Brush v. Scribner

11 Conn. 388
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 11 Conn. 388 (Brush v. Scribner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brush v. Scribner, 11 Conn. 388 (Colo. 1836).

Opinion

Williams, Ch. J.

The defendant claims, that as to the 112 dollars, 85 cents, the antecedent debt, there was not such a consideration as would entitle the plaintiffs to a recovery; or at least, that such is the law of the state of New-York, which ought to govern the contract under which the plaintiffs claimed. That a want of consideration, as between the parties to negotiable paper, may be shewn, is well settled ; and the same rule exists, where such paper comes into the hands of a third person, who was apprised of that fact. So when negotiable paper is made for a particular object, as when it is endorsed for a specific purpose, the endorser lending his name to accommodate the maker, as to renew another note, and the maker applies it to a different purpose, to the prejudice of the endorser, and this is known to the person receiving it, he shall stand upon no better ground than the fraudulent assignor. But if the assignment of such note or bill is a fraud upon the endorser, yet a bona fide holder for a valuable consideration, without notice, to whom such note or bill has been transferred, will be protected in receiving such paper, in the usual course of business.

It was long since decided, that when a bank note payable to A or bearer, was lost, and found by a stranger, and by him transferred to C, for a valuable consideration, A might have trover against the stranger, for he had no title to it; but not against C, by reason of the course of trade, which creates a property m the assignee or bearer. 1 Salk. 126. So where an inn-keeper received a bank note from his guest, in the course of his business, and paid the balance, he was permitted to retain it, although the note had been stolen from the mail; because he [391]*391had received it fairly and honestly, in the usual course of business. It shall never be followed, says Lord Mansfield, into the hands of the person who took it bona fide, in the course of currency, and in the way of his business. Miller v. Race, 1 Burr. 462. And where a bill or draft was drawn payable to the ship Fortune, or bearer, and it was lost, and paid by the finder for tea to the plaintiff, he paying the difference between the price of the tea and the draft in cash, fairly and bona fide, it was held, that there was no distinction between that and a bank note. And Wilmot, J. said, “having been taken fairly and bona fide, in the course of trade, and being negotiable, the plaintiff was entitled to recover." Grant v. Vaughan, 3 Burr. 1516. And where a bill, drawn by the defendant, payable to W or order, and endorsed in blank, by the payee, was stolen and passed for goods, Lord Mansfield, in giving judgment, says, the law is settled, that a holder coming fairly by a bill or note, has nothing to do with the transactions between the original parties, (unless in the single case of a note for money won at play.) I see no difference, says he, between a note endorsed in blank and one payable to bearer : they both go by delivery, and possession proves property in both cases. It was received in the course of trade; therefore, the case is clear. Peacock v. Rhodes, Doug. 633.

Thus stands the law, as settled by Lord Mansfield. Bank notes, bills of exchange, promissory notes payable to bearer, or to order when endorsed in blank, are all placed upon the same footing, and for the same reason ; because these principles alone would secure, their free circulation. The bona fide holder of such instruments, having received them for a valuable consideration, in the usual course of business, must be protected against the claims of the original owner, by whose misfortune or negligence, one of two innocent parties must suffer. As between the former owner, who has been robbed, and a subsequent bona fide holder for value, it is certainly a case of great hardship: it has, however, been settled, by eminent judges, upon principles similar to those which validate sales of stolen goods in market overt, or the circulation of coin, and has been acquiesced in. The liability of parties to a bill of exchange or promissory note has been fixed, says McLean, J., on certain principles, which are essential to the credit and circulation of such paper. These principles originated in the convenience of com[392]*392mercial transactions and cannot be departed from. Bank of U. S. v. Dunn, 6 Pet. 59.

But as it respects cases of this kind, where one person, has confided his name on a note or bill to a servant or a friend, and thus enabled him to appear to the world as owner, and as having a lawful right to dispose of it, if that confidence is misplaced, the principles of equity, as well as of commercial law, require, that he who has thus put it into the power of another to defraud should himself sustain the loss, rather than the person who has given credit to these appearances. It is not perceived how the case differs, in principle, from that of a man who gives his name in blank to another to fill up a note over it for a certain sum, and his agent exceeds that sum ; or where he authorises a clerk to use his name in all his business, and the clerk uses it for his own purposes. In the opinion of eminent judges, those who issue accommodation paper are not entitled to special favour, as it respects third persons. In Kerrison v. Cooke, 3 Campb. 362, Gibbs, J. says, he is sorry the term accommodation bill ever found its way into the law, or that patties were allowed to get rid of the obligations they profess to contract, by putting their names to negotiable securities : and in Fentum v. Pocock, 5 Taunt. 192. 197. Heath, J. says, courts have gone much too far in lending support to these mischievous instruments, the evils resulting from which, we see every day. And the principle applies as well to the endorser as the maker: each gives the credit of his name to the instrument: and the one contributes, as far as his name is concerned, as much as the other, to deceive the public as to the rights of the holder ; and the endorser constitutes the holder his attorney to the extent of such note or bill.

In the case before the court, it is not denied, that the plaintiffs received this note in the course of business, fairly and bona fide, and without any grounds for suspicion; nor is it denied, that a valuable consideration was paid, so far as cash or goods were paid at the time. But as to that part of it which went to satisfy an antecedent debt; it is said, that it was not a valuable consideration. That the satisfaction and extinction of a preexisting debt, is, in the common acceptation of the term, a valuable consideration, cannot be doubted. It is said, however, not to be the valuable consideration spoken of in the cases cited ; as in all those cases there was a present consideration. [393]*393It is true, that in those cases, the paper was not taken for prior debts ; but no reliance is placed upon that circumstance ; and the rule is laid clown in broad and general terms, as if intending to embrace all cases of negotiable paper, received fairly in the course of business, and for a valuable consideration given. When this term was used, the court certainly knew its legal effect, as well as its ordinary acceptation ; and had they intended to have used it in a limited sense, it would have appeared in some of these cases.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Conn. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brush-v-scribner-conn-1836.