96 Ky. 150 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1894
DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
This case went off on the pleadings, the court below sustaining a demurrer to the reply of the plaintiff, and the latter failing to amend or plead further, a judgment was rendered for the defendants.
The action is based on a negotiable note for four thousand dollars, drawn by the appellee J. P. More-land on S. P. Walden, in favor of J. H. Hickman (another appellee), and made payable at the SebreeDeposit Bank. The paper was indorsed by Hickman and discounted by the bank, and the proceeds placed to the credit of the acceptor, Walden, the paper having-been made, as is alleged, for his benefit. The note was protested for non-payment, and the defense made byMoreland, the drawer, and Hickman, the indorser, is the failure of the bank (the holder) to give them notice of the paper’s dishonor, and other defenses not, necessary to be considered.
It is insisted by counsel for the bank that the averments of the answer made on information and belief,, of facts that must, if they exist, be within the personal knowledge of the defendants, is bad pleading, and the demurrer to the reply should have been carried back to the answer and sustained to that pleading. There was-no demurrer to the answer, and the-reply of the plaintiff placed directly in issue the fact of the want of notice to the defendants of the dishonor of the paper, and cured the defect, if any-existed.' . •
It appears from this pleading the party not entitled to the notice of dishonor, and without a request even to do so, had been intrusted with the duty of giving this notice to the drawer and indorser, so as to continue their liability, and with that view it is alleged in the reply that when notices of the protest were received by the acceptor, he at. once delivered them to the drawer and indorser. When the notice of protest was received by Walden is not alleged, and while it must be inferred as a matter of law that he received the notices in due time, as the notice was placed in the post-office as soon as it could be done, if it had been necessary to hold him bound, no such inference will be indulged as to the drawer and indorser of the paper. As they were each entitled to notice, and the time it was received by the acceptor as well as the time it was handed them by him, should
It was a matter of doubt for a long time whether the acceptor of a bill, who had permitted his paper to go to protest, could give a valid notice, but Mr. Daniel, in his treatise on Negotiable Instruments, says it is now “a principle of the law merchant, however unphilosophical it may seem.” (2 Daniel, sec. 990.)
When a notice is delivered by a special messenger other than through the regular mail, it must distinctly appear when it was delivered, so as to enable the court to say that it was delivered as soon as it could have reached the party sought to be charged, by due course of mail. In this case the bank made the acceptor its agent to deliver the notice of protest, and inclosed the notices to the acceptor by mail. They were not sent directly to either the indorser ■or drawer, and it is, therefore, manifest the averments of the reply should present a state of fact showing that the appellees received this notice as soon as it could have reached them by the regular mail. That they were sent by due course of mail to the payor, and when received delivered at once to the drawer and indorser, are not such facts as would authorize the inference that due diligence had been exercised by the holder, or that the drawer and indorser received the notices as soon as they would have
The envelope in which the notices were inclosed, addressed to the acceptor, might have remained in the post-office for days before its reception by him; and while the personal service or delivery of the notice by the acceptor to the appellees would have been good if (delivered in due time, it must appear when the post-office may be used as a means of giving the notice, that a deposit of the notice in the office within due time was made, addressed to the party affected by the dishonor of the paper, or that notice was given by the holder or his agent to the party sought to be made liable, by a delivery made as soon as it could have been received by due course of mail.
There is no pretense that any notice was inclosed -to the address of these parties and sent by mail, and no state of fact alleged showing that diligence on the part of the holder, so as to hold these appellees liable ■on the paper, unless it arises from the promise to pay alleged to have been made after they had known of the protest, and the failure of the acceptor to pay, ■and his inability, long before the note matured, to make payment.
It is insisted by counsel for the bank that the promises to pay by the drawer and indorser amounted to such an acknowledgment of continued liability by the drawer and indorser as absolutely fixed their liability. That the promises were made with a full knowledge of all the facts, and the purpose of the notice to the’ parties to the bill being to prevent any loss by
This view of the question is sustained by the decided preponderance of authority, both in the textbooks and the reported cases. Mr. Daniel says that “the condition upon which the indorser becomes liable is not a strict and absolute condition precedent as conditions in contracts construed by the common law. The obligation of the indorser is regarded rather as voidable by non-fulfillment of these conditions than as actually avoided. If he chooses to affirm rather than disaffirm his liability, it can injure no one to leave him to the exercise of his discretion.” (Sec. 1147.)
