Hoffman & Co. v. Bank of Milwaukee

79 U.S. 181, 20 L. Ed. 366, 12 Wall. 181, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1180
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 30, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 79 U.S. 181 (Hoffman & Co. v. Bank of Milwaukee) 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
Hoffman & Co. v. Bank of Milwaukee, 79 U.S. 181, 20 L. Ed. 366, 12 Wall. 181, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1180 (1871).

Opinion

Mr; Jhstice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Acceptors of a bill of exchange, by the act of acceptance, admit the genuineness of the signatures of the drawers, and the competency of the drawers to assume that responsibility. Such an act imports an engagement, on the part of the acceptor, to the payee or other lawful holder of the bill, to pay the same, if duly presented, when it becomes due, according to the tenor of the acceptance. He engages t? pay the holder, whether payee or indorsee, the full'amount of the bill 'at maturity, and if he does not, the holder has a right of action against him, and he may also have one against the drawer. Drawers of bills of exchange, however, are not' *187 liable to the holder, under such circumstances, until it appears that the bill was duly presented, and that the acceptor refused or neglected to pay the same according to the tenor of the instrument, as their liability is contingent and subject to those conditions precedent.

Three bills of exchange, as exhibited in the record, were dr'awn Toy Chapin, Miles & Co., payable to the order of the defendants, and the record shows that they, the defendants, received and discounted the three bills at the request of the drawers. Attached to each bill of exchange was a bill of lading for two hundred barrels of flour, shipped, as therein represented, by the drawers of the bills of exchange, and consigned to the plaintiff's; and the record also shows that the drawers, in each case, sent a'lotter of advice to the consignees apprising them of the shipment, and that they would draw on them as such consignees for the respective amounts specified in the several bills of exchange. Prompt reply in each case was communicated by the plaintiff's, acknowledging the receipt of the letter of advice sent by the shippers, and promising to honor the bills of exchange, as therein requested. Evidence was also introduced by the plaintiffs showing that the defendants indorsed the bills of exchange and forwarded the same, with the bills of lading attached, to the National Park Bank of the city of New York, their regular correspondent; that the same were subsequently indorsed by the latter bank, and forwarded to th.e Commonwealth Bank of Philadelphia for collection; that the Commonwealth Bank presented the bills of- exchange, with the bills of lading attacked, to the plaintiff's, as the acceptors, and that they paid the respective amounts as they had previously promised to do, and that the Commonwealth Bank remitted the proceeds in each ease to the National Park Bank, where the respective amounts were credited to the defendants. Proof was also introduced by the plaintiffs showing that each of the bills of lading was a forgery, and that the plaintiffs, before the commencement of the suit, tendered the same and the bills of exchange to the defend *188 ants, and that they demanded of the defendants, at the same time, the respective amounts so paid by them to the Commonwealth Bank. Payment as demanded being refused, the plaintiffs brought an action of. assumpsit aga.inst the defendants for money had and received, claiming to recover back the séveral amounts so paid as money paid by mistake, but the verdict and judgment were for. the defendants; and the plaintiffs sued out a writ of error, and removed' the cause into this court. Testimony was also introduced by the de- • fendants tending to show that the shippers were millers; that they^made an arrangement with the plaintiffs to ship flour to them at Philadelphia for sale in that market, the plaintiffs agreeing that they, the shippers, might draw on them for advances on the flour, to be reimbursed out of the proceeds of.the sales; that for more than a year they had b§en in.the habit of shipping flour to the plaintiffs under that arrangement and of negotiating drafts on the plaintiffs to the banks in that city, accompanied by bills of 'lading in form like those given' in evidence in this case; that the drafts, with the bills of lading attached, were sent forward by the banks, where the same were discounted, and that the same were paid by the plaintiffs; that the drawers of the drafts in every case notified the plaintiffs-of the same, and that the plaintiffs, as in this case, answered the letter of advice and promised to pay the amount. They also proved that the drawers of the drafts in this case informed their cashier that the same would- always be drawn upon property, and that the bills of lading would accompany the drafts, and that they had no knowledge or intimation that the bills of lading were not genuine. Instructions were'requested by the plaintiffs, that if the jury found that the respective bills of lading were not genuine, that they were entitled to reeover..the several amounts paid to the Commonwealth Bank, with interest; but the court refused to give the instruction as prayed, and instructed the jury that if they found the facts as shown by the defendants, the plaintiffs could not recover in the case, even though they should find that the several bills of lading were a forgery.

*189 Money paid under a mistake of facts, it is said, may be recovered back as having been paid without consideration, but the decisive answer to that suggestion, as applied to the case before the court, is.that money paid, as in. this case, by the acceptor of a bill of exchange to the payee-of the. same, or to a subsequent indorsee, in discharge of his legal obligation as such, is not a payment by mistake nojt without consideration, unless it be shown that the instrument was fraudulent in its inception, or that the consideration was illegal, or that the facts and circumstances which impeach the transaction, as between the acceptor and the draper, were known to the payee or subsequent indorsee at the time he bpcame the holder of the instrument. *

Such an instrument, as between the payee and the acceptor, imports a sufficient consideration, and in a suit by the 'former against the latter the defence of prior equities, as between the acceptor and the drawer, is not open unless it be shown that the payee, at the time he became the holder of the instrument, had knowledge of those facts and circumstances.

Attempt is made in argument to show .that the plaintiffs accepted the bills of exchange upon the faith and security of the bills of lading attached to the same at the time the bills of exchange were.discounted by the defendants. Suppose it was so, which is not satisfactorily proved, still it is not perceived that the concession, if made, would benefit the plaintiffs, as the bills of exchange are in the usual form and contain no reference whatever to-the bills of lading, and it is not pretended that the defendants had any knowledge or intimation that the bills of lading were not genuine, nor is it pretended that they .made any representation upon the subject to induce the plaintiffs to contract any such liability. They received the bills of exchange in the usual course of their business as^a bank of discount and paid the ful 1 amount of the net proceeds of the same to the drawers, and it is not *190 even suggested that any act of the defendants, except the indorsement of the bills of exchange in the usual course of their business, operated to the prejudice of the plaintiffs or prevented them from making an earlier discovery of the true character of the transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
79 U.S. 181, 20 L. Ed. 366, 12 Wall. 181, 1870 U.S. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-co-v-bank-of-milwaukee-scotus-1871.