45 N.Y. 303 | NY | 1871
Two questions of fact were litigated upon the trial, and were submitted to and passed upon by the jury: *304 1. Whether the plaintiff, upon the occasion of giving his note to the defendant, which he was subsequently compelled to pay, purchased and took title to the note purporting to have been indorsed by Daniel Whitney, or whether he gave his note in payment and satisfaction of that note; and, 2. Whether the indorsement of Daniel Whitney was genuine or a forgery.
These questions were distinctly submitted to the jury, and they have found both in favor of the plaintiff, that is, that the indorsement was forged, and that the plaintiff did purchase and take title to the note, and did not pay and satisfy the same. Both parties acting in good faith, and supposing the indorsement to be genuine, the plaintiff was entitled, upon these facts, to recover the amount paid upon the purchase, with the interest thereon. (Herrick v. Whitney, 15 Johns., 240; Canal Bank v.Bank of Albany, 1 Hill, 287; Coolidge v. Brigham, 5 Metc., 68.) The plaintiff gave the defendant, in payment for the purchased note, his own note, payable in sixty days, which note, before maturity, was transferred in the ordinary course of business, and for value. The note being dishonored, an action was brought thereon by the holder, which was defended by the present plaintiff, and a recovery had against him; and, under an objection and an exception properly taken, he was permitted to recover in this action, as well the costs included in that judgment against him, as the costs and expenses incurred in the defence. For this, there is no authority; and it cannot be sustained upon principle. He defended the action for his own benefit, and took the chances of the experiment to impeach the title of the holder, so as to make the want of consideration a defence; and, failing, he cannot charge the expense of the litigation upon the defendant. These costs were not a necessary result of the breach of warranty of the genuineness of the note transferred. The damages that may be recovered in an action upon a warranty are those, and only those, that are incident to, and result from, the breach of the warranty.
The defendants had transferred the note, and payment to the holder would have given the plaintiff his action, and he *305 should have paid it and taken his remedy over against the defendant. The costs of that action were not the result or a consequence of the breach of the defendant's contract of warranty, but of the plaintiff's default in the performance of his own contract to pay his note to the holder. These costs should have been disallowed.
The costs of the action against the indorser upon the forged indorsement, and which were made and incurred in the attempt to establish the genuineness of the note which the defendant had transferred as genuine, and warranted as such, are upon a different footing. There was no question made upon the trial as to the good faith of that action or that it was collusive, and although the judgment was not treated upon the trial as evidence of the forgery, it probably might have been accepted as conclusive evidence of that fact, the defendant having had notice of the action and an opportunity to take part in its prosecution. But evidence was given on both sides as to the genuineness of the indorsement and the question submitted to the jury as an open question. The case shows that the defendant claimed and earnestly insisted at all times that the indorsement was genuine and the note valid against all the parties to it, and claimed that, if there was to be any litigation, it must be between the plaintiff and Daniel Whitney, whose name was upon the note as indorser. There is nothing to distinguish this case from Delaware Bank v.Jarvis (
GROVER, PECKHAM, FOLGER and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
GROVER, J., was also inclined to the opinion that the costs of the plaintiff's suit on the indorsement should be deducted.
Chief judge did not hear the argument.
Judgment according to the opinion of ALLEN, J.