Camden v. Doremus

44 U.S. 515, 11 L. Ed. 705, 3 How. 515, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 26, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 44 U.S. 515 (Camden v. Doremus) 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
Camden v. Doremus, 44 U.S. 515, 11 L. Ed. 705, 3 How. 515, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 441 (1845).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

No question has been raised on this record in reference to the original character of the instrument on which the action was founded ¿s a negotiable and commercial paper, nor in reference to the duties and obligations of the parties arising purely from their positions as parties to such a paper. And for aught that the record disoloses, every requirement of the law merchant, with respect to the note, or *530 ■ with respect to the rights of the endorsers thereof, appears to have been fulfilled. Presentment at maturity and within due time was made at the-Bank.of Columbus, Mississippi, and payment there demanded ; The failure to make payment was followed by regular protest, and by like notice to all the endorsers. The exceptions specifically urged by the deféndant in the court below, and.pressed in his behalf before this court, grow out. of an agreement signe'd by the firm of the Camdens and by the defendants in error at the time that the note of Calhoun was endorsed by the former to the latter, and which agreement, it is contended, bound the defendants in error to undertakings and acts- beyond the usual duties incumbent upon endorsers and holders of negotiable paper, and without the fulfilment of which no right of recovery against the plaintiffs in error could arise.. Before entering upon an examination of this agreement and of the questions which it has given rise to,.it is proper to dispose of an objection by the defendant in the court.below, which seems to have been aimed, at the entire testimony adduced by the plaintiffs, but whether at its competency, or relevancy, or at its regularity merely, that objection nowhere discloses. After each deposition offered in evidence by the plaintiffs to the jury, it is stated, that to the reading of such deposition the defendant, by his counsel, objected, and,that his objection was overruled. A-similar statement is made with regard to the record of the suit instituted in the court of Hinds county against Calhoun, the maker of the note, and offered in this cause as proof of due diligence. With regard to the . manner and the import of this objection, we would remark, that they were- of a kind that should not have been tolerated in the court below pending the trial of the issue before the jury. Upon the offer of testimony oral or written, extended and complicated as it may often prove, it could not be expected, upon the mere suggestion of an exception which did hot obviously cover the competency of the evidence, nor point to some definite or specific defect in its character, that the court should explore the entire mass for the ascertainment of defects whidh the objector himself either would not or could not point, to their view. It would, be more extraordinary still if, under the mask of such an objection, or mere hint at objection, .a party should be permitted in an appellate court to spring, upon his adversary defects which it did not appear he ever relied on; ■ and . which, if they had been openly and specifically all.egéd, might háve been easily cured. ’Tis' impossible that this court can determine, or do more than conjecture, as the objection is stated on this record, whether it applied to form or substance, or how far, in the view of it presented to the court below, if any particularview was so presented',, the court may have been warranted in overruling-it. We must consider objections of this character as vague and.nugatory, and as, if entitled to weight anywhere, certainly, as without weight before .an appellate court.

*531 Recurring to the agreement signed by the parties at the time of the transfer of the note, and to the instructions given and refused at the trial, with respect both to that agreement and the proceedings had in fulfilment thereof, wé "will remark, as to the'agreement itself, it' is clear that it bound the endorsees to conditions beyond those which- aré implied in the ordinary transfer and receipt of commercial instruments. Their- obligations, therefore, to these endorsers could by no means be fulfilled .by a compliance with such usual conditions. The language of the agreement is explicit.. The said Dore-mus,-Suydams and Nixon, were, to send the note passed to them to the Commercial .Bank of Columbus, Mississippi, for collection, and ;in the event of its not being paid at maturity, they were to use rea-, sonable and due diligence to collect it of the drawer and two previous endorsers before they were to call .upon the said Camdens, &c., &c. The obligation of the plaintiffs, as endorsees ánd holders, would have been fulfilled by-regular demand, protest, and notice; from these' a right of action would immediately have accrued; But the condition stipulated in the agreement is, that.before they can have any right, to make demand upon their endorsers, théy shall diligently endeavour .to. collect‘of the maker arid previous endorsers. With the view of showing a failure iri the plaintiffs in fulfilling their contract,, and of deducing therefrom their own exemption from responsibility, the- defendants first offered a witness to prove a difference in the practice .prevailing in eastern and western banks with respect to the management of paper deposited with them for collection'; and' inquired of tire witness whether a note presented at a bank for payment , on the last day of grace by a notary public would be considered as having been sent to the bank for collection, within the meaning of the contract. . This, question, on motion of the plaint tiff’s - counsel,-the court refused to. allow, and rejected all testimony by the witness in relation to the practice of banks as to notes deposited for collection, unless the witness could testify as to the practice or Usage of the Commercial Bank of Columbus. The ruling of the court-on this point we think was proper. The note was made payable at the Commercial Bank of Columbus; by the agreement between thje parties it was moreover expressly stipulated, that it- should be sent .to that bank for collection; if, then, any custom or practice other than general commercial usage were to control the management of the note, it was the usage of the. Bank of Columbus, certainly not the particular usage of other banks not mentioned in the contract, and perhaps' never within the contemplation 'of the parties to that contract. The next exception is taken upon an instruction asked of the court to the juiy, that unless it was proved to their satisfaction, that the note was .sent to the Bank of Columbus for collection by .the plaintiffs, they must fipd for the defendant. The court responded affirrnatively to the proposition that the note should have-been .sent to the Bank of Columbus for collection, but declared *532 its opinion that by presentment and demand of payment of the note at maturity by the plaintiffs at the said bank, within banking hours, so as to make a legal demand on the makers, the requirement of the contract in this particular would be complied with. A nice distinction might be made between the language of the agreement and that of the instruction given upon this point.. The distinction, however, we should deem to be more apparent and verbal than substantial, and not to be applicable either to the intention of the parties, or to the real merits of the case. The note was payable at the Commercial Bank of Mississippi. The maker of the note resided in the county in which the bank was situated; the endorsers Barrett and Tarpley, who were to be looked to for' payment before proceeding against the Camdens, were also residents of the state of Mississippi.

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Bluebook (online)
44 U.S. 515, 11 L. Ed. 705, 3 How. 515, 1845 U.S. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-v-doremus-scotus-1845.