12 F. Cas. 504 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Virginia | 1822
This suit is brought to obtain payment of two bills of exchange drawn by the late William Byrd, of Virginia, on Robert Cary & Co., merchants of London, the one in the year 1774, and the other in 1775. These bills were regularly protested; but the defendant makes several objections to paying them. The first to be considered is, that no notice of their non-payment and protest was given either to William Byrd in his lifetime, or to his representatives, since his death. The plaintiff contends that this notice was unnecessary, because the drawer had no funds in the hands of the drawee. Although this application, in consequence of the state of the fund to which the plaintiff must resort, it consisting of equitable assets, is made to a court of equity, it is admitted to be a law case depending entirely on legal priiiciples. It requires an attentive consideration of the question, how far the want of funds of the drawer in the hands of the drawee discharges the holder of a bill of exchange from the necessity of giving notice to the drawer of its dishonour. The rule requiring this notice was. for a long time supposed to be general, and Mr. Justice Blackstone in his Commentaries (2 Bl. Comm. 469) lays it down without any exception. The first case in which an exception was admitted, is Bickerdike v. Bollman, decided in November, 1786, and reported in 1 Durn. & E. [1 Term R.] 405; in that case the court stated, that if it be proved by the holder that “from the time the bill was drawn till the time it became due, the drawee never had any effects of the drawer in his hands,” notice to the drawer is not necessary. The reason given is, that he had no right to draw, and could not be injured by not receiving notice. An additional observation made by one of the judges is, that to draw in such a case “is a fraud in itself.” It does not appear from the report of this case, nor is there any reason to believe, that there were any running accounts between the parties; the whole complexion of the case, and the reasons assigned by the judges for their opinions, negative the idea; it is simply the case of a debtor drawing a bill on his creditor, without a prospect of its being paid. In such a case, notice is declared by the court to be unnecessary. It is remarkable that in this case, although the principle is expressly asserted by both the judges, each declares that the case would be decided in the same way on a different principle. In Goodall v. Dolley (decided in 1787) 1 Durn. & E. [1 Term R.] 712, the judgment was against the holder of the bill, for want of notice; but ini giving his opinion, Mr. Justice Duller rec-ognises the principle established in Bickerdike v. Bollman. In Rogers v. Stephens (decided in 1788) 2 Term R. 713, the law is said to be settled, that no effects of the drawer in the hands of the drawee, excuses the holder from the necessity of giving notice,
' yet, it is remarkable that in this case, 'all three of the judges rely very much on a subsequent assumpsit made by the drawer. In Gale v. Walsh (decided in 1793) 5 Term R. 239, the principle appears to be recognised; but a rule to show cause why a new trial should not be granted for this cause, was discharged, because the fact did. not exist in the case.
