20 Wend. 321 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1838
After advisement the following opinions were delivered :
Two questions of importance to the commercial community are presented for our consideration and decision in this cause: 1st. Whether an agent or broker who receives for collection a draft or bill of exchange payable at a particular day, or a certain number of days after its date, is under any obligation to present the same to the drawee for acceptance immediately, and before the time when the draft is due and payable 1 And 2d. If he is, whether the person who has given him such draft or bill for collection, can, in case of his neglect to present the same before the day of payment, recover the whole amount due thereon, with interest j although the owner has not in fact sustained damage to that extent, by the neglect of his broker or agent to present the bill for acceptance without any unnecessary delay 1
A bill payable at sight or a certain number of days after sight, must be presented for acceptance and payment, or for acceptance only, without unreasonable delay, or the drawer and endorsers will be discharged, for they have an interest in having the bill accepted immediately, in order to shorten the time' of payment, and thus to put a limit to the period of their liability j and also, to enable them to protect themselves by other means, before it is too late, if the bill is not accepted and paid within the time originally contemplated by them. But in relation to a bill payable at a day certain) as at a fixed time after its date, it is perfectly well settled, not only in this country and in England, but also in Scotland and in France, that the drawer or endorser of
The counsel for the plaintiffs in error, however, attempted to take the case out of this last exception to the general rule, on the ground that these agents only received the bill for collection, and that they received no instructions to present it for acceptance before it became due. I infer, however, from the note of the case of The Bank of Scotland v. Hamilton, as given by Glen, that the present case cannot be distinguished from that in this respect. For it there appears that the bill then in question was finally presented for acceptance on the evening of the fourth day from its date, after the drawer had failed, and then only in consequence of a letter from Dunlop, who had sent the bill to" the agents in Glasgow three days .before. From that statement of the case, I think we may fairly presume there were no special directions to the agents to present the bill for acceptance when it was originally sent to them for collection, especially as it had but four days to run when it was originally discounted by Dunlop. On this subject, Pothier says, in regard to the endorsement of a bill by the owner thereof to another, as a mere agent to receive the amount due thereon for the endorser and as his proxy, " the contract which such an endorsement implies, and which it makes between the endorser and the person to whom he makes his order, is a contract of agency, and creates the ordinary obit
In relation to the amount of damages, however, I think the charge of the judge who tried the cause was clearly wrong; and that it has unquestionably produced great injustice in this case. As we have before seen, the relation between the drawer or endorser of the bill and the person to whom it is transferred for the mere purpose of negotiation or collection, is not the relation of endorser and endorsee, so as to throw the loss of the whole amount of the bill upon the latter, if he neglects to present the same for acceptance and payment in time, or to give notice of its dishonor to the endorser, as required by law. ¡Nor will the payment of the damages by the agent, have the effect to subrogate him to all the rights and remedies of the person from whom he received the bill, as against other parties who may be liable for the payment thereof; but it is a mere contract of agency, which leaves the endorser to all his rights and remedies for the recovery of his debt as against other parties, and only renders the endorsee liable as agent for the actual or probable damages which his principal has sustained in consequence of the negligence of such agent. This principle was distinctly recognized by the court of king’s bench in England, in the case of Van Wart v. Woolly, 5 Dowl. Ryl. 374, where the plaintiff had not lost his remedy against the drawers of the bill, or the persons from whom he received it, by reason of the neglect of the agents to present it for acceptance in due time ; the drawers of the bill in that case having drawn without authority when they had no funds in the hands of the drawees, and Irving & Co., who had sent the bill to the plaintiffs in payment, not standing in the situation of endorsers of the bill, as their names did not appear upon it. In that case, however, if
Where there is a reasonable probability that the bill would Siave been accepted and paid if the agent had done his duty ; or
For these reasons I am of opinion that the judgment of the •court below should be reversed, and that a venire de novo should be awarded ; to the end that no more damages may be recovered than such as a jury may believe it probable, from the evidence adduced, that the plaintiffs may have sustained from the negligence of their agents.
