Amsinck v. . Rogers

82 N.E. 134, 189 N.Y. 252, 27 Bedell 252, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 938
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 1, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 82 N.E. 134 (Amsinck v. . Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amsinck v. . Rogers, 82 N.E. 134, 189 N.Y. 252, 27 Bedell 252, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 938 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Hiscook, J.

Appellants brought this action as holders of a certain instrument for the payment of money drawn by the respondents to their own order upon parties in Austria, and then indorsed and delivered for value to the appellants. The bill of exchange, as we shall for the present denominate it, was not paid by the drawees, and thus far recovery against the drawers has been refused upon the ground that there was no proper protest and notice of protest.

The material facts are not disputed, and the only questions • presented for our consideration upon this appeal arise in connection with the rejection by the trial court of certain evidence of Austrian laws and usages offered for the purpose of excusing protest and notice thereof.

*255 Respondents were iron merchants doing business in the city of Sew York, and appellants were hankers doing business in the same place. The former made a sale of iron to Messrs. A. Henn. Eraenckl Soehne, of Vienna, Austria, and against said sale drew the instrument in question, which reads as follows:

“Sew York, Jem. 8,1901.

“ Exchange for £2,058 6/8

“ On demand of this original cheque (duplicate unpaid) pay to the order of Rogers, Brown & Company, Twenty-two hundred and fifty eight pounds 6/8, payable at rate for bankers cheques ou London value received and charge the same to account of pig-iron per S.S. Quarnero.

“ ROGERS, BROWN & CO.

“ To Mess. A. ILerm. Eraenckl Soehne,

“ Ruepgasse, Vienna,

“ Austria.

“ No. 75.”

This bill was drawn and indorsed and transferred to appellants in New York. There was delay in the shipment of the iron, so that when the consignees and drawees of the bill were notified thereof they refused to carry out their purchase thereof unless an allowance was made, and this condition was complied with by respondents.

January 8, 1901, the hill was forwarded by the appellants to Vienna for collection where it was received January 22nd. It was presented to the drawees on the same day, but the collecting agent was requested by the latter not to present it at that time because there were certain differences then existing between them and the drawers concerning the iron in question which probably would be adjusted in a short time. The agent thereupon withdrew the bill and it was not protested and the respondents were not notified of the presentment and non-payment. January 28, 1901, the hill was again presented by the agent to the drawees and payment again demanded, when practically the same request was made that presentment be withdrawn and the same process repeated, there being no *256 protest and no notification of presentment and non-payment being given to respondents. February 12, 1901, the bill was again presented and payment formally demanded which was refused, but no protest was made and no notice given to the respondents, except that on February 18 appellants’ London agent who had been advised of the presentment on February 12 cabled information thereof and of the refusal to pay and upon the same day appellants by letter advised respondents thereof. February 21, 1901, in response to instructions from New York the bill was presented to the drawees, payment demanded and refused and protest made, and witli what we shall assume to have been proper diligence appellants thereafter and on March 11,1901, mailed to respondents the notice of protest that day received through their agents, the respondents promptly taking the position that they were discharged for lack of proper protest.

As bearing upon the merits of respondents’ position, it appears that the steamer carrying the iron arrived at Genoa February 20th, and that at that time the iron in question could have been sold at that place by the respondents at the same price at which it had been sold to the purchasers in Vienna if the bill had been promptly protested. Upon arrival in Austria, the purchasers refused to accept the iron and it was sold for the sum of $5,738.38 for the benefit of whoever might be concerned, leaving an unpaid balance upon the bill of $4,364.45.

It is practically conceded by the learned counsel for the appellants that if the latter’s obligation to cause protest and notice of protest of this bill is to be measured by the laws of New York where it was drawn and transferred by respondents, there has been a failure of necessary steps which prevents a recovery. Recognizing this, he sought, as already suggested, to introduce evidence establishing a different and less rigorous obligation upon the part of the appellants. This evidence was to the general effect that in Austria, where the same was payable, the instrument involved was not a bill of excliange nor a check, but a commercial order ” for the *257 payment of money which was negotiable and which might be presented as often as occasion arose, each presentment being legally good as any other and no protest or notice of dishonor to the drawer being required.

In connection witli the rejection of this testimony, which presents the only questions upon this appeal, appellants’ counsel has seemed to argue the proposition, broader than the evidence offered, that the rights of the drawer of a bill of exchange to protest and notice are governed by the laws of the place where the bill is payable, upon the assumption that in this case such view would excuse the omissions complained of by respondents.

We shall first discuss this general proposition so urged and, as we believe, shall demonstrate that the weight of authority is that the rights and obligations of the drawer of a bill of exchange are determined and fixed by the law of the place where he draws it, and as in this case transfers it, and that he is discharged by failure to protest the same in accordance with the laws of that place, such failure being due to different laws or customs prevailing in the country where the bill is payable.

It is familar law that the contracts of the different parties to a bill of exchange are independent and carry different obligations. The drawer of such a bill does not contract to pay the money in the foreign place on which it is drawn, but only guarantees its acceptance and jrayment in that place by the drawee, and agrees, in default of such payment, upon due notice, to reimburse the holder in principal and damages at the place where he entered into the contract.

His contract is regarded as made at the place where the bill is drawn, and as to its form and nature and the obligation and effect thereof is governed by the law of that place in regard to the - payee and any subsequent holder. (Story on Bills of Exchange, §§ 131, 154.) While as to certain details, such as the days of grace, the manner of making the protest and the person by whom protest shall be made, the law or custom of the place where it is payable will govern, *258 the necessity of making a demand and protest and the circumstances under which the same may be required or dispensed with are incidents'of the original contract which are governed by the law of the place where the bill is drawn rather than of the place where it is payable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 134, 189 N.Y. 252, 27 Bedell 252, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amsinck-v-rogers-ny-1907.