These are the earliest cases on this point; it has occurred very frequently in subsequent cases, and the principle seems to be firmly established; but as the question.has come forward in different forms, and been viewed under different aspects, the principle has been greatly modified, and is no longer laid down in the general terms which were carelessly used on its introduction. It has been found necessary to define its extent with more precision, and to state the rule with more accuracy. It was perceived, that in the course of commercial dealing, it would frequently occur that a person might draw a bill with the best reasons for believing that it would be honoured, although, in fact, he might have, at the time, no funds in the hands of the drawee; and that all the reasons for requiring notice, would apply in such a case, with the same force as if the bill had been drawn on actual funds. In Legge v. Thorpe, 12 East, 171, Le Blanc and Bayley, Justices, stated the principle laid down in Bickerdike v. Boll-man, and afterwards adhered to, in these terms: They said, “that the court in that case, looking to the reason for which notice was required to be given, laid down the rule, not generally, that where the drawer had no effects in the hands of the drawee at the time (which perhaps might turn out to be the case upon a future settlement of accounts between them), no notice of dis-honour should be given; but that it need not be given where the drawer must have known at the time that he had no effects to answer the bill, and could have no reason to expect that his bill would be honoured.” In Blackhan v. Doren, 2 Camp. 503, Lord El-lenborough said: “If a man draw upon a house with whom he has no account, he knows that the bill will not be accepted, he can suffer no injury from want of notice of its dishonour, and, therefore, he is not entitled to such notice. But the case is quite otherwise where the drawer has a fluctuating balance in the hands of the drawee.” In Walwyn v. St. Quintin, 1 Bos. & P. 654, one of the strongest cases in the books in fa-vour of dispensing with notice, Eyre, C. J., said: “But it may be proper to caution bill-holders not to rely on it as a general rule, that if the drawer has no effects in the acceptor’s hands, notice is not necessary. The cases of acceptances on the faith of consignments from the drawer, not come to hands, and the case of acceptances on the ground of fair mercantile agreements, may be stated as exceptions, and there may pos^
■ The subject was considered by the su•preme court of the United States, in the case of French v. Bank of Columbia, 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 141, 2 Pet. Cond. R. 58. In that case, it was said (by Marshall, C. J., who delivered the opinion of the court) “to be the fair construction of the English cases, that a person having a right to draw in consequence-of engagements between himself and the drawee, or in consequence of consignments made to the drawee, or from any other cause, ought to be considered as ■ drawing upon funds in the hands of the drawee, and, therefore, aB not coming within the exception to the general rule.” When the drawer is continually making consignments to the drawee, and continually drawing on those consignments, his conduct may be essentially affected by knowing that any of his bills ‘have been protested. He may stop in tran-situ, or may suspend further consignments. It may be as material to his interest to place no more funds in the hands of the drawee, in such a case, as to withdraw the funds previously placed in his hands. Notice may be as important to him in the one case as in the other, and there seems to be the same reason for requiring it — supposing the rule to be, that every person having a right to-draw, or having reason to believe that his-bill will be honoured is entitled to notice.
The general rule is, that a long acquiescence in letters containing accounts, is prima facie evidence of an acquiescence in their contents; and there is less reason for excepting this case from the rule, because the letters of Robert Cary & Co., from November, 1773, to October, 1775, do not notice any objection, on the part of William Byrd, to any of the accounts which, one of those letters says, were annually transmitted to him. The letter from Robert Cary & Co. to William Byrd, dated the 10th of November, 1773, incloses an account current, showing a balance due Robert Cary & Co. of £616 9s. Id. This letter gives notice of the completion of a contract for the sale of Byrd’s English estate; says the money is to be paid the 5th of April; that they shall immediately afterwards take up the wholé of his bills; and says that they have referred Farrell & Jones to him, to determine whether they shall pay a debt of about £800, claimed by Farrell & Jones. The next letter is dated the 13th of May, 1774. It states the receipt of £5000 on account of the estate which had been sold, and the expectation of receiving the farther sum of £11,500 on the same account. It states the payment of debts to the amount of £5544 7s. 4d. and gives a list of other debts due from Byrd, to the