27 Ind. 168 | Ind. | 1866
George K. Steele, president of the First National Bank of Rockville, Indiana, sued the appellants as indorsers of a bill of exchange, of which the following is a copy:
“Evansville, Ind., April 14,1865.
$4,000.
“ Three months after date, pay to the order of Lowry, Welborn $ Sullivan, at First National Bank of Rockville, Ind., four thousand^ dollars, for value received, without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. Notices and protests of non-acceptance and non-payment waived. And charge to the account of
A. G. Broioning & Co.”
“ To Wm. M. Aikman & Co.
Evansville, Ind.”
The complaint avers the drawing of the bill by Browning & Co., the acceptance by Aikman & Co., the indorsement in blank by Lowry, Welborn § Sullivan, the delivery to Umble, and the indorsement and delivery by him, on the same day, to Steele, the plaintiff below. The complaint also contains an averment .of a demand of payment at the proper time and place, and a refusal, but does not allege notice of dishonor to the appellants. The appellants demurred to the complaint for want of sufficient facts, but the court overruled
The substance of all these paragraphs of the answer is contained in the first, which is, in effect, as follows: That the appellants, who were the payees of the bill, tqok the same at its date from the drawers, in the usual course of business, and paid full value therefor; that at the maturity of the bill, the drawers and acceptors were solvent; that if appellants had been notified of the dishonor of the bill, at the time, or shortly after it occurred, they could have collected it from said acceptors or drawers; but that the appellee, who was the holder of the bill at maturity, neglected to notify the appellants of the dishonor of the bill, and concealed the fact of such dishonor from them for three months, (without, however, stating the circumstances of the concealment,) when the acceptors and drawers had become, and had since remained, insolvent, whereby appellants’ recourse oh them has been lost or rendered valueless. The court sustained a demurrer to each paragraph of the answer, to which the appellants excepted, and declining to answer over, judgment was rendered against them for the amount of the bill with interest.
The main question in the case in judgment is, does the waiver of notice of non-payment form a part of the bill? It is contended that it is only the waiver of the drawers, and that the indorsers are not affected by it. It is urged that the waiver is not embraced in the definition of a bill of exchange, and therefore cannot form any part of it. This position cannot be sustained. A promissory note or bill of exchange may contain stipulations other than those which are necessary to make the instrument one or the other. It is no part of a promissory note, as such, to waive the benefit of the valuation or appraisement laws, and yet a note with such a waiver is no less a note. It.is not necessary to make an instrument a bill of exchange that it should waive notice of non-payment, yet such a waiver would not divest the instrument of its quality. There is an implied
In Beagles v. Sefton, 7 Ind. 496, this court held that in a suit by the assignee against the assignor of a note, made payable without relief from valuation laws, the judgment was rightly rendered without relief. Upon principle, we think this case is in point. The waiver of valuation laws was no more a part of the note in that case, than is the waiver of notice -of dishonor a part of the bill in the case at bar. In The President, &c., v. Davis, 19 Pick. 373, the waiver was a part of the indorsement, and not a part of the bill.
We think that the liability of the indorsers became fixed by the dishonor of the bill. See Neal et al. v. Wood, et al., 23 Ind. 523.
But it is claimed that the answer set up a good defense. The notice was waived. The holder was not bound to speak, and his failure to do so cannot divest him of his rights, fixed by the dishonor. The concealment charged does not amount to a fraud. A party relying upon a fraud must' aver the facts which constitute it.
I yield to this decision only because I deem the question exactly similar to the one decided in Beagles v. Sefton, 7 Ind. 496. The doctrine of that case has ever since been adhered to in practice, and on the faith of it the whole people have ever since acted in their important business transactions, and it would be exceedingly mischievous
The judgment is affirmed, with costs, and one per cent, damages.