167 N.Y. 194 | NY | 1901
The Natalie Anthracite Coal Company, desiring to secure good paper for discount and at the same time sell some coal, sought out the defendants, composing the firm of Curtis Blaisdell, and through its Mr. Taylor entered into arrangements with them by which it promised to deliver different grades of coal at prices agreed upon within the period of four months. Thereupon a draft was drawn by the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company upon the defendants for three thousand dollars, payable four months after date, and indorsed by the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company, and across its face the defendants wrote an acceptance thereof, payable at the Nineteenth Ward Bank. This suit involves, also, another draft for twenty-five hundred dollars, in the same form and executed under similar circumstances.
On the day the defendants indorsed their acceptances upon the drafts the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company mailed them in a letter, with various other commercial papers, to the plaintiff requesting it to discount the same and remit the money therefor, which it did. The drafts not being paid at maturity they were duly protested and notice thereof given to these defendants, who refused to pay and this suit was brought. The defendants in their answer thereto, among other matters, alleged in substance and effect that the drafts were accepted "by these defendants on the agreement and condition that coal to the full amount of said drafts should be delivered to these defendants by the said Natalie Anthracite Coal Company before the maturity of said drafts, and the same were payable by these defendants only after the delivery of such *197 coal;" that the coal has not been delivered, and that such acceptances are without any consideration whatever; and that the plaintiff received the drafts so accepted with a full knowledge of the conditions upon which said acceptances were made.
In so far as the answer contained a statement of the facts, it was supported by the evidence adduced upon the trial. Its conclusion, that because the makers of the drafts failed to deliver the coal as they had promised left the drafts without any consideration whatever to support the acceptances, was, of course, erroneous, for the promise of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company to deliver the coal within four months was a sufficient consideration to support the promise of the defendants to pay for the coal at the end of four months, which promise was made in the form of acceptances of the drafts payable in that time.
The learned judge who wrote the dissenting opinion at the Appellate Division insists that the evidence failed to establish the allegations of fact contained in the answer, in that defendants failed to prove that the plaintiff had knowledge of the facts and circumstances attending the acceptance of the drafts by the defendants, his position being that while knowledge of those facts was brought home to the cashier of the plaintiff, he was not at the time of receiving such information acting in behalf of the plaintiff, but was acting as a director of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company. We find it unnecessary, however, to consider that question in the disposition of the case that we propose to make, and shall assume in the further discussion (without deciding) that the knowledge which the cashier acquired while acting as a director of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company was the knowledge of the plaintiff. Therefore we shall consider the defendants as having proved the facts alleged in their answer; those facts, however, not only do not constitute a defense, but, on the contrary, when considered with the other established facts, they constitute the plaintiff a holder of the drafts in due course. The drafts are complete and regular upon their face; the plaintiff became the *198 holder of them before they were overdue; they had not at that time been dishonored; the plaintiff in good faith paid value for them, and as the drafts were not due there was no breach of the delivery contracts of the character understood by the plaintiff at the time of the discount by the bank. The Natalie Anthracite Coal Company, therefore, had good title to valid and enforceable drafts, which it turned over to the plaintiff for value, and the mere fact that it had knowledge that the consideration for the acceptances of the drafts was a promise to deliver coal, instead of an actual delivery of coal, in no wise affects its right to enforce its obligation against the defendants so long as a discount was made by it before a breach of the agreement of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company to make delivery of coal within the time specified.
The learned judge who wrote for the Appellate Division laid down the correct rule of law upon this subject when he said: "It would be no defense to these acceptances that they were given upon an executory contract for the sale of merchandise, even if the plaintiff knew that an agreement existed between the makers and the acceptors that the drafts were not to be enforced until the merchandise was delivered, unless the acceptances were discounted with knowledge of the breach. (Davis v. McCready,
It is quite apparent from the testimony already quoted that the witness did not intend to assert that there was any understanding that the Tradesmen's National Bank should take care of the acceptances. The answer which he made undoubtedly stated his own conclusion at the moment, not a statement of *201 some one else, and that such was the case is conclusively established by what followed. The motion of the opposing counsel, together with the inquiry of the court, at once apprised both the witness and his counsel that if it were a fact, rather than his conclusion, that the Tradesmen's National Bank was to take care of the acceptances, it was one of no inconsiderable importance and worthy of support by a direct answer to the question of the court, as well as by any other facts or circumstances within the knowledge of the witness. But he made no attempt to support it; on the contrary, he proceeded to testify to facts demonstrating conclusively that he did not understand at the time the conversation took place that the cashier of the Tradesmen's National Bank was attempting to make any agreement whatever for that institution touching the discount or disposition of these drafts. "Q. You knew that the Natalie Coal Company was planning to have these drafts discounted? A. They did not say what they were going to do with them. Still I could not say of my own knowledge whether I know that or not; the only way that I would know it was that as they had all the rest of the drafts discounted I supposed they would go the same way." The effect of the witness' answer, therefore, was that it was not said by any party to that conversation where the drafts should be discounted. Moreover, when he said that the only way that he could know that the drafts were to be discounted was because all the rest had been, and he supposed these were to go the same way, he made it very clear that there was no agreement in his presence as to the disposition to be made of these particular drafts.
Mr. Wardrop and Mr. Taylor, the president of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company, were also examined as witnesses, and not a hint is to be found in their testimony, or in that of any other witness, tending to show either any promise on the part of Wardrop, or any request on the part of the defendants, that the acceptances should be non-enforceable in the hands of the plaintiff in the event of the failure of the Natalie Anthracite Coal Company to keep its agreement to deliver the coal. *202 We are of the opinion, therefore, that the record presented no question for the jury.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
GRAY, O'BRIEN, HAIGHT, LANDON, CULLEN and WERNER, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.