Fowler v. Brantly

39 U.S. 318, 10 L. Ed. 473, 14 Pet. 318, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 39 U.S. 318 (Fowler v. Brantly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fowler v. Brantly, 39 U.S. 318, 10 L. Ed. 473, 14 Pet. 318, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 375 (1840).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Catron

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action of' assumpsit by the assignee of a note against *319 the makers. The questions of law arising in this cause depend on the construction of a note of hand, in the following words:

“Selma, Dallas County, Alabama, March 1st, 1S36.

“ Eleven months after date, we, Harris Brantly, Peyton S. Graves, and Hugh Ferguson, jointly and severally, promise to pay Andrew Armstrong, cashier, or bearer, two thousand, dollars, value received, negotiable and payable at the Branch Bank of the state of Alabama, at Mobile. (Signed) Harris Brantly,

Peyton ,S. Graves,

Hugh Ferguson.

“Credit: Diego M‘Voy.

Harris Brantly,

Peyton S. Graves,

Hugh Ferguson.”

The note had on it the two endorsements of Diego M‘Voy and William D. Primrose; and that of Taulmin, Hazard, and Company was stricken out. On the face of the note there was, in pencil, the figures 169.

The defendants, the three makers, introduced evidence to prove that the note, in its present form, (except the endorsements,) was sent by one of the makers to M‘Voy, who was his factor in Mobile, to be offered for discount in the Branch Bank of the state in that city as an accommodation note; the proceeds of which were to be forwarded to said maker. That the note was offered for discount and rejected. The factor then proposed to raise money on the note for his own use, without the knowledge of the.makers, and intended to conceal the appropriation of the note from them. The first person to whom he offered to sell the note deemed the attempt a fraud, and refused to purchase. M‘Voy then endorsed and transferred the note to Primrose for one thousand two hundred dollars, communicating to him it had been offered for discount at the bank and rejected.

Taulmin, Hazard, and Company held a note for three thousand two hundred and fifty dollars, on Black, endorsed by Vail and Dade, and by Primrose, and which was past due; to discharge which, in part, Primrose transferred the note iii controversy to Taulmin, Hazard, and Company; and Taulmin, Hazard, and Company endorsed the same before its maturity, to the plaintiff, Fowler, and received credit on their account; they being largely indebted to him at the time.

The leading feature in the cause, involving the principle on which it turns, is this: the note was in the form prescribed by the bank to those who desired accommodations at it; which form was not in use before its adoption there. The memorandum on the left hand side of the noté, and signed by the drawers, was designed to show the officers of the bank to whose credit the money was to be placed, *320 should the note he discounted; and by the usages of the bank, no other person than the one thus named could receive the. money.

- Primrose testified, he knew from the pencil mark on the face of the note,'it had been offered,for discount and refused, when he purchased it.. The cashier proved the pencil mark was made according to the usage of the bank on all notes offered for discount and refused.-

' To a part of the first instruction, that held, if the plaintiff-tóok the, noté in payment .of .a pre-existing debt,, due to him from Taulmiri, Hazard, and Company, ihen. the jury ought to find for the defendants, exception is taken; and the Court refused to instruct the jury, that, if the plaintiff took the note fairly in payment of a debt due to him, ^before its' maturity, without notice of the purpose for which M‘Voy had held it, then he was entitled ta recover.

. And also refused to instruct, if the jury believed plaintiff took-.the note bona fide in payment of a previous debt, that, he had no notice of any fraud; and there were, no circumstances to put him upon an inquiry, into any fraud committed on the part of M'Voy, he was entitled to recover.

■There were other -instructions asked, and -refused; but, as they are in effect the same as those recited, an answer to which will .cover the whole cajfee, they need ftot be further noticed.

The known customs of the bank, and its ordinary modes of transacting business, including the .prescribed forms'of notes offered for discount, were matters of proof, and entered into the contract; and the parties to it must be understood as having governed themselves by such- customs and modes of doing business; and this, whether they .had actual knowledge of them, or not; and it was. especially the duty of all those dealing for. the paper in question to ascertain them if unknown. Such' is the established doctrine of this Court, as laid down in Renner vs. The Bank of Columbia, 9 Wheaton. Mills vs. The Bank of the United States, 11 Wheaton, and the Bank of Washington vs. Triplett and Neale, 1 Peters, 32, 33.

The. note sued on is peculiar in its form; it was made for the purposes of discount, and only intended for negotiation at the bank, and not for circulation out of it. The pencil mark on its face when sold, w.as common to all rejected paper, and was put there by the officers of the bank as evidence of the fact that it had been offered and rejected ; and those dealing for it, with the mark on its face, must be presumed, fo have had knowledge what it imported; as the slightest inqqiry would have ascertained its meaning; These were the legal presumptions attached,to the contract, when.the plaintiff purchased it; and the explanatory evidence to prove the- custom of the bank, was introduced to enlighten the Court and jury in regard to the rules'governing the transaction, and furnishing the law of. the case; and'which the plaintiff, when he purchased the paper, is presumed to have known and understood; as the Court knew and understood it after.it was proved on the trial.

This, was the case made up of law and fact; on which the Court *321 was asked tp chargei the jury,; and not the abstract; proposition whether, on a proper construction of the statutes of Alabama, nego.ti'able paper, payable in bank, purchased bona fide, "and without notice of-an existing infirmity,_but.taken in discharge óf a pre-existing debt, carried the Infirmity with it into the .hands of the purchaser ffor the reason, that the mode of payment was not in the usual course pf trade. , ,

A note oyer-due, or bill' dishonoured, is a circumstance of suspicion,, to put'those' dealing for it' afterwards oh their' guard; and in whose'hands it. is'open for the same defences it was in .the hands of the holder when it. fell due, 13 Peters, 79, After maturity, such paper cannot be negotiable “ in the due course of tradealthough still assignable.' "

So the paper before us carried on its face circumstances of suspicion, so palpable as to put those, dealing for it, before-, maturity, on their guard; and as to require at their hands strict inquiry into .the title of those -through whose hands' it had passed. ' Failing to be thus diligent, they must. abide, by the misfortune their negligence imposed, and stand in the.-condition-of M'Voy.

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Bluebook (online)
39 U.S. 318, 10 L. Ed. 473, 14 Pet. 318, 1840 U.S. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-brantly-scotus-1840.