5 Denio 220 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
When the note in question fell due in the hands of Olcott, it was his business to see that all the indorsers whom he desired to charge should have regular notice of non-payment. If he had chosen to rely on his immediate indorser, the present plaintiff, alone, he might have contented himself with notifying him. And in the latter case
As general propositions, the truth of the foregoing will not be denied. But it is said that the judgment against the plaintiff and all the other parties, except the defendant, destroyed the negotiability of the note, so that the plaintiff cannot recover on it; and that the judgment against the plaintiff, being by default, did not show that the latter had been charged, or was legally bound to pay; and hence, it is said, he cannot recover on the money counts, as for money paid to the defendant’s use. The last objection is involved in the first, so it falls if the first is removed. In answer to the first objection: The plaintiff having paid the note to Olcott, and having repossessed himself of it, whether voluntarily or in consequence of the judgment, he undoubtedly holds it by his original title. That is, he may c bring his action on the note against all previous parties. (Chitty on Bills, 568, 569, 8th Am. ed.; 1 Cowen’s Tr. 240, 3d ed. ; Story on Bills, §§ 422, 423; Buzzard v. Fleenoe, 1 Story’s Rep. 333.) Even where the holder of a bill sued the acceptor and charged him in execution, and the latter having obtained his discharge under the lords’ act, the holder then sued the drawer, who paid the bill; he was adjudged to be entitled to recover against the acceptor. (Chitty on Bills, 568; Mead v. Braham, 3 M. & S. 91; Macdonald v. Bovington, 4 T. R. 825.)
The general right to prosecute on the note after taking it up from the hands of a party to whom it had been negotiated, being established ; we are to inquire what the effect is of the report of the referee in the former suit by Olcott against the defendant 1 If the plaintiff really holds as purchaser or indorsee from Olcott, a verdict and judgment against him on the same matter now in issue, would be evidence against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant in this cause, and if properly pleaded would be a bar to the action. Although he does not
It is not correct, therefore, to say, as is sometimes done, that the indorser of a promissory note who has taken it up “ holds it as if he had never parted with it,” though he does so hold for all the purposes of bringing a suit upon it. And there seems
But there is in the present case an inseparable difficulty in the way of this branch of the defendant’s evidence. No judgment was ever entered on the report, and being a proceeding in a court having the power to arrest judgment and grant new trials, the report was not evidence without a copy of the judgment. (1 Phil. Ev. 389; Cowen & Hill's Notes, p. 1070.) If we consider, which I do not, that objection waived and the report actually in proof before the referee, still, not being pleaded it is not a bar, but only a.medium of evidence; and taking that view of the case we cannot say that on the whole proof the report is contrary to evidence.
Motion to set aside report of referee denied.