23 Pa. 137 | Pa. | 1854
The opinion of the Court was delivered, by
This suit is brought for the benefit of the Commercial Bank of London, upon an instrument which bears upon its face every mark of a foreign bill of exchange, drawn in Philadelphia upon a house in London, and accepted by the latter. It is true that the bill was not actually negotiated in this state, so that
All writers of authority on questions of morals agree, that promises are binding in the sense in which the promissors intended at the time that the promisees should receive them: Paley, ch. 5; Wayland, ch. 2; Adams, pt. 3, ch. 5. Upon this principle it was deemed a gross violation of contract, when Mahomet, after promising to “spare a man’s head," ordered his body to be out through the middle." When Tamerlane, at the capitulation of Sabasta, promised to “ spill no blood,” it was an infraction of the treaty to “ bury the inhabitants alive.” These monstrous constructions of contracts were condemned by the civilized world as gross violations of the established rule of construction already indicated: Vattel, B. 2, ch. 17, s. 274. There can be no plainer principle of equity than that which requires every one to speak the truth, if he choose to speak at all, in matters which affect the interests of others. He that knowingly misrepresents a fact for the purpose of inducing another to part with his money or goods is held to his
When this bill was dressed in the costume of a Pennsylvania bill, it thereby gained a credit in the foreign market which it could not otherwise have received. The Act of 1821, providing ample damages in case of the dishonor of bills drawn in Pennsylvania, contributed to give it that credit. That Act must be considered as operating on the minds of those who purchased it. In Ripka v. Gaddis, Phila., March, 1852, it was declared by this Court, after a careful examination of the authorities, that “ it had been long established in the case of negotiable paper of every kind, that it is construed and governed, as to the obligation of the drawer or maker, by the law of the country where it was drawn, or made ; as to that of the acceptor, by the law of the country where he accepts; and as to that of the endorser, by the law of the country where he endorsed. ’ ’ In Hazlehurst v. Kean, 4 Dall. 20, it was affirmed that the parties in the purchase of a bill of exchange must be supposed to have in contemplation the law of the place where the contract was made, and it (that is, the law of the place where the bill was drawn) necessarily forms part of the contract. In Allen v. The Bank, 5 Whar. 425, the same principle was re-asserted. From this rule, thus repeatedly recognised, and well established, it follows that the bank in the purchase of this bill must be supposed to have had in contemplation the law of Pennsylvania providing indemnity for its dishonor. The law of this state was therefore a part of the contract of purchase, and we have no right to impair its obligation.
There is no reason why the statute of 1821 should not receive a liberal construction. It has been held that it is not a penal, but on the contrary that it is a remedial Act — that the damages given are not for punishment, but are intended as compensation — that its provisions are just and equitable, and highly necessary in a commercial community to guard the interests of innocent individuals, and to secure good, faith in commercial transactions: 5 Whar. 425. No one can foresee the extent of the injury which the holder of a foreign bill of exchange may suffer from its dishonor. It is not like a domestic obligation, the breach of which can, in general, be repaired by the presence and credit of the holder. But the dishonor of foreign bills may occur, and usually
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that the bill should be met by the drawers in the sense in which they manifestly intended that it should be received by the holder, and we think that the District Court was in error in adopting a different rule.
Judgment reversed, and judgment for the plaintiff in error for $1453.31, with interest from the 18th May, 1852, and costs of suit.