Arnold v. Sprague

34 Vt. 402
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMarch 15, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 34 Vt. 402 (Arnold v. Sprague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Sprague, 34 Vt. 402 (Vt. 1861).

Opinion

Aldis, J.

It is not essential to the validity of a bill of exchange or. promissory note, that it should be negotiable.

The advantages arising from the negotiability of such instruments was originally the reason why they were held to be exceptions to the general rule of the commojn law that choses in action were-not assignable. Hence it was once considered that negotiability was essential to such instruments. But for a long time, both in this country and in England, it has been held, and is now settled law, that they need not be'negotiable.

[405]*405Chitty on bills 159, and cases cited. Kendall v. Galvin, 15 Maine 131.

The order now in question has all the elements essential to a bill of exchange — it is an open letter of request from one to another to pay a third person a certain sum of money..

In Fisher v. Beckwith, 16 Vt. 31, an instrument like the one in this case, (except that there it was negotiable,) was held to be a bill of exchange ; and that difference does not affect the validity of the order as a bill of exchange.

So it is weil settled that an acceptance of a bill of exchange may be by parol. This is so by the common law, and was recognized in Fisher v. Beckwith, as the rule in this state. That it is an inconvenient rule, and tends to make one’s liability upon written instruments to depend upon parol evidence, and so to open a door for perjury and fraud, has often been remarked, and has led in some states to the enactment of statutes requiring all acceptances of bills of exchange to be in writing. But it is the law.

In the case at bar the bill or order was drawn on the defendant personally, and his acceptance is stated in the bill of exceptions to have been absolute and unqualified.

I. It is claimed that he is not liable upon such acceptance, because it was without consideration.

The general doctrine that bills of exchange are presumed to be upon a sufficient consideration is not questioned. But it is urged in this case, that the acceptor was not in fact indebted to the drawer, and had no funds in his hands, and that this is such a want of consideration as may be shown in bar of this action, by the payee against the acceptor.

The drawer (Burt) was indebted to the plaintiff,, who is the payee named in the bill, to the amount for which the, bill was drawn, and this was known to the defendant, the drawee. When the bill was presented for acceptance the defendant was in doubt whether he was in debt to Burt or not. So he told the plaintiff to let the matter rest till he settled with Burt, and then if he owed Burt as much as the bill was drawn for he would accept it. He afterwards settled with Burt, found, as they then supposed, that he was indebted to him to the amount of the bill,- [406]*406and accordingly immediately thereafter, by parol, accepted the bill absolutely and unconditionally. He afterwards discovered an error in the settlement of the account with Burt, which, when corrected, showed that he was not in debt to Burt at all, but that Burt was in debt to him.

The defendant claims that these facts show such a want of consideration between him and the plaintiff, as to release him from liability on his acceptance.

Clearly as between the defendant and Burt, these facts show a total want of consideration, so that if Burt had sued the defendant on his default of payment, after acceptance to pay, the defendant might have shown them in bar of the action. It would be just the same as if the defendant had given Burt a promissory note for a supposed balance when nothing was due.

But as between the plaintiff and the defendant, the ca3e is different. The consideration as between them is not the debt, which may or may not be due from the defendant to Burt; but the debt acknowledged to be due from Burt to the plaintiff. The debt of a third person has always been held to be a sufficient consideration. The defendant by accepting the bill agreed absolutely with the plaintiff to pay him the amount of it — knowing that amount was a debt due from Burt to the plaintiff. It was an agreement to pay Burt’s debt to the plaintiff. The defendant does not offer to show that there was no debt due from Burt, and that the plaintiff has taken it without value. It is therefore an absolute promise by the defendant to pay the plaintiff the amount of the hill in consideration of Burt’s request to pay the plaintiff a debt* due from Burt to the plaintiff of the same amount.

It was for the defendant to ascertain before accepting the bill, whether he owed Burt or not. That was a risk which he took upon himself. The plaintiff had no means of knowing how that fact was. He had a right to assume that the defendant would not accept the order unless he had funds of the drawer, or other securities in his hands to make him good for the acceptance, or unless he chose to do it, upon the request and credit of the drawer, and run his risk of ultimate payment. The defendant knew that the plaintiff would rest upon such assumption, and rely upon his acceptance of the order, and would cease to look to Burt far [407]*407payment — would omit to take proceedings to collect his debt of Burt, and rely in the first instance at least, upon getting his money through payment of the acceptance. The drawing and acceptance of the order created new legal relations between the parties. * The plaintiff would no longer look to Burt for the payment of his debt in the first instance, and Burt would understand that if the plaintiff failed to collect the order of the defendant, through his own negligence, and failed to take proper steps to make him liable as drawer, that he would be discharged. Let us suppose that the defendant instead of accepting the bill had joined with Burt in a note to the plaintiff for the amount. Could he have plead in bar of a suit on the note, that at the time he signed he supposed he owed Burt as much as the note, but that he made a mistake in settling, and that in fact he owed him nothing ? It is not necessary to decide that the taking of the order, aud procuring it to be accepted, would operate as payment of Burt’s debt to the plaintiff, either prima facie, or absolutely ; so that the remedy of the plaintiff against Burt would be only upon the paper in default of payment by the acceptor. It would seem as if the taking of a bill of exchange upon a previous debt, would, after acceptance, be at least prima facie payment, like the taking of a promissory note ; — especially as the payee has an additional security in the name of the acceptor. However that may be — we are clear that after acceptance, the defendant has no right to set up as against the plaintiff, and in discharge of his liability, that as between him and the drawer there was no consideration. That is not enough. Grant et al. v. Ellicott, 7 Wend. 227; Chitty on bills 305; 16 Wend. 557; Cole v. Cushing 8 Pick 48; United States v. Bank of the Metropolis, 15 Pet. 377; 15 Maine 131.

Where one accepts a bill in order to enable the drawer to obtain credit or money, though there is no consideration between the drawer and acceptor, and though the subsequent holde'r for value knows it to be accommodation paper at the time he takes it, he can enforce it against the acceptor. It is the object of the parties to obtain a credit or money, and the parties cannot recede from their bargain. Here the transaction was not for accommodation, nor was it so understood by the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Vt. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-sprague-vt-1861.