Holbrook v. Allen

4 Fla. 87
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Fla. 87 (Holbrook v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Allen, 4 Fla. 87 (Fla. 1851).

Opinions

ANDERSON, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court, as follows:

This was an action of assumpsit, instituted in the Circuit Court for Leon County by B. F. Allen, against Holbrook and "Archer, Assignees of the mercantile firm of Lloyd & Flagg.

The following statement of facts was agreed upon at the, trial:—

Galphin, on the 18th of March, 1848, drew upon Lloyd & [90]*90Flagg, in favor of one Neeley, for the sum of $167 20. The draft was payable on the 21st of December, 1848. It was endorsed by Neeley to the plaintiff, Allen, and was accepted by Lloyd and Flagg, and duly charged to the debit of Galphin on their books. Lloyd & Flagg were the factors or merchants of Galphin, who is a planter, and were in the habit of accepting bills for him and making him advances,, receiving his crops when made. These were either purchased by them or sold by them on Galphin’s account, and the proceeds of the sale placed to his credit.

The bill in' question was presented to the acceptors about the time of its maturity, but was not paid. No notice of this non-payment was given to the drawer.

On the 10th of January, 1849, the acceptors failed and assigned all their property to the defendants in this suit, in trust, to pay their debts according to certain priorities specified in the deed.

On the 11th of January, 1849, Galphin sold to Holbrook, one of the assignees, the cotton which had been delivered prior to the assignment, and which was stored in the yard of Lloyd & Flagg. The proceeds of the sale were placed to the credit of Galphin on an account due by him to Lloyd & Flagg. At the time of the assignment Galphin was indebted to' his factors, (Lloyd & Flagg,) by note- $2,326 43, and a current open account of about $600, in which last sum was included the amount of the draft. The cotton was insufficient to pay the entire indebtedness of Galphin, and a new note was given by him to the assignees for the balance.

It was further agreed that one Footman had drawn on the same parties for $83 60, at the same time and under the same circumstances. The material facts are the same in this case as in the other, except that the proceeds of the-sale of Footman’s cotton exceeded the amount of his indebtedness to Lloyd & Flagg, and the excess was placed to [91]*91the credit -of Footman, by agreement between him and the -assignees.

These facts are specially set out by the plaintiff in two -several declarations, and he avers that by the respective payments made to the assignees by Galphin and Footman, they, the assignees, became indebted to the plaintiff in the amount of the two bills, with interest. The declaration -also contains the common money counts and, among them, the count for money had and received by the defendants, to '-and for the use of the plaintiff.

The defendants plead in each case non assumpsit. The ■Judge of the Court below was of opinion that the law was with the plaintiff, and judgment was rendered in his favor against the defendants for the sum of $278 12, with costs. From this judgment an appeal was taken to this Court.

The action for money had and received is a species of equitable action very much in favor with the courts. Its principles are liberal beyond those of any other known to the law tribunals. It lies in almost all cases when a person ■has received money which, in equity and good conscience, he ought to refund. The want of privity is no objection to this action, for the law will imply a contract from the equity of the claim. “ If the defendant,” says Lord Mansfield, “be “ under an obligation, from the ties of natural justice, to re- “ fund, the law implies a debt and gives this action, founded “ in the equity of the plaintiff’s case, quasi ex contractu, as “ the Roman law expresses it.” 2 J. Burrow, 1015.

The plaintiff, then, in the case before us, may assert his claim in the perfect confidence that the courts will afford him sufficient remedy against the defendants, if his demand against them is equitable and just.

The money which he seeks to recover is the amount paid by Galphin and Footman to the defendants, in consideration of the acceptance by Lloyd & Flagg of their respective bills of exchange, drawn in favor of Neele) and endorsed to the plaintiff

[92]*92In investigating the nature of Allen’s claim to this money it is necessary to consider, in connection with it, the claim which is in conflict with his. This conflicting claim is not that of Lloyd & Flagg, nor that of Galphin and Footman, nor that of the defendants to this suit. These last have no-personal interest in this controversy. They represent, so far as this case is concerned, the preferred creditors of Lloyd & Flagg, and it is the justice and equity of the claim of these creditors to the fund in question that is really in conflict with the claim of Allen. The relation in which they stand to the other creditors of Lloyd & Flagg, as entitled to priority of payment, is fully sanctioned by well established principles. A debtor in failing circumstances, in making an assignment of his property, has undoubtedly a right to give preference to one creditor over another. 2 Story’s Equity, 302.

To determine between the respective rights of these preferred creditors and Allen, it is necessary to refer to the circumstances under which the fund in dispute was paid to the defendants. Upon the acceptance of the two bills of exchange by Lloyd & Flagg, they became the primary-debtors to Allen, and Galphin and Footman became the sureties of the debt, being only secondarily liable. “ As be- “ tween the acceptor and the payee it is not a collateral, “ but an original and direct undertaking. The payee accepts “ the acceptor as his debtor, and he cannot resort to the “ drawer but upon a failure of the payment of the bill.— “ The engagement of the drawer, therefore, may more prop- “ erly be termed collateral.” 2 Wheaton, 387.

Allen became, then, with his own entire consent, the creditor of Lloyd & Flagg, though retaining for a while his right of ultimate recourse upon Galphin and Footman, as sureties for the payment of the debt. But even this relation ceased between them after the 21st of December, 1848. On that day the bills fell due but were not paid, and no no[93]*93tice of non-payment was given to the drawers. There does not seem to have existed any sufficient excuse for the omission of this notice, the acceptors being the factors of the drawers and receiving the crops when made, and the effect of the omission is a very familiar principle of commercial law. When a bill is duly presented for payment on the day it is due, and it be not paid, notice must be given to the drawer; otherwise he will be discharged from all liability, not only to pay the instrument itself, but also the debt in respect to which he became a party to it. Chitty on Bills, 465.

From this period, then, all privity between Allen and the drawers of the bills was at an end. By the consent of all parties, and by the operation of well known and well settled rules, Lloyd & Flagg became the sole debtors to Allen, and Galphin and Footman were indebted to Lloyd & Flagg, and to'no one else. While these parties stood in this relation to each other, the rights of the other creditors of Lloyd & Flagg intervened and became vested in the defendants, Holbrook and Archer, as trustees.

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4 Fla. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-allen-fla-1851.