Cook v. . Litchfield

9 N.Y. 279
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 N.Y. 279 (Cook v. . Litchfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. . Litchfield, 9 N.Y. 279 (N.Y. 1853).

Opinion

Ruggles, Ch. J.

One of the indispensible requisites of the notice to be given to the endorser of the dishonor of a note, is, that it should either expressly, or by just and natural implication, contain in substance a true description of the note, so as to identify it to the mind of the endorser. No particular form of words is necessary to be used for this purpose. The object of the notice is to put the endorser in possession of the material facts on which his own liability is founded, so that he may be enabled to take the necessary measures for his own security or indemnity against those who are liable over to him. (Story on Prom. Notes, §§ 348, 349.)

A notice which is barely enough to put the endorser upon inquiry is not sufficient. The note should be sufficiently described to enable the party to know what note it is. (Remer v. Downer, 23 Wend., 626.) The notice must explicitly state what the note is, and must not be calculated in any way to mislead the party to whom it may be given. (Chitty on Bills, 501, ed. of 1836.) The notice must not misdescribe the instrument so that the defendant may perhaps be led to confound it with some other. (Byles on Bills, 204.)

In the present case there are four notes of the same date, each for $740, payable to the same person, or order, at the same place, and each payable with interest from date. They are, however, payable at different times; that is to say, one in nine months, one in ten, one in eleven, and one in twelve months from date. It is in the time of payment only that *287 either note is to be distinguished by description from the others. The notes were all dishonored and protested, and the question is, whether the notices of protest contained a sufficient description of the note to which each was intended to apply. If they did they were sufficient, otherwise not. The first notice informed the defendant that a promissory note made by J. L." Carew for $740, with interest, dated April 2d, 1849, and endorsed by him, was on the day the same became due, duly protested for nonpayment. Only one note of the four had fallen due at the date of the notice. It spoke of a note which had fallen due, the date and amount of which were correctly described, and must therefore have related and applied to that note and to that only. The notice pointed out with sufficient certainty which of the four notes had then been dishonored, and distinguished it from the three others by reference to the time of its maturity. It was the only mode in fact in which it could be distinguished from the others of the series. It might have been more plainly expressed by stating the time it had to run, or by naming the day when it became due; but it was sufficient that it clearly appeared by the notice that it became due before or on the day the notice bore date. With respect to the note payable at ten months the case stands on different grounds. For the sake of brevity I shall speak of the note which first fell due, as the first of thé series, and of that which became due next afterwards as the second, and so on of the two others.

The notice supposed by the plaintiff to apply to the second note, is an exact copy of that which was given upon the dishonor of the first, except in two particulars, to wit, in its date, and in the memorandum which specifies that the interest amounted to $43.60. The notice speaks of the protest of a note which had at the date of the notice become due. It could not therefore be understood to apply either to the third or the fourth note of the series, because neither of those notes had come to maturity. But the description contained in it was applicable by its terms to either one of the *288 two first notes,. and as strictly applicable to the one as" to the. other. 'There is nothing on the face of the notice which ' enabled the endorser to know which of the first two notes the no,tice was intended for. The second notice was dated on the day when ¡the second note became due;' but it does not state that the note' mentioned in it was the’ note which became due on that. day. " It• stated only that the note mentioned in it;was duly protested bn the day when it fell due; ánd this was true as well in regard to" the first as to the sécond'. note.. ..The notice therefore did. not inform the endorser which "of the two notes it applied to. The date of the notice was no part, of the description of. the dishonored note,1 and. notwithstanding the date of. the notice, .the description, applied as well, to the one note as" "to the other. As to the memorandum at the head of the notice of the interest due oh the note'the same difficulty exists. The two first .notes .being for the same amount,' of the same date, and both bearing interest from date, the amount of interest due on each, would at the date of the notice be precisely the same. The endorser therefore could not have made out from that memorandum which of the two notes the notice was intended to apply to. So that any fact and circumstance "contained in the second notice is" applicable to the first note, ' and would have been perfectly true, if the second note had never1 been presented-for payment or if it had been regularly paid at maturity. The second notice was in everything except its date "a duplicate of the first, and if the first notice was applicable to the first note, the second is equally so.

' But it is said that the defendant could not have been misled by the defect in the notice, because it bore date on the day when thé second note, became due, and he had a month previously received notice of the dishonor of the first noté; and that knowing when the second "note fell due he must therefore hake understood the second notice to réfer to the,, second note. This is undoubtedly the strongest view of the "casé in favor of the plaintiff.; But it is not strong enough to *289 sustain Ms demand without violating a settled and salutary principle of law. “ The description of the note should be sufficiently definite to enable the endorser to know to what one in particular the notice applies; for an endorser may have endorsed many notes of veiy different dates, sums and times of payment, and payable to different persons, so that he may be ignorant, unless the description in the notice is special, to wliich it properly applies or which it designates.” {Story on Prom. Notes, § 349.) In the present case the defendant endorsed four notes which were alike in all respects, excepting in regard to the time of payment; and yet the notices omitted to describe ■ them with reference to that important particular,' by which only they could be distinguished one from the other.

In determining whether the description of the note or bill is sufficient, the circumstances of the case and the defendant’s knowledge of those circumstances may be taken into consideration ; and therefore where the notice to the drawer of a bill of exchange, was that Ms draft on A. B. was dishonored, the notice was adjudged to be sufficient until it was shown that there was another bill drawn by the defendant on A. B. for wMch the one m question might be mistaken. But Parb^ Baron, said: “ If there was another bill answering the same description, then the notice would have been uncertam.” The present is precisely the case supposed by Baron PARE^. (7 Mees. & Wels., 437.)

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Cook v. Litchfield
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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-litchfield-ny-1853.