Cook v. Litchfield

2 Bosw. 137
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedNovember 28, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Bosw. 137 (Cook v. Litchfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Litchfield, 2 Bosw. 137 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinions

I. This Court, on the previous hearing, disposed of all the questions presented upon the facts as they then appeared, and nothing now remains open, so far as those facts are concerned, except the question, whether the notice to the defendant, as the endorser of [145]*145the notes in suit, was sufficient. (Cook v. Litchfield, 5 Sandf. S. C. 330; S. C., 5 Seld. 279.)

n. The notes, in suit, were given for a debt contracted by a firm of which the defendant was a dormant partner, and for which debt he was liable.

HI. He received an assignment of all the effects of the firm, and the one which succeeded it, and agreed to pay the notes in suit, and is bound to pay them under that agreement, as well as under the agreement of June 15th, 1852.

IV. The evidence, to apply the respective notices of protest to the several notes, was competent, and the jury have found that the notices of protest did actually communicate, to the defendant, notice of the presentment and protest of the notes in suit, as they severally became due, and their finding, is conclusive on the question of notice. (Cayuga Co. Bk. v. Warden, 1 Com. 413; S. C. 2 Seld. 19.)

Chas. Tracy, for the defendant, argued, among others, the points following, viz.:—

I. The notices of protest were insufficient. (5 Seld. 279, Cook v. Litchfield.)

II. The special findings of the jury, that the defendant knew, in each case, which note was intended, should be set aside, or treated as a nullity. (1) The Court erred in submitting those questions to the jury, and the defendant took an exception, No evidence, of any sort, had been given to show the fact of the defendant having such knowledge; and notice in these cases is to be proved, not presumed. (Parson’s Merc. Law, 115; 5 Seld. 279, Cook v. Litchfield; 2 Hill, 587, 595, Bansom, v. Mack) (2) The verdict on those questions is wholly unsupported by evidence. It is against the evidence and against law.

IH. The defendant is not liable as joint maker, with Carew. The complaint alleges, that the defendant and Carew, having been partners under the name of Joshua L. Carew, they afterwards made these notes by that name, to be used in liquidating the debts of such partnership. This allegation is not sustained.

IV. The supposed debt to Eyckman, for hops, is no ground to support the present action. 1. That debt is stated to have been contracted in October, 1846. It was a debt to Eyckman, and not [146]*146to the plaintiff. 2. The debt was released, on the delivery of these notes. The debt, therefore, has no importance in this case, unless the consideration of the notes should come in question. 3. That debt was not assigned to the plaintiff; and, he being a mere endorsee, cannot sue on the original consideration. (4 Sandford, 93, 97; Morris v. Hudson, 1 Hill, 577; National Bank v. Norton.) 4. Such supposed debt was barred by the statute of limitations before this action was brought. 5. These notes, in the hands of Cook, the plaintiff, are mere commercial paper, having for maker Carew alone, and for endorsers first, Litchfield, and second,,Ryckman. The plaintiff can hold the defendant only upon his contract as endorser.

Y. There is nothing in the case excusing the plaintiff from giving due notice of dishonor, or rendering defendant liable, without such notice. 1. The articles of partnership between Carne, Carew, Litchfield and Hubbard, make no provision for such notes as these. 2. At the date of those articles, (1st January, 1849,) the only debt to Ryckman outstanding against Carew, or against the Detroit brewery establishment, amounted to barely $43.05. 3. The agreement between Carew and the defendant, made 15th June, 1852, has no influence on this question. These notes were past due and dishonored long before that agreement was made, as they matured in January, February, March and April, 1850. The defendant in June, 1852, being already discharged of his conditional obligation as endorser, could not be made absolutely liable by any thing in that agreement. Hor is that agreement a general assignment of Carew’s property, but only of certain specified property. (13 Barbour, 163, 165, 166; Bruce v. Lytle) 4. Nor does the obligation of the defendant, to release Carew, relate to any transactions except to those of the firm and firms, containing Hubbard or Carne; and a mere promise to the maker of a promissory note to indemnify him, does not change the contract of the endorser with the holder of such note.

VI. If any action upon these notes would lie against the defendant, by reason of any of the alleged copartnerships or transactions with Carew, or with Carne, Carew & Co., the present action must fail, for defect of parties. If the defendant is alleged to be a joint maker with Carew, as a member of the supposed firm of J. L. Carew, then Carew must be joined as co-defendant. If the de[147]*147fendant is alleged to be a joint maker with Garew, Game, and Hubbard, as a member of the firm of Carne, Garew & Co., then Garew and Hubbard must be joined as co-defendants. This objection was duly taken by the answer, and on the trial.

VII. On the whole record, judgment should be given for the defendant, and the complaint should be dismissed, under the stipulation contained in the case.

By the Court. Bosworth.—The

defendant is the payee and endorser of four several promissory notes made by I. L. Garew, and dated, “ Detroit, April 2d, 1849.” Each is for the sum of $740, with interest. All are of precisely the same terms, except that one is payable nine, one ten, one eleven, and the other twelve months after date. This action is brought on the three notes which matured last.

Each note, on the day it matured, was duly presented for payment, and payment of it was demanded and refused. Each note was, therefore, properly and duly protested. The important question is, was sufficient notice thereof given to the defendant, as endorser, to charge him ?

A notice, in each case, was mailed on the proper day, accurately directed, and was actually received by the defendant.

The notice, inasmuch as it stated that the note to which it referred was “ duly protested for non-payment, on the day that the same became due,” was sufficient to charge the endorser, if good in other respects. That has been finally and definitely determined, in an action between these parties upon the notes in question. {Cook v. Litchfield, 5 Seld. 279-291.)

The notes, after being endorsed by the defendant, at Detroit, were returned by him to the maker, who first negotiated them in the City of New York, by delivering them there to one Ryckman, who endorsed them to the plaintiff. The endorsements receiving their first vitality as contracts from the negotiation of the notes by the maker in New York, the law of New York must determine the sufficiency of the notice in each case.

We start, then, with the propositions duly established, that there was a valid presentment and protest of each note, and that a notice was served in time to charge the endorser, and that each notice was sufficient to inform him, that the note to which it re[148]*148ferred had been, presented for payment on the day it became due, at the proper place, and that payment had been refused on being then and there demanded.

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Related

Davenport v. Gilbert
19 Bosw. 179 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1860)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Bosw. 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-litchfield-nysuperctnyc-1857.