63 Me. 139 | Me. | 1873
Where, at the request of the party with whom he deals, one makes his promissory note, which is to be a partial payment for a piece of work to be done for him, payable to a third party, who is a creditor of the party with whom he contracts for the work, and it is credited by the payee to such party, in good faith, the maker cannot set up a failure of consideration as between himself and the party with whom he deals, in defence of .a suit upon such note in the name of the payee.
The governing principle in this case is not distinguishable from that which was laid down in Munroe v. Bordin, 65 E. C. L. R., 862.
On the twenty-seventh of April, 1868, the defendant gave to an agent of the Irving Bark Extract Co., a written order addressed to said Extract Co., to make for him a “complete set of works for the making of extract according to your patents, such as are being made by the Boston Iron Co.,” not to exceed in cost five thousand dollars (with a stipulation that he
The plaintiffs’ testimony seems to establish the following state of facts : They had been employed in making castings according to patterns furnished by the Irving Bark Extract Co., who were largely in their debt; they had a contract with that company to build five bark mills like one previously made by them for the Irving Bark Extract Co., for $4,500 each — cash on delivery in Boston, the work to be done under the supervision of one B. Irving, constructing engineer of the Irving Bark Extract Co.; and they proceeded under his direction, having no model, but working under Irving’s direct supervision some months, and having one of the machines delivered and the other four partially constructed; when the work was finally stopped by the consent of the Irving Bark Extract Co., (and for aught that appears without any fault or deficiency on the part of the plaintiffs who were informed by the Rving Bark Extract Co., that the machines though thus built according to the directions of their own contracting engineer, did not answer the purpose it was expected they would,) the Rving Bark Extract Co., remained largely indebted to the plaintiffs. While the work was in progress the plaintiffs agreed to
If Mr- Brown, by reason of a misplaced confidence in the Irving Bark Extract Co., and the value of their invention, and the practical utility of the machines they were constructing, has given his note to a bona fide creditor of theirs, it is to them that he must look for a reimbursement when he has paid his note. The plaintiffs were under no obligation to him. A good consideration passed from them to the Irving Bark Extract Co. That the defendant did not receive what he contracted for, from the party with whom he dealt, was no fault of the plaintiffs, nor can Mr. Brown resist the payment of this note, on the ground of a want or failure of consideration, any more than he could allege such a defence if he had given the same note purely as a matter of accommodation to the Irving Bark Extract Co., in payment of their debt to the plaintiffs. The defendant claims to be let into his defence upon the ground that Johnson of the Extract Co., was the agent of the plaintiffs, and that he dealt directly with the plaintiffs for the machines. But this is contradictory of his own order to the Irving Bark Extract Co., with whom he dealt on different terms, both as to price and time of payment, from those upon which the Iron Co., were making the machines for the Extract Co.
Then the defendant says, if he did give the order in the first place to the Extract Co., it was made over with his consent together with the note to the Iron Co., who (he claims) took the note with the understanding that they were to take the contract off the hands of the Extract Co., and assume its performance so far as Mr. Brown was concerned. If the Iron Co., were content to do this and to guaranty the sufficiency and utility of the machines, when they had no interest in the patent, and to become responsible for the delivery of the machine to Mr. Brown, it would put a different face upon the case.
It is not worth while for us to spend time now in inquiring
The stipulation in the report is that if the court shall be of opinion that the action is legally maintainable upon the admissible evidence, the case is to stand for trial; and such is the result.
Case to stand for trial.