Cohu v. Husson

14 Daly 200, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 292
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 4, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Daly 200 (Cohu v. Husson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohu v. Husson, 14 Daly 200, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 292 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

J. F. Daly, J.

The action was brought upon a promissory note for $750 dated December 11th, 1878, made by Joseph Husson the defendant, to the order of Henry S. Cohu, plaintiffs’ intestate, payable five months after date at the Brooklyn Bank in the city of Brooklyn. It was an exchange note, Cohu having made and delivered to Husson his own note of the same date and amount, which Husson used, having it discounted by George B. Ripley & Co., and which, after it fell due and was protested, was taken up by the administrators of Cohu with two other notes of his [202]*202which had also been discounted for Husson by Ripley & Co., all three aggregating $2,200. Cohu in his lifetime had paid $1,700 to Ripley & Co. on account of the three notes, and after his death A. B. Cohu, one of his administrators, gave his own note to the holders for the balance and received the notes for the estate. This gave the administrators the right to recover upon the notes of Husson which had been given to Cohu in exchange for the latter’s notes thus paid and taken up by him and by his estate. Each party, upon an exchange of notes, is bound to pay his own, and this action is properly brought upon defendant’s note (Wooster v. Jenkins, 3 Hill 187).

The answer sets up the agreement which the law implies, viz.: that each was to pay his own note, and that neither note was to have vitality as against the other unless they were so respectively paid. The defense pleaded was that Ripley & Co. were still the holders of Cohn’s note, but on the trial it was shown they had been paid as above stated, and that his administrators held them, and the defense therefore failed.

It is urged, however, on this appeal, that plaintiffs should not recover because the said three notes of defendant are set forth in the inventory of the estate of Cohu as “ accommodation” notes which “ represent the amount of $1,700 paid by deceased: ” also that the administrators, in making personal demand of payment of defendant before action, did not claim upon defendant’s three notes, but on the notes of their intestate, which they had taken up, and that the plaintiffs on the trial claimed to recover on such notes: and the argument is that those notes were discounted by Ripley for Cohu’s benefit and not for defendant’s, and therefore that defendant’s notes given in exchange for them never became legal obligations. All the elaborate speculation on this point in appellant’s brief, goes for naught, however, in the face of defendant’s admission in his answer that he used the plaintiff’s intestate’s notes and transferred the same to George B. Ripley & Co., and his statement on the trial that he got the money on them.

[203]*203It is also urged that neither Cohu nor his administrators had the right to take up his notes, as Husson might have a good defense upon his indorsement as against Ripley & Co. who had, it is alleged, discounted them usuriously for less than their face. As an exchanged note is given for value and may be sold for any sum less than its face, there is no force in this objection (Wooster v. Jenkins, above cited).

The further objection is made that the administrators can recover on the notes of defendant no more in the aggregate than the $1,700 paid by Cohu on taking up his own notes; and that as they have already obtained judgment in another action upon another note for $750, the balance should be apportioned in some way upon the note in suit and the other unpaid note still held by them. The payment by the administrators of the difference between the $1,700 and the $2,200, which the notes aggregated, although such payment was by a note of one of them accepted by Ripley & Co., must be taken into account, the same as a cash payment, the presumption being that the maker of the note is solvent and will pay. But if it were not to be so considered, the recovery on the note in suit here, together with that in the former action, does not appear to be greater than the $1,700 cash paid by Cohu, and the defendant is not yet compelled to pay more upon his notes than Cohu was compelled to pay upon his. There is, however, no force in the objection.

The defendant set up in his answer as a counterclaim, a note made by Cohu on August 11th, 1879, for $750 payable two months after date to the order of Joseph Husson. The plaintiffs in their reply alleged that the said note had no legal inception, and was one of a series of notes given to the defendant without consideration and purely for his accommodation. The chief contention upon the trial was upon this issue, and the principal exceptions taken by defendant were to rulings upon evidence with regard to it.

The allegation of the reply that the note set up in the counterclaim was given for defendant’s accommodation was amply proved. The plaintiffs put in evidence a note [204]*204of defendant for the same amount, dated the same day, and payable at the same time to the order of their intestate. It was to be inferred from the two obligations that they were exchanged, one for the other. The fact that both notes Avere in defendant’s possession at the time of the trial is claimed to.be evidence that his own note was taken up and paid by defendant after it had been used and discounted by Cohu, Avhile Cohu had not paid his note on which the counterclaim is based, and that the latter is therefore established as a valid obligation in defendant’s hands. To this, it is a sufficient answer to say that defendant, although he went upon, the stand as a witness in his own behalf and testified, did not attempt to show that he had taken up and paid his own note, nor that Cohu had xxsed and discounted it, and the presumptions from his possession of it are destroyed by this silence and his admissions. These admissions, as testified to by one of the administrators, and by Horace Ripley of Ripley & Co., respectively, were as follows : when Ripley & Co. held the notes above referred to as discounted by them, the defendant told Horace Ripley that he intended to pay the notes, and never at any time made any claim that Cohu owed him; and after the administrators had taken up the notes, A. B. Cohu, one of the administrators, went to him for payment, and he stated that he would pay them, that Cohu had nothing to do with them, and he never made any claim that he held any note against the estate, nor made any claim of any kind; but stated that the deceased loaned him his notes frequently when he wanted ijhem, and that he got them discounted, and that the estate had nothing to do xvith paying them; he would settle with Ripley.

It was also shown by the introduction of a number of, notes on both sides, that the deceased and Husson had exchanged notes frequently up to the time of the death of the former. Objection was made to the introduction of these notes on the part of plaintiffs, but they were properly admitted to show the course of dealing between the parties, and did not mislead the jury. In fact, as defendant pro-. [205]*205duced a greater number of such notes than plaintiffs did, the real danger lay in their possibly deeming that the balance of indebtedness was against plaintiffs’ intestate and finding accordingly. They found on the contrary for plaintiffs on the counterclaim, a result which was justified by the admissions of defendant, tacit and other, and by the production of the duplicate or exchange note of August 11th, 1879, to which I have already referred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Daly 200, 6 N.Y. St. Rep. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohu-v-husson-nyctcompl-1887.