28 F. Cas. 1096 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana | 1846
Assump-sit by Varnum, the holder, against Bellamy, the indorser, of a promissory note for eight hundred and ninety-nine dollars and fifty-three cents,' dated Nov. 23rd, 1840, payable and negotiable ninety days from date, at the If'ort Wayne Branch of the State Bank of Indiana. The note is made by Wright and Dubois, and payable to the order of Lyman G. Bellamy, who indorsed it in blank. Since the commencement of the suit, Bellamy has died, and the action is now against his ad-ministratrix, Caroline Bellamy. The declaration is in the usual form. The qnly pleas on file are the general issue, and plene ad-ministravit. As no .proof has been introduced applicable to the last plea, that part of the case need not be again referred to.
The first ground of defense insisted on is, that the note in question was given solely as an accommodation note, to be discounted at the Fort Wayne Bank—-that the indorsement was made with that understanding and without consideration, and that it was delivered to the plaintiff by the makers, in violation of that understanding, and thus diverted from its original purpose. This matter being in avoidance of the note, should have been specially pleaded, but no such plea is found among the papers. Inasmuch, however, as the question was considered on the trial and made the subject of an elaborate
The second ground of defense is, that Johnson, the attorney of the plaintiff, when he received the note for collection, entered into-an agreement with the makers to receive from them certain claims which they, held upon other persons, which, when collected, were to be applied upon this note; that Johnson was to have five per cent, for collecting them; and that they were to pay also a small amount of money, which was to-be applied on the note; and that, in consideration thereof, Johnson agreed not to bring suit, and did retain the note in his hands for about the period of two years after it fell due. The only evidence in the cause (except the proof of pretest, etc.) is furnished by the depositions of Dubois, one of the makers of the note. It seems that he has been examined on three several occasions, and the last time was cross-examined by the plaintiff’s counsel. The witness evidently shows a strong bias in favor of the indorser, and there are some discrepancies in his statement, not compatible with the utmost candor. It seems, from his last deposition, that some time after the note fell due, and was protested for non-payment, it was placed in the hands of Thomas Johnson, an attorney of Fort Wayne, Indiana, where the makers and indorser resided, for collection r that when called on for payment, the witness, one of the makers, told the attorney that they were unable to pay it, but that if he would take a small amount of money, and some claims which they held against other persons, they would turn them out, and allow Johnson five per cent, for collecting them—the money so to be paid, and the claims, when collected, to be applied in payment of the note. It seems that Johnson acquiesced in the proposition; that a small sum of money was paid, and that claims to a considerable amount were placed in his hands. The witness says, also, that “the understanding was, that he (Johnson, the attorney,) was not to sue on the note,” and that he retained it in his possession without suit for some two years.
The other question is, was the forbearing to sue the makers of the note, as above stat-' ed, such an indulgence as will release the in-dorser? I think that it was not, even supposing the agreement to have been made upon sufficient authority. “The agreement for delay must be such an one as for a time will tie up the creditor’s right of action.” Braman v. Howk, 1 Blackf. 302, and note 2. The indulgence which will release an in-dorser, must not only be given upon a good consideration, but it must be for some limited and definite time, within which the creditor's right of action is suspended. Chit. Bills (9th Am. Ed.) 446. In this case, both these requisites are wanting. The payment of a part of the debt, after the whole became due, and the transfer of claims, to be applied when collected, in further payment of the note, constituted no legal consideration for the promise of forbearance. Berry v. Bates, 2 Blackf. 118. No time was fixed within which the attorney agreed “not to sue.” It was a mere verbal promise, founded upon no sufficient consideration, and might at any time have been disregarded.
These views do not in any manner conflict with the principle laid down in the case of Bank of U. S. v. Hatch [Case No. 918], afterward reviewed by the supreme court of " the United States (6 Pet. [31 U. S.] 250). Judgment for plaintiff de bonis testatoris.