11 Mich. 501 | Mich. | 1863
This was an action of assumpsit brought by Allen, the plaintiff below, against the company, to recover the amount of a loss by fire under a policy issued by the company to Allen.
The declaration contained counts upon the policy, and the common counts. The plea was the general issue. It appeared from the evidence introduced by the plaintiff (and of these facts there was no dispute), that on the 20th day of April, 1861, the loss under the policy had been adjusted by compromise between Allen and the company (the latter acting through one Holden, their agent,
“$1,106 25. Walnut Street Bank: Cincinnati, May 2, 1861.
Pay to the order of R. H. & H. M. Magill, general agents, eleven hundred and six 25-100 dollars current funds.
G. II. Bussing & Co.
To Hoffman & Gelpecke, Chicago, III.”
This draft was received by Stephens & Beatty, at Detroit, from their agents in Cincinnati, on the 4th day of May, 1861, and on the 25th day of the same month they transmitted it by mail to their agents in Chicago, for presentment and demand of payment; and, on the 29th day of the same month, it was duly presented to Hoffman & Gelpecke, the drawees, and payment demanded, which payment was refused; and it was thereupon protested for non-payment, and due notice thereof given.
It was admitted there were daily mails between Detroit
The draft was offered in evidence by the plaintiff, under the common counts, but rejected by the Court on the .ground that it was not negotiable, because payable in current funds, and not in cash. As the plaintiff does not complain of the judgment, and we think the draft was properly excluded for another reason, it is only important to notice this point for the bearing it may be supposed to have upon another question in the cause. But in the absence of all evidence that anything else than cash was treated as current, funds in Chicago, we do not see how the Court could assume judicially to know the fact or presume it; until this should be made to appear, the current funds in which it was made payable, should, we think, be held to be such funds only as were current by law. We must therefore treat this draft as a negotiable bill of exchange payable in money. It does not appear to have been obtained for the purposes of exchange; that is, for the purpose of transmitting funds to Chicago; but it is clear that it was received in payment of the first draft or order drawn by Holden and indorsed to Stephens & Beatty, or, in other words, in payment of the sum due the plaintiff for his loss under the policy. Whether received in absolute or conditional payment, was a question for -the jury upon the evidence. Had they found it was received as absolute payment, they could not have found for the plaintiff: as his remedy would then clearly have been confined to the draft itself, which the plaintiff was not allowed
In Jennison v. Parker, 7 Mich. 355, it was held by a majority of this Court that where a draft drawn by a third person was indorsed by the debtor, and by him sent to the creditor to be applied when paid, the creditor made the paper his own and could not sue upon the original debt if he neglected the steps necessary to hold the debtor liable as indorser. We see no reason for departing from the rule there laid down. We think the same reasons apply here, not only with reference to the •indorser, but with at least equal force to the drawers also; since, if the drawers have been dischai’ged by the neglect of the holder to present for payment in due time, the indorsers (who, so far as the present question is concerned, may be considered as the company for whom they acted) would lose their remedy over upon the drawers; for there is nothing in the case to show that the drawers could be held liable without due presentment.
In 2 Am. Lead Cases, p. 183, upon a careful review of the cases it is laid down as a general principle of the law merchant that, “a plea that the plaintiff has taken
Had there been evidence upon the point, the questions might have arisen, which were so fully and ably discussed by the counsel, whether the reasonableness of the time was a question of fact for the jury, or — the facts being undisputed — a question of law for the Court, or, if dis
As there was no evidence tending to show the time to be reasonable, and the Court held the question to be one of fact for the jury, and permitted the reported cases to be read to them against the objection of defendant’s counsel, the jury must naturally have inferred that they were at liberty to consider those decided cases as evidence upon which they had a right to base their verdict. The cases could only be properly read to, or considered by the jury upon the hypothesis that they were to decide the question as one of law: and such, in this ease, must have been the result, so far as their verdict may have been in any way influenced by the cases and the argument based iqion them.
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and' a new trial granted.