21 Wend. 588 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1839
By the Court,
Had this been an ordinary contract, of guaranty or insurance, there is no doubt that it must have contained all the requisites claimed for it by the defendant in the court below. A. consideration must have been expressed, and been followed by an agreement to guarantee or insure the payment, and the whole been subscribed by the defendant below.
But the defendant below did not put himself in the position of a man expressly contracting to pay the debt .of another by an ordinary simple contract, calling, in order to give it effect, 'for all the express requisites demanded by the statute of frauds. He chose to satisfy the statute in another way, which he had a perfect right to do. He endorsed these negotiable notes, in the hands of the plaintiffs, saying, “ I choose to guaranty the debt in that form.” This gave the plaintiffs below the authority to write over his
It has been held by several courts, that where a man puts his name on a note not negotiable, with intent to guarantee its payment, you may write a guaranty, indeed a promissory note, over the name, and expressing a valuable consideration. Josselin v. Ames, 3 Mass. R. 274. White v. Howland, 9 id. 315. Hunt v. Adams, 5 id. 358. Palmer v. Grant, 4 Conn. R. 389. Beckwith v. Angell, 6 id. 315. And see other cases cited in Dean v. Hall, 17 Wendell, 219, 220 ; Seymour v. Van Slyck, 8 id. 421, 2, and the cases there cited by Sutherland, J. At least, you may write the ordinary endorsement, which amounts to a bill of exchange. Chit, on Bills, 218, 219, Am. ed. 1836; Hill v. Lewis, 1
Since the revised statutes authorizing you to impeach the consideration of a specialty, the two species of paper occupy more nearly the same footing. In both, you may show a total or partial want of consideration; though in the case of negotiable paper, you may be cut off from that right by a bona fide transfer. But as between the original parties, either species of paper, imports a consideration; and this is considered a sufficient expression to satisfy that branch of the statute of frauds which requires that a guaranty of another’s debt should show the consideration upon which it is made. See Turnbull v. Trout, 1 Hall’s R. 336, and the cases there cited. Therefore, it is quite clear, that the suit was correctly brought against the defendant as endorser.
But it was strenuously insisted, that, admitting the defendant to be liable as endorser, he is so to the extent only of the consideration he has received. It is admitted that, had the note been bona fide endorsed before it fell due to the Union Bank, for the purpose of obtaining credit at which, Hamilton told the defendant his name was required, there would have been an end of the question. The bank would then claim by a title paramount in the eye of the commercial law; and the endorsement must have stood incapable of qualification. But it is equally well settled, as a general rule, that where such paper is contested between the original parties, whether payee and maker, or endorsee and endorser, the original consideration is open to examination ; and the recovery may sometimes be reduced to the real consideration received, whatever that may have been." Prima facie, the liability of the undertaker is co-extensive with the face of the note. But it is so no longer, when it appears that the consideration came short of it. Such too, would now probably be the rule, even in regard to a specialty ; at least, it would be so in case of a total want or
What are the extent and principle of that defence by which a negotiable paper may be thus reduced 1 In the case of a simple endorsement, for the consideration of a sum of money, which is less than the face of the note, the endorser is liable for the sum he received and that only. This has been repeatedly held, where a valid business note has been sold for less than its face, and especially where such a limi tation has been necessary, in order to avoid the imputation of an usurious intent. Braman v. Hess, 13 Johns. R 52. Munn v. The Commission Company, 15 id. 44. Cram v. Hendricks, 7 Wendell, 569. But where the party endorses in such case, with the avowed purpose of securing the full amount of the note, it has never been holden that the contract could not be avoided on the statute of usury. Otherwise, the transaction is regarded as a sale of the note, the vendee to take his chance of collecting from the maker, with the privilege of resorting to the endorser for the real sum advanced and the simple interest. The contract being open to such an interpretation, it has been uniformly holden in this state, that the transaction is not usurious, though it may have often been made a cover for usury and by some courts is treated as usurious on its face. I have just now cited the prominent cases, decided by this court and the court of errors. On these the plaintiff in error relies. It is insisted on the authority of these and like cases, see Livingston v. Hastie, 2 Caines, 248, and 13 Johns. R 52, Bayley on Bills, 544, Bost. ed. 1836, and cases there cited, as between the original parties, or a third person holding mala fide, you may universally inquire into the value of the consideration, and the amount of obligation shall be reduced and made commensurate with it. The proposition, put in
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.