amount of £11,577. The letter •concludes with saying, that by Greenland’s •estimate, the produce of the estate will not exceed £15,500, out of which great charges are to be deducted. From this sketch the letter proceeds: “You will be able to judge how the account may stand, and what bills must be returned.” It is observable, that among the debts paid, are several bills of •exchange, which had been long protested, one of. them as early as February, 1768. .This fact shows an understanding by which bills were held up after a protest, in the expectation that they would be paid by the drawee, notwithstanding the protest. In such a case, If no notice be given, the law seems to be, that the holder looks to the drawee, not to the drawer, for payment. Townsley v. Sumrall, 2 Pet. [27 U. S.] 170. The next letter, of the 5th of August, 1774, states that there are many bills which must be returned, after paying all the money received on account of the English estate. This letter speaks of a further sum for a half year’s rent, accruing before the purchaser took possession, to be received after Michaelmas. This would be £371 4s. 6d. There is, too, a subsequent letter, of the 14th of March, 1775, which mentions a farther receipt of £448 12s. Id., on account of the English estate. Colonel Byrd appears to have drawn to the full amount of his English estate, so far as Robert Cary & Co. had stated the money to have been received; and if the transactions between the parties had gone no farther, these letters would furnish strong reasons for the opinion that, in July, 1774, he acted at least incautiously in drawing the bill under consideration. But there were transactions between the parties. Colonel Byrd held a large estate in Virginia, and the usage of the considerable planters to ship their tobacco to London merchants, and to draw on their consignments, is of general notoriety. In their letter of the 17th of November, 1774, Robert Cary & Co. say: “We shall, in the disposal of your tobacco, hope to render you a safe and pleasing tale.” In a letter of the 10th of February, 1775, is an account of sales of fifteen hogsheads of tobacco, shipped in a vessel commanded by Captain Powers; and there is also notice taken of a mortgage on the estate sold to Mrs. Otway, for which no claimant had appeared, but for which Mrs. Otway had retained a considerable sum in her hands. The letter says: “We were compelled to settle the conveyance in the manner we did, yet at the same time, it no ways precluded you from receiving your part of this other mortgage, if no claimants.” The letter shows that Colonel Byrd had written on this subject, and had manifested the expectation of receiving a further sum on this account. The letter mentions the payment of some small orders given by Byrd. It may be considered as probable, from these letters, that Colonel Byrd was not perfectly satisfied with the sums retained on account of charges on the estate, and expected more money from it. A letter of the 20th of June, 1775, states the payment of a draft drawn by Colonel Byrd, in favour of Hornsby, for £75, and their payment for his honour of- another draft on Farrell & Jones for the same sum. The last letter is dated 2d of October, 1775. It mentions the payment of several little drafts,, as desired by Colonel Byrd, “which are mentioned in an account current inclosed,” but the ac
From this review ■ of the letters in the cause, it is obvious that Colonel Byrd was much pressed for money; that he was sanguine in his calculations of the sums to be yielded by his estate in England; that he drew upon that fund by anticipation, and to an amount greater perhaps than was strictly justifiable. It is also apparent that a considerable part of the money for which the estate sold, was retained for incumbrances, some of which were questionable, and there is reason to believe that he questioned them. It is also apparent that there were running transactions between the parties, and that the holders of his bills were in the habit of retaining them, and of receiving payment long after protest. That he made shipments of tobacco in the time, is unquestionable; but the amount of his shipments is uncertain; his letters are not produced; they would throw much light on this transaction. The letters giving notice of this particular draft, might, and probably would, show the idea on which it was drawn, and the calculations of the drawee; it might be drawn on actual consignment of tobacco, or it might be drawn on a calculation that something farther might be yielded by those items of the English estate, which the letters show had not finally been adjusted. These calculations may have been erroneous; but if they were made, the bill was not drawn with a knowledge that it would not be honoured, and therefore notice of its dishonour was unnecessary. The court will not presume that these calculations were made; the court will not presume that the letter of advice which usually accompanies a bill .of exchange, did show th'at the drawer calculated on his bills being hon-oured; but the-court cannot presume the contrary; and it is to be recollected that when