21 N.Y.S. 505 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1892
This action was commenced against the maker and indorser of a promissory note in these words and figures:
“$400. New York, July 1st, 1889.
“On demand Ipromise to pay to the order of Benjamin B. Strong four hundred dollars, with interest, at New Rochelle, N. Y., value received.
“G. R. Sheffield.”
The defendants are husband and wife, and the note was indorsed by Mrs. Sheffield, but it does not appear in the record how it was indorsed. The husband answered at first, but subsequently withdrew his answer, and the case proceeded against the wife alone. The action was commenced in the county court of Westchester county, and tried there, and the plaintiff obtained a verdict there. From the judgment entered upon the verdict, and the order denying a motion for a new trial upon the minutes of the court, the defendant Louisa A. Sheffield has appealed to the court.
As we have seen from the form of the note, it is payable on demand, to the order of the plaintiff, and is nonnegotiable. It is to be observed at the outset that this action is against the maker and indorser of a promissory note, and is based upon that instrument solely, and is brought by the payee named in the paper. He states no facts in his complaint except such as relate to the paper alone, and sets up no facts which impose any liability upon thé parties except such as arises from the.simple act of making and indorsing the paper. He claims to occupy no relation to the appellant except such as arises from her indorsement, and demands no relief except what the law affords to the holder of a negotiable promissory note against an indorser thereof. Even if the paper in suit was negotiable, the action would fail. The note is payable to the plaintiff, and, as to him, the appellant occupies the position of second indorser. It is antagonistic to the principles of commercial law, which have always prevailed in relation to negotiable paper, to make a subsequent indorser liable to a preceding one. The settled rule of law is exactly the reverse, and upon the face of this note, if negotiable, the' plaintiff would be liable to the appellant. Bacon v. Burnham, 37 N. Y. 614; Coulter v. Richmond, 59 N. Y. 478. It is a fundamental principle of the law relating to commercial paper that no person can be held responsible as an indorser of a nonnegotiable promissory note, (Roe v. Hallett, 34 Hun, 128; Griswold v. Slocum, 10 Barb. 402;) and the rule applies with augmented force where, as here, the note is payable to the holder, because there is no possibility of raising the ordinary obligation of an indorser. There are adjudicated cases, of which Moore v. Cross, 23 Barb. 534, and Meyer v. Hibsher, 47 N. Y. 268, are examples, where notes payable to the order of the plaintiff, and indorsed by third parties under an agreement to become security for the maker and for the purpose of securing for him a credit, in which recoveries against the in
The origin of this note, according to the testimony of the plaintiff, ■which was not contradicted, was this: He said he transferred his stationery business to the husband of the appellant for $700; received $300 :in cash, and a due bill for the remainder of $400, upon which he paid interest down to the date of this note. That he finally told the husband he must have some security for the money, and thathe must give him .•a note with some good indorser as security, and when th eliusband asked him who he wanted for an indorser he said he wanted his wife, Louisa. The husband said he could not do that, because his wife was in busis ness now in her own name, and, if her creditors ascertained that she waindorsing notes, it would injure her credit, and might injure her business. Thereupon he told the husband if he would give a note with his wife’s indorsement as further "security for what he owed him he would ■.give him his word as a man, and an affidavit, that he would not pay the note away, and would not place it in any bank, but would hold it until he wanted the money. He further said that in a few days he saw the husband, who told him to draw up a note, and Louisa would indorse it. That he drew up a note, and gave it to him, and he took it away, and brought back this note, and said the other did not exactly suit his wife, ■.and .he drew up this one, and he promised again to retain it until he wanted the money. It thus appears that this note was given for the pre■existing debt of the husband to the payee; that there was no stipulation for any extension of credit; and this note did not even suspend the right to sue, for it was payable on demand, and an action could have been commenced upon it or upon the old note at any time. This examination has been sufficient to show that no recovery can be sustained against this appellant, but it will be incomplete without examination of another ■class of cases in which it has been held that a person who writes his ■name on the back of a nonnegotiable promissory note can be held as a maker or guarantor.
