Arnold v. Rock River Valley Union Railroad

5 Duer 207
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 5 Duer 207 (Arnold v. Rock River Valley Union Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Rock River Valley Union Railroad, 5 Duer 207 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

By the Court. . Bosworth, J.

The objection, that the certificate of the notary could not be admitted as evidence, is untenable. To exclude it, the statute requires the defendant “to annex to his plea an affidavit, denying the fact, of having received notice of non-acceptance, or of non-payment, of any such note'or bill.” (2 R. S. 2d edit. 212, § 46.) The defendant insists, that the answer, in substance, contained such a denial; and that the answer, being verified, it was as effective, as a distinct affidavit annexed to it, to deprive the plaintiff of all right to read the - certificate. To this there are two answers:—

First. The answer denies “that due notice of such demand and non-payment was given to them, or either of them,” (the endorsers.)

It does not, as the statute requires, deny that notice was “ received.” An affidavit, in the words of this part of the answer, would not preclude the certificate from being read as evidence.

Second. The court has no right to interpolate words into the statute. The statute was not designed to affect the rules of pleading, nor to make a plea or answer perform any new office. An answer, merely denying that a notice was received, would deny an immaterial fact, and one not averred. If it did not deny that due notice had been given, the plaintiff would be entitled to judgment on the answer, if his right to recover depended, according to the pleadings, solely on the question, whether due notice had been given to the endorsers.

[211]*211It cannot affect a plaintiff’s right to recover, that the endorser never received notice of protest, if it is proved or is admitted to have been served, in time, and in a proper manner.

An answer can contain, only a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the complaint controverted by the defendant, or a statement of new matter constituting a defence or counter claim. (Code, § 149.)

A denial, of having received notice of protest, is not a denial of any allegation of the complaint; nor is it a statement of any new matter, constituting a defence or counter claim.

A party can make such an affidavit as the statute requires, provided no notice has been received. Whether it has, or has not been received, is known to the endorser personally. When an endorser has not actually received notice, he has a right to infer that none has been given. He may well be supposed to be ignorant of the name of the witness who will be called, or of the particular evidence that will be attempted to be given, to prove notice.'

If a notice has been actually received, he must know when it was served, if the service was personal. If it was served by mailing it, the post-mark will show the time of service. In the latter case, he can prepare for the trial of the question of due notice.

If he has not, in fact, received any notice, he will labor under a disadvantage, in preparing for the trial. The statute malees it incumbent upon him, in order to deprive a plaintiff of the right to use a notary’s certificate, to annex to his plea, or answer, an affidavit, denying the fact of having received notice. To hold, that he may work the same result by other means, is to modify the statute, and make pleadings perform an office not known prior to the Code, and, impliedly, if not, expressly, prohibited by the Code itself.

The objection, that the instrument, sued upon, is not a negotiable promissory note, is deserving of more consideration.

We do not think there is any thing in the objection, that it is, in effect, a contract to pay the difference, between the amount of the proceeds of the bonds, after a sale thereof, and the amount of the note. The holder is not, by its terms or legal effect, precluded from suing upon it, until after the bonds shall have been sold. When the day of payment had passed, his right of action was [212]*212perfect, and a recovery might be had against all the parties, for the whole amount, if there was no objection to a recovery, except the one, that the bonds had not been sold.

The only important question, is this: Is an entire contract, part of which is, in form, a good promissory note, but which also contains a special contract, in relation to the money promised to be paid, a good promissory note, negotiable by statute, as to so much of the contract as is, in form, a promissory note ?

By this instrument, ten bonds are pledged, as security for the payment of the $5,000. By it, Elisha Peck is made a trustee, to hold and sell the bonds, and apply the proceeds. The mode of sale is agreed upon; and, on pursuing the mode specified, the maker agrees, to pay the balance that may remain, after applying the proceeds in satisfaction of all expenses of the sale, and in reduction of the principal and interest due thereon. See Allen v. Dykers & Alstyne, (3d Hill, 593.)

The terms of this contract do not modify that part which contains a promise to pay, absolutely, to the order of the persons named in it, a sum certain, and on the day specified.

The only objection is, that it contains a contract, collateral to the promise to pay the $5,000, by which the maker of the paper may be subjected to a liability, which the law would not impose, upon the mere fact, of a deposit of the bonds as collateral security, without any special agreement as to the manner of selling them.

It will hardly be pretended, that, in the absence of any special agreement, the pledgee of stocks, deposited as security for the payment of a note of the pledgor, discounted by him, could sell, in the manner, and upon the notice, specified in this contract, and apply the proceeds, first, to pay all expenses of such a sale, and the residue on account of the principal and interest, and then, as a matter of course, recover the balance due on the note. The pledgor of the stocks would not be concluded by a sale, made in such a manner, and on such a notice, in the absence of any special contract in relation to it.

It cannot properly be said, therefore, in this case, as was said in Wise v. Charlton, (4 Ad. & E. 786,) that the instrument recites, or contains nothing, except what the law would imply. In that case, the note merely recited the fact that title deeds had been deposited as security.

[213]*213The essentials of a negotiable promissory note, as stated in elementary books and in adjudged cases, are, that it must be payable at all events, not dependent on any contingency, nor payable out of a particular fund; and that it must be for the payment of money only, and not for the performance of any other thing, or in the alternative. (Cook v. Satterlee, 6 Cowen, 108.)

In Bolton v. Dugdale, (4 Barn. & Ad. 617,) the instrument was, in form, a promissory note, as to a promise to pay £30 and interest. By it, the maker also promised to pay a sum, which was uncertain, to a third person, in part of interest, and “ the remaining stock and interest,” or the balance, on demand. This was held not to be a promissory note. The sum payable to the third person being uncertain, left; the sum, payable to the payee, uncertain. That case, therefore, does not touch the proposition, that a note ceases to be negotiable, because it contains a collateral contract, in no way modifying the terms, or legal effect, of that part, which, by itself, is a promissory note.

In Davies v. Wilkinson, (10 Ad. & E.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Duer 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-rock-river-valley-union-railroad-nysuperctnyc-1856.