a protested bill is held up for a great length of time without notice, the whole onus probandi is thrown on the holder; he must prove every thing, and nothing is required from the drawer. The case furnishes strong reason for the opinion, that this bill was not returned to Virginia, but was held up by Spiers, Bowman & Co. in the expectation of its being paid by Bobert Cary & Co. It was drawn on the 19th of July, 1774, and protested for non-payment on the 26th day of November of the same year. Another bill for £213 15s., drawn on the 4th of July, 1774, in favour of Spiers, Bowman & Co., and protested on the 9th of November, 1774, was returned to Colonel Byrd, and was taken up; these bills drawn by the same persons, and held by the same house, at the same time, would probably have been returned by the same vessel had they been both returned. The circumstance that one was drawn in favour of Brisbane, an agent of the company, and indorsed by him to a member of the company, and by that member to the company, would not account for the appearance of one bill without the other, if both were returned. They were both theproperty of the same company, both due by the same person, both in possession of the company at the same time, and would probably have been both returned, if they were both returned, by the same vessel. The bill, said not originally to have been drawn in favour of Spiers, Bowman & Co., would probably have been transmitted to the same agent to whom the other bill was transmitted. The appearance of the one bill without the other, is, then, a strong circumstance in favour of the opinion that the bill retained was held up in England in the expectation of its being paid by the drawee. In estimating the probabilities of the circumstances and prospects under which the bill was drawn, this fact is entitled to some consideration. We have no regular accounts, no statements of the consignments made by Byrd to Bobert Cary & Co. We know that their connexion was of long standing; that there was a considerable degree of mutual kindness and confidence; that Byrd was in the habit of shipping tobacco to Bobert Cary & Co.; that there may have been a shipment, at the very time this bill was drawn; that money was paid for Byrd by Bobert Cary & Co., after this bill was protested; that a bill of £75 was taken up for his honour; and that in October, 1775, the balance of £616 9s. 5d., which stood against him in November, 1773, was converted into a balance of 16s. lid. in his fa-vour. We have not all the intermediate accounts, and we do not know how this balance may have fluctuated; add to this, that the bill is not . said to have been protested for want of effects.
Under all these circumstances, I cannot say that the bill was drawn with a knowledge that it would be protested; and that notice of the protest could not be necessary. I cannot say that it was a fraud upon the payee, by giving him a bill which the drawer knew would not be paid. If the onus pro-bandi lay on the drawer of the bill, the case would be clearly against him; but as it lies entirely on the holder, whose laches are without a precedent in acourtof lawor equity, I think he has not made out a case of complete justification, on which he can entitle himself to a decree for the bill drawn on the 19th of July, 1774. The second bill was drawn on the 26th day of November, 1775, for £246 3s. 7d., and was protested on the 26th day of June, 1776. It was drawn after the commencement of hostilities in Virginia; and before it was protested, all intercourse between the two countries was interdicted. Under these circumstances, notice is not to be expected, and ought not to be required. I at first doubted whether a bill, which, for a length of time, is held under circumstances which dispense with notice, does not lose its commercial character, and become an ordinary debt. But on reflection, I am satisfied that
With respect to the mortgage for which it had been supposed that the mortgagee was dead without a representative, he says, “it is feared the representative is found, but be this as it may,” he adds, “the estate will be always liable, and therefore, without a proper indemnity, little can be expected. What indemnity you may offer we know not, but we shall not engage for our own parts.” After mentioning the payment of some bills, they add, “but for paying any more, or raising money on the uncertainty of the -mortgage, we shall not attempt.” With this letter before him. Colonel Byrd must .have drawn, I think, with a moral certainty that his bill would be dishonoured: and if in any case a holder can be excused for not giving, notice, this is that case. There was an end of all consignments, of all intercourse between the parties; there were no funds to withdraw, and no remittances to stop. The want of notice would be no injury to him. This case seems to me to come within the exception of Bikerdike v. Bollman, as modified in the subsequent cases.
This brings me to the consideration of the other objections made by the defendant to the payment of this bill. He contends, that after , such a lapse of time, payment must be presumed.
