Blount v. . Windley

68 N.C. 1
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 68 N.C. 1 (Blount v. . Windley) 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
Blount v. . Windley, 68 N.C. 1 (N.C. 1873).

Opinion

Pearson, C. J.

Panic of Charlotte v. Hart, et al. 67 N. C. Rep. 264, the right of the defendant to have “ the bills of the bank” applied in payment of a judgment in favor of the bank, is conceded; and the only question was, as to the allowance of interest upon the bills from the time at which *3 the defendant had demanded to have the bills received in satisfaction of the judgment; it is decided that interest should be allowed. Exchange Bank of Columbia and C. H. Baldwin v. Tiddy, 67 N. C. Rep. 169, the principal question was, as to the right of the defendant to have “ the bills of the bank” applied in satisfaction of the judgment. It is decided, “ on payment of the bills into Court, satisfaction of the judgment be entered of record.” No notice is taken of the effect of making Baldwin a party plaintiff as receiver, and the case is made to turn on the point, that as against a bank, chartered in another State, suing citizens of this State in the courts of this State, the defendant is entitled to have the bills of such bank applied in satisfaction of the judgment. So between the bank and its debtors, the question may be considered to be settled. In our case, the action is in the name of Blount, who is the assignee of the bank, and the point made is, that the defendant has not the right to have the bills of the bank applied in payment as against the assignee. In Mann v. Blount, 65 N. C. Rep. 99, an opinion is intimated by the Court that the defendant is entitled to the same right as against the assignee, that he would have had against the bank, had the note not been assigned. But it was not necessary to decide the point, as the matter went off upon an objection to the mode of procedure, and although the subject was then discussed, we were willing to hear further argument, treating it as an open question.

The assignment of the note by the bank to Blount is not made by endorsement, as provided by the Statute of Ann, “ in like manner as inland bills of exchange, according to the custom of merchants of England”: Revised Code, chap. 13, sec. 1; but, as we will assume for the sake of the argument, by a general deed of assignment, conveying all of the effects, choses in action, &c., of the bank to Blount, in trust for the creditors of the bank, pro rata, who elect to take under the deed. So, the learning in respect to the legal ef *4 feet of the endorsement of a hill of exchange, or promissory note, according to the custom of merchants in England, before maturity, or after maturity, has no application to our case; and we will not enter into a consideration of the point, whether the endorsee of a note, before maturity, made to a bank, has a right to compel payment in gold or silver coin, and is relieved fr.om the right of the maker to pay the note in the bills of the bank, which right he certainly had, as against the bank ; or whether the endorsee, after maturity, of a note made to a bank, has a right to compel payment in gold and silver coin, or is subject to the right of the maker to use the bills of the bank in discharge of the note, as a right which had attached at the date of the endorsement; for, in either case, if the maker has not the same right as against the endorsee, that he would have had against the bank, it results from the effect given to the endorsement, “ by the custom of merchants in England,” with which we are not now concerned.

Nor, will we enter into a consideration of the point, in respect to the law of set off; whether the defendant must hold the “ mutual demand,” at the time of the assignment, or at the commencement of the action, or at the time of plea pleaded, or at the trial; for, ours is not a question of set off, but a question as to the right of a bill holder to use the bills of the bank, as a legal tender, equivalent to gold and silver coin, in satisfaction of a debt due to the bank

The neglect of advertance to those diversities is the cause, as it seems to us, of the obscurity and confusion in which the question is involved in many of the cases. See Exchange Bank of Virginia, for Camp, Trustee, v. Knox, 19 Grattan, 739; 3 Wendall’s Rep. 13; 8 Watts & Serg. 311; 1 Ohio Rep. 381. It certainly is the main fallacy of the very labored argument of the plaintiff’s counsel in this case.

Nor will we enter into a consideration of the point, how the question would have been had the payee of the note *5 been an individual or a corporation other than a bank, chartered for the pv/rpose of supplying a currency in the shape of bills of the bank, to ciradate as the representative of money. For here, the payee is such a bank. •

The question will be considered in four points of view:

1st. Did the maker of the note have a right to tender the bills of the bank in payment, as equivalent to gold and silver coin, or had the bank a right to compel payment in gold or silver coin, and to refuse to accept its own bills in payment of debts due to it ?

This is too plain for discussion. The object of incorporating the bank was to furnish a currency, and as a condition for the grant of this franchise, or exclusive privilege, the law il tacitly ” annexed the condition, (using the words of Lord Coke,) that the bank would receive its own bills in payment of debts due to it.

So, when the note was made, there was this condition implied by law, as a part of the contract, just as forcible as if set out in the face of the note, the bills of the bank will be accepted in satisfaction of this note, as equivalent to gold and silver coin”; and carrying out the idea, as if every ten dollar bill, had been stamped, “ equal to $10, in gold, in payment of debts due to the bank.” Assuming this to be so, it is said, tender of money must be pleaded, and the money be brought into Court, which, of course, must be done before judgment” ,

Here we have another instance of the confusion of ideas by the introduction of irrelevant learning. The defendant does not propose to avail himself of a right common to every defendant, when there is a controversy as to the amount due, to tender money and bring it into Court. He takes the broad ground of a right as a part of the contract, to pay this debt in the bills of the bank, and that the bank has its mouth shut by estoppel, and by the maxim, “ no one shall take advantage of his own wrong.” So it can make no dif *6 ference whether the bills of the bank, which are, as against the bank, to be treated as equivalent to gold and silver coin, are tendered before or after judgment. Surely a debtor can discharge his debt, by a tender of gold and silver coin, at any time before the sheriff sells under execution. As against the bank, the bills of the bank are to be treated as equivalent to gold and silver coin. At the common law, when execution had not issued within a year and a day, the plaintiff was required to issue a sci. fa., to give the defendant a day in court, to show cause; if an execution issued within the year and a day, the defendant, in order to get a day in court, sued out a writ of

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Related

King v. . Davis
130 S.E. 707 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.C. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blount-v-windley-nc-1873.