Cutts v. Perkins

12 Mass. 205
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1815
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Mass. 205 (Cutts v. Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutts v. Perkins, 12 Mass. 205 (Mass. 1815).

Opinion

Putnam, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff’s intestate having delivered the goods and earned the freight, the burden rests on the defendant to show why the plaintiff ought not to recover. His defence, in substance, is, that Abbot, being in London before the ship sailed on her return voyage, and desirous of anticipating the money that would be due for the freight on the delivery of the goods in the United States, procured an advance to be made to him by Mr. Bromfield, of London, to the full amount of the same ; and, from the account settled at that time, it appears, that Abbot allowed to Mr. Bromfield the premium of insurance upon the freight, and interest upon the amount to the time when it would probably become payable in the United States. And the defendant contends, that the bill of exchange, having been accepted and paid, is a discharge of the debt for the freight ; or that, if the draft was not good as a bill of exchange, that it ought to avail as an assignment of the freight-money ; and that, in either event, the plaintiff ought not to prevail.

On the part of the plaintiff it is insisted, that, when /he bill was [185]*185drawn, no debt existed, and none could be assigned ; that it accrued to Abbot on the delivery of the goods in the United States; that Abbot's death was a revocation ; and that the acceptance afterwards ought not to prejudice the claim of the plaintiff any more than an acceptance of the draft of a bankrupt after knowledge of the bankruptcy.

We are therefpre to determine, whether the money due for this freight belongs to the plaintiff, to be distributed among the creditors of his intestate, his estate being insolvent; or whether Bromfield, for whose benefit this defence is made, is entitled to it, the defendant having paid the amount to the indorsee of Bromfield in consequence of an indemnity, and being in effect a stake-holder.

* Considering that Abbot received the amount of the [*210] freight from Bromfield, in London, and there invested the same for his own account, and that the proceeds make a part of the estate of the deceased, it would be difficult for the administrator to establish an equitable claim ; because, if he should recover, the estate will twice receive the money, and the foreign merchant, who made the advance to the intestate, will be obliged to accept a dividend under an insolvency, instead of the whole sum intended to have been paid.

The cases, cited for the plaintiff, to show that the death of the drawer is a revocation of the order on the drawee to pay, do not warrant the position. In the case first cited of Vernon & al. vs. Hankey,

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Related

Getchell v. Maney
69 Me. 442 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mass. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutts-v-perkins-mass-1815.