The chief argument in support of this presumption, is founded on the time which has elapsed since his death, without any demand on his representatives. The plaintiff ascribes this to the insolvency of his estate; but to this it is answered that a suit had been brought in 1803, for a different claim, by the same agent, who was in possession of these bills; a bill was then filed claiming £70 19s. 10d.. as a debt due from William Byrd & Co. for dealings at their store in Manchester, and £10 19s. 6%d. a debt due from William Byrd for dealings at their store in Petersburg. If the insolvency of the estate did not prevent this suit, it cannot have prevented a suit on the bills. The plaintiff assigns two reasons for this suit, by which he attempts to repel the inference which has been drawn from it. One is, that though William Byrd was supposed to be insolvent, William Byrd & Co. were not so. The other, that this suit was only preparatory to an application to the British commissioners, sitting under the treaty of 1802; neither of these reasons is satisfactory; the suit does not seek for satisfaction from the
If it be said that they have been laid before the commissioners, I ask what has been the fate of the application? Has it been rejected in consequence of the laches of the holder, or has it been successful? But there is no reason to believe that the suit in 1803 was brought with any other view than to recover the money it demanded, and the question recurs — why were not these bills put in suit also? It has been said they were overlooked by the agent — but this• is not credible. There is an indorsement on the envelope which contained them, in his hand writing, and it must be supposed that bonds, bills, and notes were not thrown in confusion among general books and papers, but were carefully preserved and listed, and that they would be immediately inspected by the agent to whom their collection was confided. Must it then be presumed that the agent believed them to be paid? The reasons against this presumption, so far as respects a payment made by Colonel Byrd, have already been stated. The reasons against their having been paid by his representatives are still stronger. Their accounts are all preserved, and this credit is not claimed. How could the agent have received an impression that they were paid? He must have received it from the papers themselves, from the entries on the books, or from direct communications made by Spiers, Bowman & Co. But the papers contain no indications of payment. The books, I am told, contain none; and is it reasonable to suppose that the plaintiff would send the bills to be collected, and write to the agent that nothing was duo on them? We must impute negligence to the agent, or believe that he was of opinion that the debt was not recoverable at law. The last opinion, however, does not necessarily imply his conviction that it had been paid. The bills were not accompanied with any proof of notice, and he could obtain none. Without this proof, and without any evidence that the drawer had no right to draw, he might have' thought the claim desperate; but this does not create a presumption that he believed it to be paid. I think, on a consideration of the circumstances of the case, that the presumption of payment is completely rebutted.
I am next to consider an objection which goes to the right of the plaintiff to sustain this action, even admitting that the right to bring it exists in some person. In 1813 a contract was entered into between the plaintiff and William C. Williams, a citizen of Virginia, by which the .former conveyed to the latter all his debts in this country, and authorized him to sue for them, either in his own name, or in the name of the present -plaintiff. It is contended that these bills passed by this assignment, and that the whole legal and equitable interest being in another, no suit on them can be maintained by the plaintiff. On the part of the plaintiff it is answered, that this instrument, being made flagrante bello, is void, and that no action can be sustained on it, even after peace. As this may probably become a question between the parties to the instrument, I would not give an opinion on it unless it should be necessary in this cause. I am rather disposed to think it is not necessary. Bills of exchange are transferable, not by force of any statutes, but by the custom of merchants. Their transfer is regulated by usage, and that usage is founded in convenience. It appears to me that it would be extremely inconvenient to separate the evidence of ownership from the bill itself, and I think there is no usage to justify such a separation. Nothing can be more anti-commercial than the idea of transferring a negotiable paper by a deed transferring a vast number of bills, bonds, notes, and accounts. Such an instrument may very properly be considered as conveying the equitable interest, the right to receive the money, but cannot be considered as a negotiation of the bill upon mercantile principles, or according to mercantile usage, so as to authorize the holder to sue in his own name. The books treat of no such mode of transfer. The person to whom a bill is transferred is never denominated an assignee. He is always termed an indorsee. Upon this ground, I am of opinion, that in this case a suit could not be maintained in the name of William O. Williams. Were this even doubtful, the instrument now relied on contains an authority to sue in the name of the plaintiff, and may, therefore, fairly be considered as not being intended to have the legal effect of an assignment, but to operate as an agreement authorizing William C. Williams to
