Andrews v. Pond

38 U.S. 65, 10 L. Ed. 61, 13 Pet. 65, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 13, 1839
StatusPublished
Cited by157 cases

This text of 38 U.S. 65 (Andrews v. Pond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Pond, 38 U.S. 65, 10 L. Ed. 61, 13 Pet. 65, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 413 (1839).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taney

delivered the opinion of the Court.—

This case comes before the Court upon a writ of error, directed to the judges of the Circuit Court for the ninth circuit and southern district of Alabama.

The action was brought by the-plaintiff as endorsee,, against the defendants .as endorsers of a bill of exchange in the following words:—

“Exchange for @7287T\V • New York, March 11, 1837.

■ “ Sixty days after' date of this first of exchange, second of same tenoitr and date unpaid, pay vo Messrs. Pond, Converse, and Wads-worth, or order, seven thousand-two hundred and eighty-seven TW dollars, negotiably and payable at the Bank of Mobile, value received, which pláce to the account of

“Your obedient servant

“ To Messrs. Sayre, Converse & Co. \ “ D. Carpenter.” Mobile, Alabama.” 5

The case, as presented by the record, appears to be this. The defendants were merchants, residing in Mobile, in the state of Alabama. H. M. Andrews and Co. were merchants residing in New York; and before the above mentioned bill was drawn, the defendants had become liable to H. M. Andrews and Co. as endorsers upon a former bill for. @6000, drawn by E. Hendricks on Daniel Carpenter, of Montgomery, Alabama. The last mentioned bill was dated at New York, and fell due on the 21st of February,. 1837, and was protested for non-payment. The défendant Pond, it seems, .was-in New Ydrk in-the month of March, 1837, shortly after this protest'; when H. M. Andrews and Co. threatened to sue him on the protested bill: and the defendant Pond, rather than be sued in New York, agreed to pay H. M. Andrews and Co. ten per cent, damages on the protested bill, and ten per cent, interest and exchange on a new bill to be given, besides the expenses on the protested bill.

According to this agreement an account, which is given in the record, was stated between them on the. 11th of March, 1837, in which the defendants viere charged with the protested bill, and ten per cent, damages on the protest, and interest and expenses, which amounted altogether to the sum of @6625 25, and ten per cent, upon this sum was then added, as the difference of exchange between Mobile and New York, which made the sum of @7287 78; for which the defendant Pond delivered to H. M. Andrews and Co. the bill of exchange upon which this suit is brought, endorsed by the defendants in blank. The bill was remitted by H. M. Andrews and Co. to S. Andrews, at Mobile, for collection.. The drawees refused to accept it, and it was. protested for non-acceptance; and after this refusal *74 and protest, it was transferred by S. Andrews to J. J. Andrews, the present plaintiff. It is stated in the exception,'that after this transfer it was a cash credit in the account between H. M. Andrews, and Co. and S. Andrews. The bill was not paid at maturity, and this suit is brought to recover the amount.

There is no question between the parties as to the principal or damages of teri per cent, charged for the protested bill of @6000; nor. as to the interest and expenses-charged in the account herein before mentioned. The defendants admit that the principal amount of the protested bill, the damages on the protest which are given by the act of assembly of New York, and the interest and expenses, were properly charged in the account. The sum of @6625 25 was therefore due from them to H. M. Andrews and Co. on the day of the settlement, payable in New York. The disputé arises on the item of @662 53, charged in the account as the difference of exchange between New York and Mobile, and which swelled the amount for which the bill was given to @7287 78. The defendants allege that the ten per cent, charged as exchange, was far above the market price of exchange at the time the bill was given, and that it was intended as a cover for usurious interest exacted by the said H. M. Andrews and Co. as the .price of their forbearance for the sixty days given to the defendants. This was their defence-in the Circuit Court, where a verdict was found for the- defendants under the directions given by the Court.

■ Many points appear to have been, raised at this trial, which are stated as follows, in- the exception taken by the plaintiff.

The defendant offered evidence—

1. To prove that the said bill of exchange was usurious, according to the statute and lay's of the state of New York. The plaintiff objected to the reading of the statute and depositions aforesaid, because the contract was not made with a view of the statute or laws of New York. But the bill of exchange was usury or not by the laws, and statutes of Alabama; and that the contract was subject only to the laws of'the state of Alabama, as to its obligatory force and validity: and he further objected, that if this contract were to be decided by the statute of New York, that this proof could not be given under this issue: but the Court overruled all these objections, and permitted thé depositions and statute to be read, to show the bill of exchange to be void by the laws of New York : to all which plaintiff excepts.

2. Plaintiff then offered to prove by Joseph Wood, that the banks purchased bills at a far less.rate of exchange than others, that they never bought any than undoubted paper; that from the facility of collecting, remitting, &c. they had many advantages over the citizens at large, and that the exchange of the banks was therefore much lower than the community at large; that' there was no fixed rate of exchange between Mobile and New York; that it varied from one to twenty per cent, according to the solvency, punctuality, risk, &c.; that exchange was ever fluctuating, and was high or low as *75 the risk was great or Small. The Court rejected this testimony also, to which plaintiff excepts.

3. Plaintiff asked the Court to instruct the jury, that if they were satisfied that the excess over legal interest retained in this bill was taken and contracted for innocently by the parties; without intending to violate the laws against usury; that they might find for plaintiff: but the Court refused this also, and plaintiff excepts.

4. Plaintiff moved the Court to charge the jury that the contract expressed in this hill of exchange, if to be executed in Alabama, was subject alone to the laws of Alabama against usury; and that the usury laws of New York.had no force, or any thing, to do with this investigation. This was refused by the Court, and plaintiff excepts.

5. Plaintiff next requested the Court to charge the jury, that if they believed S. Andrews- received the bill before'maturity, for a valuable consideration, without any notice of usury, and that plaintiff received it from S. Andrews, without notice of usury, and. before maturity, that the plaintiff might recover; notwithstanding plaintiff offered no proof of the consideration he gave for it. • To this refusal there was also an exception.

6. Plaintiff next moved the Court to charge that the variance between the bill declared on, and the one set up as the same bill by defendants’ deposition, was fatal in a plea of usury; to which the Court refused, and plaintiff excepts.

7. It appeared that before the bill was delivered by S. Andrews to the plaintiff, it had been, while in the hands of S. Andrews, protested for non-acceptance, which appeared on the face of the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
38 U.S. 65, 10 L. Ed. 61, 13 Pet. 65, 1839 U.S. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-pond-scotus-1839.