In this case the defendants in the court below were agents for collecting for a commission, a draft on another state, payable after date. What are the duties and responsibilities of agents in regard to presenting such paper for acceptance 1 Legal authority as well as commercial usage, has long settled as a general rule, that the holder of a bill of exchange, payable at a specific time, is not obliged to present such bill for acceptance in order to hold the drawer or prior endorser. It is, indeed, usual as well as prudent, to do so, both for the sake of the added security and better credit of the paper, and because in case of refusal, recourse may be had immediately to the drawer. It is, therefore, the duty of an agent for collection, to exert the customary prudence, and present such paper for acceptance without delay, since, by neglect, his principal may either lose the drawee’s security, and the credit it gives, or else be prevented from making such inquiries and demands, or using such legal or precautionary measures towards the drawer or other parties as anight tend to secure his debt. This distinction was long ago stated by Pothier, who points out the different obligations of him who holds a bill as an agent, (" mandataire,”) “ who ought to present it for acceptance as soon as possibleand those of him who holds as owner, (" lorsque le porteur est en meme temps le proprietaire,”) who may present it when he thinks fit. Contrat du Change, partie 1, c. 5, art. 128. This distinction was recog
Thus, it seems to be the general commercial law of the civilized world, that when a bill is payable at a day certain, the drawer and endorser are not discharged, if the bill is not presented until the day of payment. Yet it is still the duty of the agent for collection to present the bill for acceptance without delay, and to give immediate notice of refusal to accept. The reason of this, I take to be, that the drawer by fixing a day certain for payment, assumes the responsibility of providing funds at
Thus far, then, I think the law quite clear as to the rights of holders of bills,■■ and the duties of collecting agents, but I have had more hesitation as to the rule of damages. Is the plaintiff in similar eases to be obliged to make out in evidence the precise •actual amount of the damage he sustained, and thus to give to ■the party in- fault all the numerous and great advantages of doubt, uncertainty and difficulty in the proof 1 Or are we to •apply to these cases the doctrine of laches in commercial paper, as between the holder and other parties, and consider the agent as having made the paper his own by his neglect 1 Contradictory as these rules are, they have yet each their share of authority, and are just and wise when applied to other questions ; but I am not satisfied with the equity in the commercial policy of either, when applied to a collecting agency, and I have sought in the decisions for some safer and more equitable doctrine on that •head.
Considering the subject in regard to commercial policy, there
It is true, that Lord Tenterden, in Van Wart v. Woolley, above cited, held that damages must be shewn, and that the face of the bill is not the conclusive measure; but this I think is not in contradiction to the view that I have taken. I therefore take the cases before mentioned to point out the sound doctrine here. The face of the bill is the prima facie measure of damages. These may be reduced by any positive evidence proving the real damage to be less ; but the burden of that proof must be upon the negligent agent, and not on the party who suffers by his negligence. Circumstances like those of the present case, may often render it difficult or impossible for either party, to prove or even to form a probable estimate of the precise damage s incurred by the agent’s neglect. In such cases, is it not just that those
Perhaps the case was a hard one. So are many others that arise under our law of negotiable paper, in consequence of laches of parties. In all such instances, the hardship of the particular case must yield to the necessity of adhering to some general rule founded on broad considerations of public policy. I can find no such rule safer or more conducive to commercial convenience, or sanctioned by stronger authority than the one I have stated.
If, however, we abandon this rule, the only alternative, in my judgment, so far as authority governs, is to adopt the stricter doctrine of our supreme court, in Le Guen v. Gouverneur & Kemble, 1 Johns. Cas. 467, and affirmed in 1800, in this court, “ That where the property consists of credits, the agent whose breach of orders causes damages, is bound to answer to the amount of the credits, and the principal may abandon to him.” The only defence distinctly recognized as valid in those doctrines, is that of fraud, or some similar one going to invalidate the whole contract.
Upon this principle, the agents here would be held to have made the paper their own by their default, if the plaintiffs below thought fit to abandon it to them; and this, perhaps, is the ground on which the superior court rested their decision in this case ; the reasons of which I regret that we have not before us.
Under the circumstances of the case, either this rule or that which I have stated before, would affirm the judgments of the courts below ; but I place my own vote for affirmance upon the
On the question being put, Shall this judgment be reversed 1 the members of the court divided as follows : 20 in the affirmative:, and 4 in the negative. Whereupon the judgments in the courts below were reversed, and a venire de novo directed to be awarded by the superior court.
. In the rule for judgment of reversal, the following entry was made : “ It is further ordered and adjudged, that an " agent who " receives a bill of exchange for collection which has not been " accepted, is bound to present the same for acceptance without " unreasonable delay, as well as to present the same for payment " when it becomes due, or he will be liable to his principal for " the damages, which the latter sustains by such negligence.”