Bingham v. Reddy

3 F. Cas. 402, 5 Ben. 266
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1871
StatusPublished

This text of 3 F. Cas. 402 (Bingham v. Reddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingham v. Reddy, 3 F. Cas. 402, 5 Ben. 266 (N.D.N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

HADE, District Judge.

This cause is.now before me upon the motion of the defendant for a new trial of the issues tried and determined at the last May term of this court; and also upon the application of the plaintiff for a final decree in his favor, upon the pleadings, proofs and verdict

The bill was filed to set aside a mortgage executed by the bankrupt, and which was conditioned for the payment of the sum of $2,300 in one year from the date. This mortgage was dated Sept. 2, 1869, and was, on that day, executed and acknowledged by the bankrupt, and duly recorded in the county clerk’s office.

On the 21st day of the same month a petition in bankruptcy was filed against the mortgagor, and he was afterwards adjudicated a bankrupt upon such petition; the execution of such mortgage being one of the acts of bankruptcy upon which such adjudication was made.

The bill alleges that at the time the mortgage was executed David S. Wing was insolvent, and that he executed such mortgage with intent to give a preference to the defendant over his other creditors, and to defeat and delay the operation of the bankrupt act, [14 Stat. 534, § 35.] It also alleges that the defendant accepted such mortgage with a view of obtaining a preference over the other creditors of Wing; and that, at the time he received such conveyance, he had reasonable cause to believe that a fraud on the bankrupt act was intended, and that said Wing was insolvent.

The defendant’s answer denied such allegations; and, under a stipulation of the parties, certain issues, based upon such allegations and denials, were ordered to be tried before a jury. They were so tried, and the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff upon all the issues submitted.

In order to prove the insolvency charged, the plaintiff, amongst other proof of indebtedness, proved a note of $10,000, dated May 20, 1868, signed by E. Wing & Co., and by David S. Wing, the bankrupt, and also by J. B. Thompson and H. Crandall, Junior. David S. Wing testified that he signed this note, with several others, at the request of his brother, the senior partner of the firm of E. Wing & Co., in Connecticut; that the note, which was in part printed or lithographed, was entirely filled up, with the exception of the amount and date, before he signed it.

By the testimony of J. B. Thompson, it appeared that he and Crandall put their names on the back of the note, after it had been signed by E. Wing & Co., and at the request, and for the accommodation of that [403]*403firm; and it is upon the testimony of Thompson (and not upon that testimony and the testimony of David S. Wing), and also upon the evidence furnished by the note itself, as stated by the parties in a bill of exceptions agreed to by their counsel (without the intervention of the judge, or any settlement of or signature to the bill), that the defendant moves for a new trial.

The printed or lithographed part of the note, before the addition of any writing, was in the following letters, characters, and figures:

“$ 186
After date promise to pay to the order of
dollars at value received.”

As presented at the trial, the note read as follows:

“$10,000. West Goshen, Ct., 20 May, 1868.
“On demand, we promise to pay to the ■order of E. Wing, Ten thousand dollars, at E. Wing & Co.’s office, value received.
“E. Wing & Co.
“D. S. Wing.
“J. B. Thompson.
“H. Crandall, Jr.”

On the back of the note the names of E. Wing, J. B. Thompson, and H. Crandall, Jr., were indorsed.

On being shown this note, Thompson testified that he saw E. Wing & Co. sign the note; that it was signed in the firm name by Henry E. Wing, a member of the firm, at the time he (the witness) indorsed the note; that E. Wing and Mr. Crandall indorsed it at the same time; that he saw the note filled up at the time he indorsed it; that a week or two after, Henry E. Wing brought him the note, and said the bank wanted their names on the front, to make it good, as it was not negotiable on demand without; and that he then put his name on the front of the note. On his cross-examination, he stated that the note was all blank when he first ■saw it, except the name of David S. Wing; that it was all filled up at the time he indorsed it, and at Wing’s office.

After stating this testimony, the bill of exceptions sets forth that “the defendant’s counsel, at the close of the evidence, requested the court to charge that this note, in September, 1869, was not a valid obligation against David S. Wing; and that the court declined so to charge; and the defendant excepted.”

As no question, except that presented by this bill of exceptions, was raised by the defendant’s counsel, in opposition to the plaintiff’s application for a final decree, the discussion will be mainly upon the bill of exceptions; but as the bill of exceptions does not state all the facts necessary to the proper presentation of the legal question intended to be presented, and as the granting of a new trial is a matter of discretion, the whole evidence, and the general facts of the case, may properly be considered.

The objections raised, and upon which the invalidity of the note referred to is insisted on, are: 1. That by the subsequent addition of the signatures of Thompson and Crandall, as joint makers, — some one or' two weeks after the note had been signed by E. Wing & Co., and indorsed as stated, — -the note was materially altered in such manner as to affect and alter the responsibility of David S. Wing; and that he was, therefore, discharged from his liability.

2. That the note — having been signed by D. S. Wing, in blank, at the request and solely for the accommodation of E. Wing & Co. —was not binding against D. S. Wing, because the • words “after date” were after-wards erased; the implied authority given by D. S. Wing extending only to the filling of the blanks, and not to the erasure of any words contained in the blank signed.

Both of these objections assume what is not stated in the bill of exceptions, but which was proved on the trial, that the note in question was, as against David S. Wing, accommodation paper. The last objection also assumes that the words “after date” were stricken out after the blank was signed by D. S. Wing; and though it is insisted, and, I think, with reason, that there is no direct proof of this fact, these objections will be considered as though the facts thus assumed were sufficiently proved.

The first objection above stated was urged at the trial: and it was earnestly insisted that it was fully sustained by the case of Gardner v. Walsh, 5 El. & Bl. 83. In that case the plaintiff declared upon a note, by which the defendant, and Elizabeth Barton, and Alice Clarke, jointly and severally promised to pay to the plaintiffs, or their order, £600.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. Cas. 402, 5 Ben. 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingham-v-reddy-nynd-1871.