Gwathmay v. Clisby

31 F. 220, 24 Blatchf. 398, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589

This text of 31 F. 220 (Gwathmay v. Clisby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gwathmay v. Clisby, 31 F. 220, 24 Blatchf. 398, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589 (circtsdny 1887).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

This case is here upon the motion of the plaintiffs for a new trial on exceptions to the rulings of the referee by whom the case was tried. The action is brought upon a bill of exchange drawn upon defendants, and accepted by them, at Montgomery, Alabama. The referee found that the acceptance of the bill was obtained by fraud and without consideration, but that the plaintiffs received the bill without actual notice of any defense thereto, or of any equities existing between the drawers thereof and the payee in part payment of an antecedent indebtedness of the drawers. He decided that under the law of Alabama the bill of exchange was not a negotiable instrument, and was not governed' by commercial law, because it was not by its terms payable at a certain place of payment therein designated.

The only question which it is necessary to consider is whether bills of exchange are “governed by the commercial law,” within the meaning of section 2094 of the Code of Alabama of 1876, when they are not by their terms payable at a certain place, of payment designated. If they are, as the plaintiffs were holders in good faith and for value, according to the decisions controlling upon this court, the bill of exchange in their hands was not subject to the equities existing between the original parties. Swift v. Tyson, 16 Pet. 1; Railroad Co. v. National Bank, 102 U. S. 14. The language of the section is as follows:

“See. 2094. Bills of exchange and promissory notes, payable in money at a bank or private banking-house, or a certain place of payment therein designated, are governed by the commercial law.”

It is plain, upon the maxim expressio univs est exclusio alterivs, that promissory notes are not governed by the law of commercial paper, under this section, unless they are made payable at a bank or private banking-[221]*221house, or some other designated place of payment. The inquiry is whether, by the terms of the section, the same conditions apply to bills of exchange. It is somewhat surprising that, so far as is known, this question has never been decided by the courts of the state of Alabama, and that it should devolve upon a foreign tribunal to place a construction for the first time upon the meaning of a law of Alabama which has been in force since 1852, affecting a subject so important as the rights and obligations of parties to a bill of exchange.

Reading the section without the assistance of other provisions of the laws of Alabama in pari maleria,, or of antecedent legislation upon the same subject, the question presented would be one of much doubt. The punctuation would favor the view that bills of exchange and promissory notes are both governed by the restrictive terms. But, in arriving at the real meaning of statutes, the courts disregard punctuation, and read statutes with such stops as are most consistent with the sense. In other words, punctuation is no part of the statute. Hammock v. Loan & Trust Co., 105 U. S. 77. It was undoubtedly the purpose of the section to change the rule of the common law respecting the attributes of promissory notes. If a like intention can be gathered with respect to hills of exchange, it is because both classes of commercial paper are associated together in the section. But this consideration does not advance the inquiry, because the point is whether the qualifying words apply to both classes, or only to promissory notes.

The plaintiff invokes the rule of construction, sometimes resorted to, that relative words must ordinarily be referred to the next antecedent, where the intent upon the whole statute does not appear to the contrary. Broom, Leg. Max. 680; Dwar. St. 590, 591; Cushing v. Worrick, 9 Gray, 383. This rale is not controlling, and has often been disregarded; and it is not necessary to place the decision of the question upon such a narrow consideration.

The Code of 1876 is a revision of pre-existing legislation. It succeeded the Code of 1867, and, like that Code, was authorized by an act of tho general assembly which contemplated that the substance and meaning of former statutes should remain unchanged. When a codification or revision of laws contains provisions which are substantially reproduced from previous acts of the legislature, and doubts arise from the ambiguity of the language employed, tho safest rule by which to ascertain tho meaning is to resort to the original sources for tire purpose of ascertaining the legislative intent. U. S. v. Bowen, 100 U. S. 508. To quote the language of the supreme court of Alabama in Landford v. Dunklin:

“No rule of statutory construction rests upon better reasoning than that, in the revision of statutes, alteration of phraseology, or the omission or admission of words, will not necessarily change the operation or construction of former statutes. The language of the statute as revised, or the legislative intent to change the former statute, must be clear, before it can be pronounced that there is a change in such statute in construction and operation.” 71 Ala. 609.

As said by the court in East Tennessee v. Hughes, 76 Ala. 590:

[222]*222“Unless the alteration of the original act is of such a character as to manifest a clear intent to make a change in the construction and operation, effect will be given to the statute as originally framed by the general assembly.”

Section 2094 is a reproduction of -section 1525 of the Code of 1852, as amended in 1873, which, as will be seen, did not exclude bills of exchange when not payable- at any designated place from the category of instruments governed by the commercial law. The origin of the legislation in reference to the general subject is found in the act of January, 15, 1828, which reads as follows:

“* * * Hereafter the remedy on bills of exchange, foreign and inland, and on promissory notes payable in bank, shall be governed by the rules of the law-merchant as to the days of grace, protest, and notice.”

This provision was supplemented by an act of 1832 reading as follows:

“Bonds and other instruments payable in bank shall be governed by the rules of the law-merchant as to days of grace, demand', and notice, in the same manner that bills of exchange and notes payable in bank now are.”

The grammatical construction of the act of 1828 plainly limits the qualifying words, “payable in bank,” to promissory notes. And the statute is not to be construed as altering the common law, or making any innovations therein, further than the words import. Shaw v. Railroad Co., 101 U. S. 557. Accordingly, by the reasonable interpretation of the acts of 1828 and 1832, bills of exchange were governed by commercial law, and so, also, were all other instruments when payable in bank, including promissory notes. That this was the true meaning and result of the legislation is made still more clear by the Code of 1852.

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Related

Swift v. Tyson
41 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1842)
Tennessee v. Davis
100 U.S. 257 (Supreme Court, 1880)
United States v. Bowen
100 U.S. 508 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Shaw v. Railroad Co.
101 U.S. 557 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Railroad Co. v. National Bank
102 U.S. 14 (Supreme Court, 1880)
Hammock v. Loan & Trust Co.
105 U.S. 77 (Supreme Court, 1882)
Knott v. Venable
42 Ala. 186 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1868)
Cook v. Mutual Insurance
53 Ala. 37 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1875)
Landford v. Dunklin
71 Ala. 594 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1882)
East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Railroad v. Hughes
76 Ala. 590 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1884)

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Bluebook (online)
31 F. 220, 24 Blatchf. 398, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwathmay-v-clisby-circtsdny-1887.