Bank of North Carolina v. President of the Bank of Cape Fear

35 N.C. 75
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 N.C. 75 (Bank of North Carolina v. President of the Bank of Cape Fear) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of North Carolina v. President of the Bank of Cape Fear, 35 N.C. 75 (N.C. 1851).

Opinion

Ruffin, C. J.

The defence would not be available at common law under either issue. By presenting the note for payment an action arose to the plaintiff as the holder ;j' and it is fully settled, that a promissory note, made payablej' in the body of it on demand at a certain place, becomes'! due only upon a presentment at that place. Hence, the!* offer of the two notes for $50 in payment did not amount*! to payment, nor do they bar by way of set off. There was ¿t one period a conflict of judicial opinions in England, in respect to an acceptance of a bill of exchange, whether, if given payable at a particular place” it was to be considered a general acceptance or a special one, requiring pie- *77 sentment at the place named; and the point was not settled, until the opinions of the Lord Chancellor and all the Judges were taken on it in the case of Rowe v Young, 2 Bligh 391, and 2 Brod. & Bing. 180. It was there held, that a declaration on such an acceptance was bad, because it did not aver presentment at the designated place. No one of the Judges expressed a doubt, that, notwithstanding some previous nisi prius cases, the law was, that, if one promise by his note to pay at a particular day and place, there must be a demand there. Lord Eldon explicitly laid that down as the established law, and he stated the reason to be, that the place stands in the body of the instrument as a part of it, which must be declared on as it is, and proved as described in the declaration. Indeed, it is apparent, that it is an important part of the contract. For, when one engages to pay money generally, without mentioning a place for the payment, the law is, that the debtor must seek the creditor, whether the payee or his assignee, and at his peril find him, in order to save himself from the payment of interest and an action. By specifying the place, both parties are saved the trouble, but especially the maker, as he knows where to take the money to meet his note at maturity. The law cannot be said to be settled in the United' States exactly in the same way; as in some, and perhaps most of the Courts, a distinction has been taken, that ihe declaration need not aver the presentment at the place, but the want of it may be alledged as matter of defence, if a loss arose therefrom, and the debtor will be discharged pro raía; as if the note be payable at a bank, and the debtor deposit the money there, and the bank afterwards fail. Without going through the cases in this country in detail it suffices to refer to that of Wallace v McDonnell, 13 Peters, 36, in which most of them were cited, and considered by the Supreme Court as establishing that rule, and it was then *78 adopted. It has indeed been questioned both by Chancellor Kent and Mr. Justice Story, who hold- the rule 1'aid down in England to be the true one, according to the plain sense of the contract. But it is not material, which posK tion is right in respect- to- notes payable- at a- certain day as-well as place ; since no one-, either in Englander here, has’; supposed, that presentment of a promissory note was not j indispensable when, in the body, it is payable on demand j at a particular place; which is our case.. Even the Court of Kings Bench, whose judgment in Rowe v Young, as to. the special acceptance of a bill, was reversed in the House of Lords, held this on demurrer to a declaration by the bearer of a note payable on demand, against the maker, in which presentment at the designated place was not averred.. Saunderson v Bowes, 14 East 500. The judgment was founded on this: that the maker did not appear to have been in default before suit brought ;■ and that- has not subsequently been questioned any where. The cases in this country, in which it was held, that the declaration need not aver the presentment of a note payable at a certei-a day and place, distinctly admit it is otherwise as to a note payable on demand at a certain place. It is expressly laid down in Wallace v McConnell, that upon a note of the latter kind the declaration must aver a demand at the place-; and Mr. Justice Thompson in delivering the opinion of the Court, gives the reason that, until a demand, the debtor is not in default, and so there is no cause of action. There is, therefore, now no doubt, as to the common law, in respect to notes of this kind made by a natural person-;: that the maker is not bound to pay them, until presented at the place, where they are expressed to be payable. And there is no ground for a distinction upon this point between notes made by a natural person and those made by a corporation. . The reason is not less applicable to bills of an incorporated *79 bank, payable on demand at different branches ; which, for! purposes of local accommodation, the law generally requiresl to be established upon shares of the capital adequate to meet the notes issued at the respective branches, in respect to which punctuality is of the utmost consequence to the public, and is usually enforced under heavy penalties. Every one knows that no individual or bank can at all times and everywhere discharge all outstanding liabilities, due and not due ; which would make credit useless. Then, each point of a banking institution, having branches, has its own liabilities and must have its own resources; and it can only fulfil its engagements to the public, when left to manage its own funds without impediment from the law. If the funds appropriated to the business at one place, instead of being left for that purpose, may be daily diverted therefrom at the pleasure of the holders of the notes of every other part of the institution, it would be manifestly impossible for the bank and its branches to meet their notes for any length of time. It is therefore apparent, that the provision in the notes, that they are. payable on demand at the several branches, is of their essence ; and consequently there is at common law no liability on such a note but for not paying it, when demanded according to its tenor.

The defence, however, is not founded on the Commoa Law, but upon an Act passed at the last session of the Assembly, entitled “ An Act in relation to exchanges of notes between the several banks of this State.” Yet, the discussion of the rule at Common Law was not the less needful, in order to a proper understanding of the nature of the contract constituted by notes in this form, and of' the operation of the Statute, if it be effectual.- — Its principal provision is, that when a bank or its branch presents for payment a note of another bank, the latter may pay its note with a note or notes of the former, without regard to the *80 place where the same may be'payable, It is clear that the case before the Court, is within the Act, and that the question is, as to its validity. — With all respeot to the Legislature, and. every disposition to carry out its will, ii recon,-eileable with the fundamental law, the Court is, nevertheless, constrained to declare this enactment to he plainly contrary to the Constitution of the United States, and, therefore, inoperative.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.C. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-north-carolina-v-president-of-the-bank-of-cape-fear-nc-1851.