9 Watts 273 | Pa. | 1840
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The first error assigned is an exception to the opinion of the court below, admitting the note, with some of the endorsements thereon, to be read in evidence to the jury, without proof having been first made, that all the endorsements were true. It certainly was not requisite to make proof of all the endorsements' as they appeared on the notes, to entitle the plaintiffs below to give it in evidence to the jury, unless they had been averred in the declaration to have been made, which does not appear to be the case;
It will be sufficient to remark here, in answer to the fourth error assigned, that the last position laid dowu above, and the authorities cited in support thereof, show clearly that it cannot be sustained.
The second error assigned is also an exception to the opinion of the court, admitting the deposition of James Heli, as evidence to prove, that a notice was put into the post office, addressed to the defendant, advising him that the note had been duly protested for non-payment. The first ground of objection to this deposition, as being given in evidence for such purpose, is the only one which can
The third error, which is the next in order, is an exception to the answers of the court, given to the first and second points, submitted by the counsel for the defendant below. The only question, seeming to arise out of these points, which can be regarded as at all material to the defendant below is, whether taking, about a year after the note in suit had become payable, and. been protested for non-payment, two new notes drawn by Gray, one of the drawers of the first, as a collateral security, for the payment of the debt mentioned in the first note, including also an additional sum of money owing by the drawers of the first to the plaintiffs, at fifteen and thirty days thereafter, without any agreement on the part of the plaintiffs below to give time for payment of the first note, released the defendant below from his liability as the endorser thereof.
The evidence given on the part of the plaintiffs below, went to show clearly that they agreed to accept of the new notes as collateral security merely, and that the old were not to be delivered up, but retained by them. On the other hand again, the evidence for the defendant tended to prove distinctly, that the new notes were given in satisfaction of the old; and that it was the understanding, that the old should, upon the giving of the new, be delivered up; but that the plaintiffs, upon receiving the new, refused to do this. The court upon this evidence submitted it to the jury, as a question of fact, to be decided by them, whether the new notes were given as collateral security only for the debt mentioned in the old, or in satisfaction thereof. The jury, by finding for the plaintiffs below, have decided that the new notes were given as collateral security merely. Upon this subject, the general rule seems to be, that if one indebted to another by simple contract, give his creditor a promissory note, drawn by himself, for the same amount, without any new consideration, the new note shall not be deemed a satisfaction of the original debt, unless so intended and accepted by the creditor. Hart v. Bollar, 15 Serg. & Rawle 162; Roberts v. Gallagher, 2 Wash. C. C. R. 191. And most clearly all the authorities go to show that, at law, accepting of a security of equal degree, either from the debtor himself with or without a suretjr, or from a stranger alone, at the instance of the debtor, is no extinguishment of the first debt; as where a second bond is given to the obligee ; for one bond can not determine the duty of another. Cro. Eliz. 304, 716, 727; Brownl. 74; Cro. Car. 85-6; 1 Burr. 9; 1 Stran. 427; Brownl. 47, 71; Hob. 68-9; 1 Mod. 225; 2 Ibid. 136; Cro. Jac. 579; 3 Lev. 55; Hamilton v. Calender’s Executors, 1 Dall. 420. In Lovelace and Wife v. Cocket, Hob. 63-9; S. C. Brownl, 47, being an action of debt up oh a bond given to the wife when sole, the defendant pleaded, that at the day of payment, he and his son, naming him, gave a new bond to the wife, who was still sole,
In Day et al. v. Leal et al., 14 Johns. 404, it was held that a collateral security, even of a higher nature, as a bond and warrant of attorney, on which judgment is entered, does not extinguish the original contract, as long as it remains unsatisfied. There the action was brought to recover the amount of two promissory notes; after they had become payable the bond and warrant of attorney were given by one of the drawers of the notes, to secure the payment of the same debt mentioned in them, and an additional sum of money owing to the plaintiffs by the obligor and another person, not one of the drawers of the notes. And the court seemed to think that the two circumstances, to wit: that of the bond and warrant being given by one only of the drawers, and the additional sum of money being included in intended strongly to show that the bond was intended to be only a collateral security. The like cirfcumstances exist in the case before us, but with the addition of another circumstance, making the case still more favourable for the plaintiffs, which is, that both securities are of equal degree. This court also held, in the case of Wallace v. Fairman, 4 Watts 378, that a specialty or single bill taken by the creditor of a firm from one of the partners thereof, for the payment of the debt owing to him by the firm, for which he gave, at the time, a receipt, expressing that the specialty, “ when paid,” would be in full of his claim against the firm, and upon which he afterwards obtained a judgment, was no extinguishment of the original claim, because it appeared to have been taken as a concurrent and additional security. But let us turn to cases resembling the present so closely, that they cannot in principle be well distinguished from it, and see what the rule is which has been applied in deciding them. In Pring v. Clarkson, 1 Barn. & Cress. 14; S. C. 8 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 10, it
The fourth error having been noticed and settled at the conclusion of what was said on the first error, we come now to the fifth error. It is an exception to the answer of the court to the fourth point, submitted by the counsel of the defendant below. The letter of notice to the defendant, advising him of the non-payment of the note, was proved to have been directed to him at Walnut Bottom, near Carlisle, which, it would seem, was the place of his residence; but it was shown that, although there was a post office in Carlisle, it was some nine or ten miles from Walnut Bottom, the place where the defendant resided; and that there was a post office called “Dickinson” within half a mile of his residence. The counsel of the defendant below, therefore, requested the court, in the fourth point, to instruct the jury that, if the letter was put into the post office at all at Philadelphia, it must have been mailed, from the direction on it, for the post office at Carlisle, where the defendant would not look for it or be likely to receive it, instead of Dickinson post office, where he would have received it with some certainty, as the latter was the post office at which he generally received letters addressed to and intended for him. We are not prepared, however, to say that the court erred in refusing to give the instruction here asked for; because, at the distance of one hundred and thirty miles from Philadelphia, it may be impracticable to'ascertain by inquiry in the latter place, whether there be a post office nearer to the residence of an individual who resides in the county, than that which is located in the town which, is the seat of justice in the county wherein he resides. And if it were to be decided that the letter
As to the sixth error, which is the only remaining one, it is sufficient to observe that it has been sufficiently answered in the discussion of the second error.
Judgment reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.