of the parties thereto, cannot be said to pass in the usual course of trade and business. Such paper does not circulate for commercial purposes, and neither banks nor business men deal in it, or accept it in exchange for money or merchandise. Although it will pass by delivery, and the holder may maintain an action upon it, the substantial elements of commercial paper for the purpose of trade and business are wanting, in the absence of an unqualified obligation of the parties to it to pay at maturity. The holder takes it in the light of an assignee of the person from whom he receives it, rather than an indorsee according to the usage of trade, and he therefore takes just such title and no other as his assignor had to it at the time of the transfer. As James Bigler had no title to the note he could transfer none to the Park Bank:
For these reasons I think the judgment should be affirmed.