Mason v. Burton

54 Ill. 349 | Ill. | 1870

Mr. Chief Justice Lawrence

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action brought by Burton as endorsee of two promissory notes, against Mason as endorser. The notes were given by one Hodson, and were payable to the order of Mason, at Chicago, Illinois. It was proven on the trial that the endorsement was made in Chicago, and that when the notes matured Hodson was a resident of the State of Wisconsin. It was then admitted that the notes were made in Wisconsin, and that the maker lived there when they were made, and has lived there ever since.

The "counsel for appellant contends that the statute, which makes the endorser liable when the maker has left the State at the maturity of the note, can not apply here, because the maker, not having lived in the State at all, can not be said to have left it. We should not be inclined to give the statute a construction based so completely upon its letter instead of its spirit, even if the question were a new one in this court. But it is not new. In Schuttler v. Piatt, 12 Ill. 418, the maker of the note, as in this case, resided in Wisconsin, and the court held, if he was beyond the limits of the State at the maturity of the note so that he could not be subjected to our jurisdiction, the liability of the assignor was fixed, the assignee not being obliged to pursue his debtor into a foreign jurisdiction. The court further said, the circumstance that the maker resided in another State, and that this was known to the plaintiff when he received the notes, did not vary the liability.

In that case, it is true, the note was made in Chicago while the maker was casually there, though living in Wisconsin, and it may be said he did literally leave the State. But the court does not base its decision upon any verbal niceties, but upon the broad ground that the maker was absent from the State when the note matured, and the assignee was not bound to pursue him into a foreign jurisdiction. It is wholly immaterial whether the liability of the endorser in such a case be referred to that clause of the statute which charges him when suit against the maker would be unavailing, or to the clause which makes him liable when the maker has left the State. He would be liable under either clause. A suit against the maker would be unavailing, because there could he no service of process upon him in our courts, and it can not be supposed the legislature intended the maker should be pursued all over the world, or anywhere beyond the limits of our own State, before charging an endorser on an endorsement made in this State.

That the endorsee should not be required to pursue the maker into a foreign jurisdiction, is clearly shown by the clause establishing the liability of the endorser if the maker should leave the State. The reason why he should be held liable in such an event, is simply because the endorsee ought not to be required to follow him into a foreign jurisdiction; and the reason applies with the same force in all cases where the maker is absent from the State, whether he never lived here or left after making the note. By the phrase in the statute “ left the State,” the legislature designed simply to indicate the fact of absence, so as to be beyond the reach of legal process. This construction is unavoidable, if the statute was intended to apply to notes made in another State, but assigned in Illinois; and that it does so apply was held by this court in Crouch v. Hall, 15 Ill. 263, and, we have no doubt, rightly held. But the note in this case was made payable in Chicago, and the liabilities growing out of the assignment are of course the same they would have been if the note had been made there.

It is further insisted in behalf of appellant that he should have been permitted to prove a verbal agreement, made at the time of the endorsement, to the effect that he should not be responsible as endorser. This evidence was properly excluded. His assignment of the notes meant that, in certain contingencies defined by the statute he would pay the notes, and it meant this as fully as if this agreement had been written out in words. This was the legal effect of the assignment, and it can not be impaired "by proof of a different parol agreement. Howes v. Merrill, 5 Cush. 82; Campbell v. Robbins, 29 Ind. 271. This point has been often ruled, and so far as the cases cited by counsel for appellant tend to show such evidence admissible, they are in conflict with principle as well as the great current of authorities.

Appellant also offered to prove at the trial that, after the maturity of the notes and before the commencement of the suit, the maker of the notes was in Chicago more than thirty times, buying goods and shipping the same to Wisconsin, and that this was known to the plaintiff. It is claimed that, on the ordinary principles which regulate the relation of principal and security with their common creditor, the defendant should be released, the plaintiff having failed to make his debt from the principal when he might have done so. But the liability of the endorser having attached by the failure of the maker to pay at maturity, we are not prepared to say this liability was lost by the mere failure of the plaintiff to attach these goods in transitu. In order to attach them, it would have been necessary for the plaintiff to have given bonds, and incurred contingent liabilities which it would be unreasonable to demand as a condition to holding the defendant to a liability which had already become fixed under the statute. The liability of the endorser having once attached, would be released only by such laehes on the part of the holder in collecting the debt from the principal as would release a surety in any other case; and such laehes is not shown in this record.

Judgment affirmed.