2 Abb. N. Cas. 444 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1877
In Exp. Mure (2 Cox, 63), which is one of the earliest adjudged cases in point, the facts were these : James and John Woodbridge, being indebted in a large sum to Sir Barnard Turner, assigned to him as a security for their debt, a bond and warrant of attorney, made by one Nelson to them for £3,000. Turner and his attorneys delayed the collection of the bond, (though judgment was taken upon it) for a period of five months, at the end of which time Nelson died insolvent. The judgment could have been collected of
In Williams v. Price, 1 Sim. & Stuart, 582, the court held that a creditor to whom his debtor assigned a judgment against a third party as security for his debt, is to be charged not only with what he actually collected on the assigned judgment, but with what he might have collected, but for his willful default or neglect.
In Peacock v. Pursell, 14 Com. Bench N. S. 728, the plaintiff, being defendant’s creditor, had received from him as collateral security for his debt, a bill of exchange drawn by a third party, but failed to present the bill at maturity for payment, and to give notice of non-payment, by reason of which the bill was lost, and it was adjudged that the laches of the plaintiff made the bill equivalent to payment of the amount thereof on the debt as collateral to which he received it. In laying down the rule applicable in such a case, the court said: “If the creditor, when the bill falls due, is guilty of laches whereby the security becomes
The case of Wakeman v. Gowdy, 10 Bosw. 208, holds that a creditor receiving from his. debtor, as collateral security, a promissory note made by a third person, past due, with the request to collect it and apply the proceeds to the payment of the debt, though without any request to sue upon it, incurs the obligation to use diligence in its collection, and to sue if necessary. And the creditor having received the note as such security, at a time when the maker was abundantly able to pay it, and on payment being demanded, the maker having intimated that he had a defense, but the creditor neither notified his debtor thereof, nor brought suit on the note, until three months thereafter, and in the meantime the maker had become insolvent, whereby the amount of his note was lost, it was adjudged, that negligence was imputable to the creditor, which made him liable to his debtor for the amount of the note.
In Buckingham v. Payne, 36 Barb. 81, the same principle is laid down on a similar state of facts, and the court approved the doctrine of the chancellor in Exp. Mure,, supra, that the obligation of the creditor in such cases, is the same in effect, as that of an agent or attorney employed to collect the demand; ■(see also Chamberlyn v. Delarive, 2 Wilson, 353; Hoard v. Garner, 6 Seld. 261; Lawrence v. McCalmont, 2 How. (U. S.) 426; Kephart v. Butcher, 17 Iowa, 240, and the opinion of Aleeh, J., in Smith v. Miller, 43 N. Y. 171, 174).
In conformity to these adjudged cases, the elementary writers lay down the rule, that a creditor who receives from his debtor the notes or bills of third parties, as security for his debt, is bound to the exercise of such diligence as is required of a bailee for hire, and is liable to the debtor for any loss or deterioration in
These authorities fully sustain the decision of the court which tried this cause. And if we considered the case upon principle only, we must arrive at the same conclusion.
The defendant pledged the G-anson note to the bank as security for the payment of the note in suit, and gave the note so pledged into the custody and control of the bank, which thereupon became the bailee thereof, and bound to the same degree of diligence in maintaining and preserving the value of the pledge and saving the defendant from any loss thereon as a prudent business man would exercise in respect to such a note. Different kinds of property, when made the subject of such a bailment as was created in this case, require of the creditor, who is the bailee, different kinds and degrees of care and diligence to preserve it from deterioration and loss, according to the nature of the property, and the incidents which affect its value. Money, bullion and precious stones require only safe keeping ; cattle, horses and other live stock, must be fed, watered and kept secure ; grain must be properly stored and protected from dampness, heating, and other injuries to which it is subject; and so, every species of property held in pledge by the creditor demands appropriate measures to protect it from loss or injury. In the case of bonds, notes or other securities for the payment of money, a prudent business man will take care that they are collected when due, and that, if necessary, payment be enforced by suit, while the parties liable on them
In the case before us, the neglect of this very duty by the bank of which the plaintiff is receiver, beyond any doubt caused the defendant to lose the amount of the note which he had pledged to the bank, as security for the note in suit. When the pledge was made, Mr. Ganson, the maker- of the note, was perfectly solvent, and for a period of at least four years thereafter, the note could at any time and without difficulty have been collected. The defendant repeatedly urged the president and financial manager of the bank to do his duty, and require payment of the note, and he as often promised to give it the care and attention which his duty required that he should. But he continued to neglect that duty until insolvency and death intervened, and the note became worthless. It makes no difference, that the responsible officer of the bank, in charge of its affairs, and the maker of the note pledged as security to the bank, were one and the same-person; or if the fact does make a difference, it operates rather in favor of the defendant than against him. If the note pledged had been made by a third person, having np relation to the bank, the negligence of the latter could not have been more marked or resulted more injuriously to the defendant.
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed with costs.
Present, Clinton, Ch. J., and Smith, J.