In the case of McMullen v. Rafferty, 89 N. Y. 458, Judge Earl, in writing the opinion of the court, said this:
*508 “As these were nonnegotiable notes, the. defendant, did not, in a commercial', sense, become an indorser of them with the rights and liabilities of a simple indorser. But he can be held as a maker of the notes, or as a guarantor of their-payment. ”
—And cites the case of Cromwell v. Hewitt, 40 N. Y. 491, for his authority. Turning to the latter case, we find1 that the action was brought to. charge the defendant as the guarantor of two nonnegotiable notes made-by William Ryan, payable to Richard Hewitt, and indorsed by James R. Hewitt and" Richard Hewitt. James R. Hewitt was originally made-a defendant, but the action was discontinued as to him before the trial. One of the plaintiffs testified that James R. Hewitt, the defendant, was-indebted to them, and it was understood between them, when these notes-were passed over by him in payment to him, that1 they were taken solely upon Ms-responsibility, and that he assured,them the- notes should be-paid. The action-, therefore, was against the payee in the notes, who-had indorsed them over to the plaintiffs in- payment of hi's indebtedness-to them, and the complaint was framed to charge him as the guarantor of the notes. That case does not aid .the plaintiff here.
In the case of Jaffray v. Brown, 74 N. Y. 394, the note was given by the maker to the plaintiffs for goods sold to him by them, and was payable to- their order. They subsequently called upon him for further-security for his debt, and redelivered the note to him to procure an indorser, and he procured the indorsement of the defendant Maria Brown, upon the note. In that case the note was given for the goods, and in. that respect differs from this. But the court, in answer to the contention that there was no consideration for the indorsement, because the-goods for which the note was given had been delivered without promise-of security before the indorsement was demanded, said:
“Even if it be con ceded'that a debtor cannot voluntarily give additional security to hi a creditor for a subsisting'indebtedness:, the further fact exists in this ease-that the creditor claimed that he, had been defrauded in the sale, and threatened; to and was about to reclaim his goods, unless further security was given, andi that, in consideration of the indorsement in question, he relinquished that remedy, and the purchaser averted the breaking up of his business.which would have.ensued.”
To the same effect is Griswold v. Slocum, 10 Barb. 402.
These examples might be easily multiplied, but our object is only to show that the principles upon which they proceed' can have no application to this case. There was no consideration for- the indorsement of the-appellant, and if she had written a guaranty of payment over her signature it would have been void for want of consideration. There is im fact no consideration either for the note or the indorsement. It was-given as security for the old note, and it does not appear that that note-was surrendered. At all events-, there is nothing in this case- to show that the appellant ever intended to assume any responsibility except that of a second indorser of a promissory note, and therefore no other or-further liability can. be imposed upon her. In the case of Hall v. Newcomb, 7 Hill, 418, the chancellor said the courts had gone quite far-enough in repealing the statute to prevent frauds and perjuries by introducing paroi evidence to charge a mere surety for the principal debt-or by showing that his written agreement means something beyond what
“We must take this contract as the parties left it, complete and perfect, when the note was delivered to Hall, and we have no right to ask him to resort to practices bordering on trickery and deception for the purpose of changing the character and liability of the parties. ”
Courts of justice cannot become resorts for the reparation of blunders. If contracts are not made in conformity with law, the courts cannot complete or vary them by ascription, or legalize them by construction. Intentions cannot be attributed to parties which they have not entertained or expressed. There should be no relaxation of the elemental and salutary rule of law which prohibits the variation of written instruments by paroi testimony. The rights of makers and indorsers of promissory notes are well defined. These instruments are drawn in different forms, with reference to the law as settled in relation to each, and with ■relation to the liabilities which the different parties design to assume. If they are so drawn and executed as to fail in the accomplishment of the purpose intended by some of the parties, the law is powerless without a reformation of the instrument. Applied to this case, these remarks are designed to manifest the impropriety of holding the appellant responsible in any character or manner beyond that signified by the act of writing her name on the back of the note in suit. The legitimate inference from that act is that she intended to become liable as the second indorser of the note, and, as she cannot .be held responsible in that capacity, her intention is frustrated, and she escapes liability. Such results are not uncommon. Persons who promise to answer for the debt cf another intend to incur responsibility, but the law will not enforce the promise. In no view can the appellant be made responsible upon this note, and the judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the ■event.