Cowperthwaite v. . Sheffield

3 N.Y. 243
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 243 (Cowperthwaite v. . Sheffield) 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
Cowperthwaite v. . Sheffield, 3 N.Y. 243 (N.Y. 1850).

Opinion

Hurlbut, J.

The bill of exceptions in the present case does not properly present the question which was argued at the bar, as to the sufficiency of the notice of dishonor of the bills which are the subject of this suit. When the plaintiff rested his case, he had given what he deemed sufficient proof of such notice, but he may not have exhausted all the evidence in his power *248 If the defendants designed to make a point as to the sufficiency of the proof delivered, they should have objected against it specifically, and pointed out the defects which they conceived to exist in this branch of the case, in order that the plaintiff might have had an opportunity to supply such defects by the delivery of further evidence, or in default of it, that the ruling of the court might have been obtained upon the precise point presented by the objection. But instead of this, the bill of exceptions merely states, that when the plaintiff rested, the defendants’ counsel moved for a nonsuit, which was denied, and the defendants excepted. This presents no question as to the sufficiency of the notice of protest. (Gillett v. Campbell, 1 Denio, 520; Whiteside, &c. v. Jackson, 1 Wend. 418; Ford v. Mannor, 20 id. 210; Norman v. Wells, 17 id. 136.)

The other questions which are presented by the bill of exceptions, arise upon the following facts:—On the 8th of February, 1837, Messrs. James and John Reid, of Mobile, drew two' bills of exchange on Messrs. Kelly & Co. of Glasgow, for one thousand pounds each, and payable sixty days after sight to the order of the drawers. They were drawn against a shipment of cotton by the Messrs. Reid to Kelly & Co., of which they were advised by letter dated February, 28, 1837, which contained a notice of the shipment and of four drafts drawn on account of the same, amounting in the aggregate to four thousand pounds, including the two drafts in suit. The letter was received by Kelly & Co. on the 14th of April, 1837, and on the 15th the bills were presented to them, and were protested for non-acceptance on the 17th of the same month. The cotton arrived at Glasgow about the 27th of June, 1837, and the proceeds were credited in account of Kelly & Co. with Messrs. Reid on the 14th of August of that year. The bills contained nothing on their face indicative of their having been drawn on a specific fund, but were in the ordinary form of negotiable bills of exchange; and there is nothing in the case which shows that the defendants purchased them with information of their having been drawn against a shipment of cotton. Other bills were drawn by Messrs. Reid on Kelly & Co. against shipments *249 of cotton made to the latter, which, including the two bills in question, amounted in the aggregate to £4529 0 4; and all these bills, together with others of the same drawers on other houses, came into the possession of the Bank of England before their maturity, and were claimed to be owned by that bank, for whose benefit this suit is prosecuted.

John H. Reid, one of the drawers, after the failure of his firm, went to Glasgow and made a settlement with Kelly & Co. on the 15th of August, 1837, by which a balance of £4593 3 7 was found to be due to the Reids from Kelly & Co., which was sufficient to pay all the outstanding bills drawn by the former upon the latter house. This balance, by agreement between Reid and Kelly & Co., was placed in the first instance in the hands of Mr. Cuthbertson of Glasgow; and afterwards by the consent of parties the money was transferred to the Bank of Liverpool and deposited in the names Langdon & Miller, subject to the joint order of the Messrs. Reid and Kelly & Co., and to be retained until the discharge granted by the Reids to Kelly & Co. upon their settlement should be ratified by the creditors of the former.

The Bank of England was the holder of ten bills of exchange drawn by the Messrs. Reid, including the two bills in suit, and upon these bills instituted suit against the drawers (the Reids) and proceeded to outlawry against them, and under that process obtained possession of the funds which had been deposited in the Bank of Liverpool. The Messrs. Reid afterwards appeared in the suit, the outlawry was reversed, and on the 5th of March, 1842, judgment was recovered in England on all the bills, including the two now in suit, for £8893 1 5. The fund which had been seized now amounted to £4696 3 2, and the Bank of England claimed that by reason of an exception of the bills in this suit from the benefit of the seizure made in the process of outlawry, the fund thus obtained ought to be applied to the satisfaction of eight of the ten bills included in their judgment, to the exclusion of the two bills in this suit. The superior court, however, held, that the bank could not single out a part only of the separate demands upon which their judgment was recov *250 ered and apply the fund to their payment to the exclusion of the bills in this suit, but must apply the amount collected through the instrumentality of the process against the drawers, as a payment upon all the bills embraced in the consolidated debt constituting the judgment-—-whereby the bills in this suit were reduced by a pro rata application of tlie fund derived from the drawers, to the same extent as the others upon which the judgment was recovered. But the defendants were not content with this ; they claimed upon the trial that under the facts of this case, their liability upon the bills in suit was extinguished altogether, and they requested a ruling of the court to the effect: .

I. That the drawing of the bills against the shipment of cotton operated as an assignment of so much of the proceeds thereof as would be sufficient to pay these bills; that the drawees must be considered as having held the fund for the benefit of the holders of the bills, and that the Bank of England being such holders, and receiving the funds destined for their payment, the bills must be regarded as paid.

II. That the drawers having appropriated the proceeds of the cotton to pay all the bills drawn by them on Kelly & Co., and the fund being sufficient for that purpose, the bank was bound to apply the fund according to the intention and direction of the drawers.

The defendants, in taking these grounds of defense, seem to have mistaken the true character of this transaction, and the nature of these bills of exchange. They were not in the nature of orders drawn on a particular fund, nor were they payable upon any contingency, but were in the form of proper bills of exchange, and were negotiated as such; so that the parties thereto became answerable, not upon a special contract to be inferred from the circumstances of the case, but according to the obligation created by the bills themselves as the law defines it. Had the bills been accepted by Kelly & Co. they would have been bound to their payment, whether they received the consignment of cotton or not, and irrespective of the amount of its proceeds. There was nothing on the face of the bills either *251 binding such proceeds to their payment, or limiting thereby the liability of the drawees.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowperthwaite-v-sheffield-ny-1850.