The doctrine, with its modifications, as laid down in the above opinion of Chief Justice Marshall, and in the case of French v. Bank of Columbia [supra], has been examined and re-affirmed in a recent case decided by the supreme court of the United States. In the case of Dickins v. Beal, 10 Pet. [35 U. S.] 572 (January term, 1836), in delivering the opinion of the court, and after a rapid review of the cases reported in the English books cited above, Mr. Justice Baldwin continues: “But unless he draws under some such circumstances, his drawing without funds, property, or authority, puts-the transaction out of the pale of commercial usage and law; and as he can in nowise suffer by the want of notice of the dishonour of his drafts, that it is deemed an useless form. ‘Notice, therefore, can amount to nothing, for his. situation cannot be changed.’ In a case where he has no fair pretence for drawing, there is no person on whom he can have a legal or equitable demand, in consequence of the non-payment or non-acceptance of the bill. This is the rule, as laid down by the court in French v. Bank of Columbia, 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 153. 164, on a very able and elaborate view of the then adjudged cases; which is fully supported by those-since decided in England, and in the supreme court of New York. The case of the defendant falls clearly within the rule applicable to bills drawn without funds, or any bona fide, reasonable, or just expectation of their being: honoured; and notice of their, dishonour, was-not necessary.” In truth, no principle of commercial law can be more firmly established, and1 it would seem that the- only question which can hereafter arise with respect to it, will be, not as-to the extent of the general doctrine, but in its. application to the facts of the particular cases.
The statute of limitation did not apply to this case. See Hopkirk v. Bell, 3 Cranch [7 U. S.] 454; 4 Cranch [8 U. S.] 164. By the fourth article of the definitive treaty of peace, between the United States and his Britannic -majesty, of 1783, “it is agreed that creditors on either side shall meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery in full value in sterling money of all bona fide debts heretofore contracted,” which fourth article is recognised, confirmed, and declared to be binding and obligatory by the second article of the convention between his Britannic majesty and the United States, made on the 8th of January, 1802. By the fourth section of the act of limitation of Virginia, all actions of debt, detinue, &c., are directed to be brought within five years after the cause of action shall have accrued. By the 12th section of the same act, there is a saving of persons beyond seas, but by the 13th section, it is provided “that all suits hereafter brought in the name or names of any person or persons, residing beyond seas, or out of this country, for the recovery of any debts due for goods actually sold and delivered here, by his or their factor or factors, shall be commenced and prosecuted within the time appointed and limited by this act, for bringing the like suits, &c., notwithstanding the saving &c., to persons beyond the seas, at the time their causes of action accrued.” The case of Hopkirk v. Bell, was certified from the circuit court of Virginia, in which the opin
In an action of debt on a promissory note, the court, if requested, ought to instruct the jury, that, twenty years having elapsed between the date, of the execution of the note and the institution of the suit, they ought to presume it paid, unless evidence be offered of some acknowledgment of the debt, or of payment of interest, or of part payment of the principal within twenty years Wells v. Washington’s Adm’r, 6 Munf. 532. But if more than five years and less than twenty years have elapsed, the defendant cannot rely on the presumption of payment, but he must plead the statute. Tomlin’s Adm’r v. How’s Adm’r, 1 Gilmer, 1. In the case of Du Belloix v. Lord Waterpark (decided in 1822) 1 Dowl. & R. 16, 16 E. C. L. 12, which was an action of assump-sit by the payee against the maker of a promissory note, it was contended that the jury were bound to presume, from analogy to the ease of the bond, that after twenty years, the note had been paid, although there was no proof that the payee had been within the realm; but the chief justice (Abbott) held, that the case of a bond was distinguishable from promissory notes and bills of exchange, which were simple contract debts, and were subjected to the provisions of the statute of limitations; whereas, the rule for presuming payment of a bond after twenty years, was founded on the common law, there being no statutable provision with respect to obligations of that nature; and, therefore, without some decisive authority on the point, he could not direct the jury in the way contended for.