Ellis v. Brown

6 Barb. 282, 1849 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 215
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 6 Barb. 282 (Ellis v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Brown, 6 Barb. 282, 1849 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 215 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

Gridley, J.

Upon the facts in this case the question is whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover, or whether the non-suit was properly granted. In considering this question it must be borne in mind that this action is not brought for money paid by the firm of Newell, Daniels & Co. as it manifestly could not be in the name of the present plaintiff, but is instituted [285]*285upon the note itself as the foundation of the action, and against the defendant as a “'party to the note.”

1. It is obvious, therefore, that the action can not be maintained against the defendant as a guarantor of the note. A person who guaranties a note is in no sense a party to the note. (Story on Prom. Notes, § 3; 5 Wend. 307; 2 Hill, 190.) A guaranty is a special contract, and must be specially declared on. (1 Chit. Pl. 339.) And it is only where the person called the guarantor has been held by the court to be, in legal intendment, the maker of the note, that a different rule has prevailed. Again; if the indorsement were to be regarded as a guaranty, such guaranty was made to Newell, Daniels & Co., and the action should have been brought in their names, and not in that of Ellis. [See Lamourieux v. Hewit, 5 Wend. 307; 2 Hill, 192.) To this we may add that the law will never imply a contract of guaranty, when the evidence shows, as it does here, that the defendant undertook to be bound only as indorser. (Seabury v. Hungerford, 2 Hill, 80.) Without pursuing this point farther it may be safely assumed that the defendant is not liable in this action as a guarantor of the note.

2. The next question is whether he can be made liable as a' maker. Now it is not to be denied that there are cases in which a party indorsing a note has been held liable as maker of a separate note to be written over his indorsement, and sometimes as joint and several maker of the note on which his name is written; for the purpose of carrying lout what was regarded as the general intention of the parties, which intention they had failed to express in the written instrument itseh (See 1 Hill, 256; 4 Id. 421; 3 Id. 585, 9; 2 Id. 663; 19 Wend 203.) We do not mean to deny, and it is not necessary that we should do so, that it is allowable to write a note over the name of a party when the facts show that it was the intention that he should be bound as a maker. But some of the cases have gone beyond this reasonable rule of limitation; and have held parties hable, not upon the legal interpretation of the instrument they had signed, nor upon any parol contract which they had made; but upon contracts which the courts have made for the parties, to [286]*286remedy the hardship of particular cases. The mischief arising from this loose construction of commercial paper had become so intolerable that the courts have, for some years, been retracing their steps and holding parties to the contract which they themselves have made, according to this legal interpretation. In Hall v. Newcomb, (7 Hill, 418,) the chancellor, in delivering .the prevailing opinion in the court of errors, says, “ The courts have gone far enough in repealing the statute to prevent frauds and perjuries, by introducing parol evidence to charge a mere surety for the principal debtor, by showing that his written agreement was something else than what, upon its face, it purj ports to mean.” Again, in 1st Comstock’s Reports, 324, the court held this significant language, There are a few cases in^ the books which hold, in effect, that a written contract of one kind may be turned into a contract óf a different kind, by parol proof concerning the intention of the parties; that the indorser of a promissory note may, under certain circumstances, be charged as maker or guarantor; and that the guarantor of a promissory note may be sometimes charged as maker or indorser. Although these cases stand upon no principle, it has been a work of some time and difficulty to get rid of them. The court of errors was at first equally divided on the question, but after a second argument the court decided by a pretty strong vote to uphold contracts as they had been made by the parties, instead^ of making new contracts for them c” citing Hall v. Newcomb, (7 Hill, 416.) In the lase of Hall v. Farmer & Doolittle, (not yet reportedy)-the-piaintiff sought to recover against the defendants, wlm, with the view of securing , a debt due to Hall from Katlfla &. Doolittle, indorsed a guaranty on a note made by the latter firm, and payable “ to Luther Hall, to the order- of Kathern & Doolittle.” An attempt was made to charge the defendants as makers or guarantors, for the purpose of'carrying.óut what was supposed to be the general intent of the parties. The court, however, held that the action could not be supported upon the guaranty ; for the reason that it was void under the statute of frauds, in not expressing the consideration on which it was founded; and that the guaranty could not be [287]*287treated as a promissory note, because a guaranty is in its nature a conditional contract binding on the guarantor only upon the default of the principal debtor; whereas it is essential to the very nature of a promissory note that it should be payable absolutely and at all events.

If these cases be good law, then, notwithstanding the parol testimony should be held to have been properly admitted in this case, to show what contract the parties intended to make, it is quite clear that the defendant can not be held liable as maker of the note in question. He was not only an actual indorser in fact and by the legal construction of the written paper on which the suit is brought, but the letters of Newell, Daniels & Co. as well as of Stone & Greene, show that it was intended by all parties that he should be an indorser, and nothing else. (See the opinions in the cases of Seabury v. Hungerford, 2 Hill, 80, and Miller v. Gaston, Id. 188.) These cases are direct and conclusive authorities to show that when the parties have agreed upon a contract of a particular kind, by which a demand shall be secured, the courts will not allow a contract of a different kind to be written in lieu of that which the parties have made. In other words, that when the parties have agreed upon an express contract, the court will not imply one of a different legal effect and obligation. It is to be assumed, therefore, as an incontrovertible fact that the defendant never contracted to be holden as a joint and several maker of the note in question, with Stone & Greene. And we have already seen that unless he did so he is not a party to this note, as maker, and therefore can not be made liable as maker, under this declaration. This very question is virtually decided in Hall v. Newcomb, (7 Hill, 416.) If this suit had been brought in the names of Newell, Daniels & Co. instead of Ellis, the cases would have been alike. So far as the question whether the party who placed his name on the back of the note can be made liable as a maker of the note, is concerned, it is unimportant whether the suit is brought in the name of Newell, Daniels & Co. or in that of the plaintiff Ellis. It may be said in this case, as the chancellor said in Hall v. Newcomb, “ that when a man writes his name in blank \

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Bluebook (online)
6 Barb. 282, 1849 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-brown-nysupct-1849.