22 N.Y.S. 151 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
As stated by the referee in Ms opinion, this action is brought upon a promissory note, which reads as follows:
“$5,000. New York, Nov. 23d, 1886.
“Four months after date, we promise to pay to the order of Allen & Stead five thousand dollars, at the treasurer's office, 44 Broadway, New York. Value received. ’ Council Bluffs City Waterworks Co.
“Henry Allen, Treasurer. ”
■ It was indorsed by Allen & Stead, and sent by Allen to one Bradford, a person in Providence, R. I., who claimed to have facilities for obtaining the discount of mercantile paper. Bradford took the note in December, 1886, to plaintiff, at Providence, R. I., and asked for a loan upon it. Plaintiff, remembering that a bank wherein he was a director had discounted such a note for Bradford, got that note from the cashier, and compared it with the one in suit, and found them similar in form; and the president of that bank also told him there was another such note held by a savings bank in Providence, and that it was a good loan. Plaintiff therefore lent to Bradford $4,500 on the note, and he sent $8,500 to Allen, the maker, who entered the fact of the issue of the note, and the receipt of .the money, on the books of Allen & Stead, in an account therein kept as the Council Bluffs.Waterworks account; and he testified that he applied the proceeds to that company’s use.
The questions presented for review are whether the defendant corporation is liable upon the note, and, if liable, to what extent.
Upon the former, as to defendant’s liability, we might content, ourselves with resting the case upon the reasoning contained in the opinion of the learned referee, which, upon the evidence, disposed of the defenses that plaintiff .is not a bona fide holder, for valué, and that the note in suit was issued without authority of the defendant, and was not its obligation, and points out the distinction between this case and that of First National Bank of Middletown against this same defendant, (56 Hun, 412, 9 N. Y. Supp. 859.) It is not claimed that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of fact made by the referee, and upon such evidence we think he has correctly interpreted the decisions, and drawn correct legal conclusions. He finds that during the period from some time in the month of October, 1885, to February 27, 1887, Harry Allen, as treasurer of the defendant corporation, made and issued in the name of the defendant, and to which the name of the defendant was signed by himself, as treasurer thereof, some 40 or 50 promissory notes, to the order of, and indorsed, “Allen & Stead,” which were negotiated, and money obtained thereon; that the reason for the making of such promissory notes to the order of Allen & Stead was that
The question, however, as to the extent of the defendant’s liability, remains to be considered. This note in suit, as shown, was delivered as collateral security to a loan of $4,500 made by plaintiff to one Bradford, under an agreement that the loan was tobe paid in a i'ew days, with interest at the rate of $5 a day until such time as the loan was paid. If the re-cove^ upon this note were to include the $4,500 and interest, as agreed upon, then it would amount to more than the principal and interest upon the note itself.
But the appellant insists that neither of these measure the extent, if answerable at all, of defendant’s liability, but that all that plaintiff can claim is the $4,500 advanced on the faitb of defendant’s note, with interest thereon from the date of the loan at the rate of 6 per cent. In Todd v. Shelbourne, 8 Hun, 512, it was held “that the indorsee of commercial paper, not valid as a legal obligation in the hands of the payee negotiating it,.must be restricted in his recovery to the value, with in