Again: “It makes no difference, where the promise to pay is made with knowledge of the laches, .that the party making it did not know of its legal effect as a waiver, or that he had a legal defense to the bill or note, for it is a maxim that ignorance of the law excuses no one,” &c. (Section 1148.)
In Yeager v. Farwell, 13 Wall., 6, the Supreme Court of the United States, following the doctrine of the textbooks, held the indorsers liable upon their promise to pay where neither protest or demand of payment bad been made.
Yeager & Co., of St. Louis, had indorsed the paper of Kerchoff for fifteen thousand dollars, and the paper was held by Farwell & Co., of Boston, who
While this court' recognizes the importance of uniformity in judicial utterances affecting the liability of parties to commercial paper, we are not disposed to follow those authorities on the question before us. The tendency of legislation in this State, as well as the decisions of this court, is to relieve parties who
There is no doctrine more firmly established than that negotiable paper, when dishonored, requires demand, protest and notice to those who are the mere accommodation indorsers or drawers, in order to hold them responsible. This is the rule of the law merchant, and applicable to notes discounted in bank and placed on the footing of foreign bills by our statute and to recognize a doctrine that in effect dispenses-with the performance of conditions by the holder upon which the indorser agrees to become bound, and hold him liable upon a subsequent promise to pay, although released, destroys the virtue of commercial paper, and places the indorser at the mercy of those-who, in great commercial transactions, are seeking to-hold those liable who have been once released, upon the plea that the laches of the holder redounds at last to his benefit, if he can establish a promise on the-part of the indorser, although released from the payment of the dishonored paper.
There is no rule of commercial law more rigidly applied than that requiring notice of protest to those who are the mere indorsers of negotiable paper, and there is but little reason, it seems to us, for dispensing with this rule, or nullifying the conditions upon which the indorser becomes and is to remain bound, for the-purpose of releasing the holder from the effect of his own laches.
Where the question of a want of notice is in issue,, it would be competent to show a subsequent promise
In this case the reply alleges the manner in which the notice was given; and, conceding the doctrine to-be that the general averment of due demand, protest and notice is sufficient, yet where the pleader attempts-to set forth the mode in which notice was given, and the facts stated are not sufficient to charge the indorser, the pleading should be held bad on demurrer; and the averment of a subsequent promise to pay be-' ing a mere matter of evidence, will not be considered.
If the promise had been made upon the consideration that no suit would be instituted against the-parties to the bill, the promise would be binding, and upon this' promise an independent action could be maintained. No such fact is alleged, even in the-reply, or any facts connected with the promise that, would work an estoppel. It is alleged only that the promise having been made, the plaintiff forbore to sue. N o loss or injury is alleged by reason of the promise. There is no allegation that the promise was made in consideration that no suit would be brought on the paper. The payor, Walden, was insolvent, and the-appellants have a judgment against him for the debt. A promise to pay, after the maturity of the paper, is presumptive evidence that demand was made and notice duly given, and would support a recovery if there was no evidence to the contrary, or rather-the question would go to the jury upon the issue; made; but in this case the notice was not duly given,, as appears from the reply of the plaintiff.
This is the extent to which the authorities in this State go, and we think the correct rule on the subject. In the cases of the Bank of Tennessee v. Smith, 9 B. M., 609, and Landrum v. Trowbridge, Dwight & Co., 2 Met., 281, a distinction is attempted to be drawn be
The obligation of the indorser is known to the holder of the bill. His relation to the bill requires the highest degree of diligence on the part of the holder for the protection of the indorser; and when released from liability, having occupied the position of a mere surety, something more than a verbal promise, so easily established when large commercial interests are involved, should be established before that which is dead is brought to life, and the liability continued without any consideration whatever.
The judgment below must be affirmed.