94 A.D. 474 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
According to the' testimony of the plaintiff the note was not paid nor was it surrendered up to the defendant Post upon the under
The following is the opinion delivered by Freedman, P. J., in the court below:
This action was brought to recover an alleged balance of $1,750 claimed to be due upon a demand note for $5,000, dated May-1,-1899, payable to the order of the maker, the defendant Post, and indorsed by him and his father, the defendant Postawalsky. Postawalsky was not served with the summons and did not appear. After a trial by a jury a verdict for the amount claimed was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s complaint, originally, averred that he is “now the lawful owner and holder” of the note in suit, but it was subsequently amended by striking out the allegation that plaintiff was the “holder.” The answer denied the delivery of the note to the plaintiff and that he was the owner thereof, and set up, among other defenses, that the note had been delivered up and surrendered to Post, the maker, about April 9, 1900, and that defendant had e.ver since been the holder thereof.
At the beginning of the trial, the note, in pursuance of a notice given by plaintiff’s attorney, was produced by the defendant ~Post, and by plaintiff’s attorney offered and received in evidence.
The testimony of the transaction out of which the cause of action arose, as given by the parties, is very conflicting, and a reading of the record convinces one that neither party has given a complete statement of the facts.
The plaintiff’s version, however, was accepted and believed. by the jury, and must, therefore, for the purposes of this appeal be taken as true, and, briefly stated, is as follows:
In 1898 plaintiff and the defendant Postawalsky were copartners in the cloak business. This partnership was dissolved by
At the close of the plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole case the defendant’s attorney moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that “ the plaintiff has failed to establish a cause of action and. upon the ground that by his own admission of the delivery and surrender of the note by him to the defendant, (the plaintiff) extinguished any liability on that note. * * * My contention is that the delivery of that note by the plaintiff to the defendant constituted a discharge and cancellation of that note.”
' I am of the opinion that the defendant Post is right in this contention. - |
The cause of action is based wholly upon the note. Subdivision 5 of section 200 of.the Negotiable Instruments. Law provides that a
The instrument in question was a negotiable note. The term “ holder ” is defined in section 2 as follows : “ ‘ Holder ’ means the payee or indorsee of a bill or note, who is in possession of it, or the bearer thereof,” and section 3 contains the following definition: “Person primarily liable on instrument.— The person‘primarily ’ liable on an instrument is the person who by the terms of the instrument, is absolutely required to pay the same.”
The words of subdivision 5 of section 200, “ in his own right,” merely exclude such a case as that of a maker acquiring the instrument in, purely, a representative capacity.
The case at bar comes exactly within these provisions. Post was the maker of the note and primarily liable thereon ; it was surrendered to him and he became the “ holder ” thereof without fraud or mistake in “ his own right.”
Prior to the adoption of the Negotiable Instruments Law, it has been held that if a note be surrendered by the payee to the maker the whole claim is discharged. (Jaffray v. Davis, 124 N. Y. 164, 170; Ellsworth v. Fogg, 35 Vt. 355; Kent v. Reynolds, 8 Hun, 559; Beach v. Endress, 51 Barb. 570 ; affd. in Larkin v. Mardenbrook, 90 N. Y. 333.)
Whether the plaintiff can maintain an action -upon the original indebtedness or upon the defendant Post’s promise to pay the balance due, the consideration therefor being the plaintiff’s surrender of the note, need not now be determined.
As the foregoing views necessitate a reversal of the judgment the other alleged errors need not be considered.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Lead Opinion
Determination, of Appellate Term affirmed, with costs, on the opinion of the court below, and judgment, absolute ordered for defendant, with costs.
Present — Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ.