9 Wend. 170 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1832
By the Court,
The verdict of the jury conclusively exonerates the plaintiffs from all fraud, and also from the imputation of want of prudence or ordinary discretion in the transaction. But the question still remains, did the plaintiffs acquire this note in the usual course of trade, and for a valuable consideration, within the meaning of those terms, when applied to the class of cases to which this belongs! This note has not answered the object for which it was endorsed by the defendant; it was not intended for the benefit of the makers generally, but for the special purpose of being substituted for, or enabling the makers to take up another note which the defendant had endorsed for them, and which was about falling due, The endorsers did not intend to extend their responsibility for the makers, but to substitute the one note for the other. Where a note has effected the substantial purpose for which it was designed by the parties, an accommodation endorser cannot object that it was not effected in the precise manner contemplated at the time of its creation. Upon that principle, the cases of Powell v. Waters, 17 Johns. R. 176, The Bank of Chenango v. Hyde and others, 4 Cowen, 567, and The Bank of Rutland v. Buck, 4 Wendell, 66, were decided. See also 2 Gall. 233; Payson v. Coolidge, 2 Wheat. 66. But where a note has been diverted from its original destination, and'fraudulently put in circulation by the maker or his agent, the holder cannot recover upon it against an accommodation endorser, without shewing that he received it in good faith, in the ordinary course of trade, and paid for it a valuable consideration. Woodhull v. Holmes, 10 Johns. R. 231. Skelding & Haight v. Warren, 15 id. 270. Brown v. Taber, 5 Wendell, 566. Vallett v. Parker, 6 id. 615, and the authorities cited in those cases.
That it was an act of gross fraud in Hughes to put this note in circulation, is not and cannot be denied ; and the only question is, whether the plaintiffs took it in the ordinary
Hew trial granted 5 costs to abide the event.