Bank of the United States v. Tyler

29 U.S. 366, 7 L. Ed. 888, 4 Pet. 366, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 483
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 29 U.S. 366 (Bank of the United States v. Tyler) 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
Bank of the United States v. Tyler, 29 U.S. 366, 7 L. Ed. 888, 4 Pet. 366, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 483 (1830).

Opinion

Mr Justice Baldwin

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the plaintiffs sue, not as the indorsers of two notes, negotiable under the statute of Anne, which has never been adopted in Kentucky, but as assignees for a valuable consideration of promissory .notes, which are assignable by the laws of that state, and on which the assignee may sue in his own name. 1 Kentucky Digest, 99.

The first note was drawn by Anderson Miller, dated at Louisville, May 2, 1821, for three thousand' nine hundred dollars, in .favour of John T. Gray, negotiable and payable sixty days' after date, at the office of discount and deposit of the Bank of the United States, Louisville, Kentucky, for value received. The note was assigned in. the following manner. For value received, I assign, the within note to Levi Tyler or order, John T. Gray, by Levi Tyler, liis attorney.” “ For value received, I assign the within to the president, directors and company of the Bank of the United States, Levi Tyler.”

As this note was drawn, assigned, and payable in Kentucky, the obligations and rights of the parties must depend on the laws of that state.

The statute authorising the assignment of notes is silent as to the duties of the assignee, or the nature of. the contract created by the assignment. It only declares such assignmént valid, and the assignee capable of suing in his own name ;,but the courts of that state have clearly defined the rights, duties, and obligation resulting from the assignment.

The assignee cannot maintain an action on the mere nonpayment of the note and notice thereof, or of a protest to the assignor, until the holder of the note has made use of all dué and legal diligence to recover the money from the drawer. But if this fails, then the assignor may be resorted toon his assignment; which is held to be an engagement to, pay .the amount of the note,- if, after due and diligent pursuit, the maker is insolvent. This contract results from the act of assignment, without any express agreement to be an *381 swerablé; the law. is the same, whether this contract is expressed in terms, or is implied from the, assignment; the rights and duties of the parties are the same in both cases. 4 Bibb, 286. 1 Marsh. 229. This case may then be considered as an assignment of a promissory note, with, an ex-, press promise by the assignor to pay if by legal process and due diligence the assignee is unable to recover the amount due from the drawer, Viewed in this light the case is more readily comprehended*.

The means which the assignee is bound to use, the time within which he must commence, and the diligence with .which he must pursue his legal remedies against the maker, and the extent to which he must carry them,-have been the subject of much litigation and discussion in the courts of Kentucky: they have however adopted the following as principles, which must be taken to be the law of the. state:

That the assignee is no.t bound to run a race against titne, or to -use. extraordinary means; that he is not required to prosecute a drawer or obligor farther than aman of ordinary prudence and diligence would do in a case where he was s.olely and exclusively interested. But in order to' bring himself within these rules, he must commence a suit against' the drawer at the first term after the note becomes due, if a judgment could be obtained then. He must sue within such time, before the.term, as will authorise him to procure judgment. After suit is brought, he must prosecute it to judgment without delay, or giving time to the maker of the note. Though he is notoriously insol vent,-and dies on the third day of the first term after the note becomes due, and no administration is taken out on his estate, the assignor is discharged, if no suit has been brought. ' After judgment, there must be the same diligence in pursuing the debtor’s property by execution as in the commencement of the -suit. There must be no delay in putting the execution into the hands of the sheriff, or in making sale of the property levied on; he must continue the process of execution until’ the property of the .'drawer is exhausted, and the sheriff returns nulla bona to the last execution; and after his insolvency is thus ascertained, a capias ad satisfaciendum must be ‘taken for his. body; *382 and if he is committed, the assignee must show what has become of the debtor, and how he has been discharged.

If the debtor assigns property, it must be sold. If property is taken in execution, and replevin bond given, the bond must be put in suit; if there is bail to the action, and the principal cannot be taken on a capias ad satisfaciendum, the bail must be pursued; and all incidental and collateral remedies, which may accrue to the assignee, must be adopted and prosecuted; and the discharge of the drawer by the insolvent act, at the suit of a third person, will be no excuse for any relaxation in the diligence required to fix the assignor; who is suable only after the exhaustion of all legal means of obtaining payment.

The cases on this subject have been collected in a note in 2 Peters, 338, 339, 340; and were all cited and ably commented on by the counsel on both sides.

It is believed that the principles which exact- such an unusual degree of vigilance from the assignee, are peculiar to the jurisprudence of Kentucky; but they have been established by a long series of cases adjudged in their highest courts for many years •; they have long formed'the law of that state as to notes and bonds assigned under.their statute; and the legislature has not thought prqper to change it. The courts in Virginia have given a very different .construction to their statute on the same subject; and there are no decisions in any state which have extended the rule of diligence so far. But this court has always felt itself bound to respect local laws', however peculiar, in alteases where they do not come in collision with laws .of higher authority and more imposing obligation. Such a case is not presented in the record now under our consideration.

These are the duties imposed by the law of Kentucky on the assignees of promissory notes, before they can commence a suit against the assignor on his promise.' These rules are the law of this case;' and although in our opinion they carry the doctrine .of diligence to an extent unknown to the principles of the common law, or the law of other states, where bonds, notes, and bills are assignable, we must adopt them as the guide to our judgment. They must be considered with *383 a reference to the laws of Kentucky respecting judgments and executions, in order to form a correct opinion of their true character. A judgment does not bind land in that state; the lien attaches only from the delivery of an execution to the sheriff; it then binds real and personal property, held by a legal title. An execution returned, is no lien on any property not levied on; and no new one can be acquired'until a new execution is put into the- hands of the sheriff; and none can issue while a former levy is in force. 6 Kentucky Digest, 485, sec. 8. Any delay then by the assignee enables the debtor to acquire, hold or alienate his property in the interval between judgment and the'execution reaching the sheriff; as well as between the return of one and the lien acquired by a new execution.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Koyode Akinniyi v. Attorney General United States
629 F. App'x 425 (Third Circuit, 2015)
David Joseph Rawls v. United States
331 F.2d 21 (Eighth Circuit, 1964)
Burns Mortgage Co. v. Fried
292 U.S. 487 (Supreme Court, 1934)
Carolina National Bank v. Wallace
13 S.C. 347 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1880)
Sayre v. McEwen
41 Ind. 109 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1872)
Watson v. Hahn
1 Colo. 385 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1871)
Godwin v. Collins
3 Del. Ch. 189 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1868)
Mansony v. United States Bank
4 Ala. 735 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1843)
Bishop v. Yeazle
6 Blackf. 127 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1842)
Johnson v. Lewis
31 Ky. 182 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1833)
Offutt v. Bowen
1 Miss. 545 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1832)
Porter v. Ingraham
10 Mass. 85 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)
Sandford v. Dillaway
10 Mass. 52 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1813)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 U.S. 366, 7 L. Ed. 888, 4 Pet. 366, 1830 U.S. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-the-united-states-v-tyler-scotus-1830.