Holbrook v. Mix

1 E.D. Smith 154
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedApril 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 1 E.D. Smith 154 (Holbrook v. Mix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holbrook v. Mix, 1 E.D. Smith 154 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1851).

Opinion

By the Court. Woodruff, J.

The defendant in this case endorsed the note, upon which the action is brought, for the accommodation of the makers, by whom it was delivered to Moses Y. Beach. Mr. Beach, being indebted to the plaintiffs for premiums of insurance paid by them, enclosed the note to them, [157]*157in a letter, requesting them to “ pass the note to his credit, on account,” and adds, “as I understand there will be a disposition to contest it on the part of Mrs. Mix, I have not endorsed it over to you. If you wish, I will attend to the collection of it, on your account, on receiving the proper authority, by suit, if necessary. As the ground for contesting it will mainly be the bad character of the ship Apollo, it would be well for you to forward, in good season, the policies of insurance you have obtained upon her, and upon cargo sent by her, or some legal certificate of their having issued—probably nothing but the policies would be legal proof.”

The plaintiffs, thereupon, deducting the interest for the unexpired term of payment, gave Mr. Beach credit for the residue, sent him a receipt therefor, acknowledging the receipt of so much money, on account, and wrote to him further, “ we have passed to your credit $498 06, as cash, being the proceeds of the note of $500, less the interest off.” The plaintiffs’ letter shows that the insurance effected by the plaintiffs, for Beach, was upon the ship Apollo and her cargo, on her voyage to San Francisco, in California. The testimony of one of the plaintiffs is, that “ the proceeds of the note were received, and credited in part payment of the indebtedness of Mr. Beach to the plaintiffs, for insurance,” &c., or, as he otherwise expressed it, “the note was received in part payment of Moses Y. Beach’s indebtedness to us.”

Under these circumstances, the defendant proposed to show, that the note was made by the drawers, and endorsed by her to M. Y. Beach, for the passage of the makers from New York to San Francisco, in the ship Apollo, owned by him; and that the making and endorsement of the note were procured by the false and fraudulent representations of Beach, in regard to the qualities of the ship Apollo, in which the makers had taken passage ; and that, on the discovery of the falsity of such representation, the makers refused to go by the ship Apollo, but took passage in another vessel.

The jury, by their verdict, have found that the note was procured by the fraud and false representations alleged ; and, al[158]*158though the testimony, as it appeared to me on the trial, would have warranted the contrary result, we must, on this appeal, assume that fact to be well found.

The only question, then, before us for inquiry is, whether such fraud was under the circumstances above stated admissible in evidence to defeat the plaintiffs’ recovery.

The same question is also raised by the plaintiffs’ exception to the charge of the court, “ that the plaintiffs are not bona fide holders for value so as to be entitled to recover, if the party from whom they received it procured it by such a fraud as would constitute a good defence if he had brought the action in his own name.”

The plaintiffs received this note in payment of a debt due from Moses T. Beach; and if this court is bound to regard as binding authority the opinions of judges of the court of errors, and the late supreme court, it seems to me we ought not to hesitate in affirming this judgment.

Chief Justice Spencer, in Bay v. Coddington, 20 Johns. 651, says: “ I understand by usual course of trade, that" the holder takes them-in his business for a debt contracted at the time? That the cases in which the holder of a note was deemed a bona fide holder for value, were where the holding was for a present consideration paid. (See, also, Chancellor Kent, and the other judges in that case, in 20 Johns, and in 5 Johns.) Chief Justice Savage, in Rosa v. Brotherson, 10 Wend. 86, says, “ the holder of a note who receives it in payment of a precedent debt, or responsibility incurred, takes it subject to all the equities existing between the original parties.”

And again he says, in Payne v. Cutter, 13 Wend. 606, “the maker of a negotiable note may set up any defence, &c., unless the holder has advanced money or property, or incurred liability upon the credit of the note.” In the recent case of Stalker v. McDonald, 6 Hill, 96, this subject is discussed at great length, and it is there treated as the settled law of this state, that the holder of a note received in payment of a preexisting debt, who has not relinquished any security, upon the [159]*159faith of the transfer, is in no better condition than he from whom he received it.

This subject has been much discussed, and the opinions expressed by the judges of our courts have been much controverted. (See Swift v. Tysen, 16 Peters’ U. S. R. 15 ; Story on Promissory Notes, § 195, and notes ; Allaire v. Hartshorne, 1 Zabriskie N. J. R.) There is no pretence that in the present case the plaintiffs paid any thing of value for the note, and the only claim is, that by receiving it, unaccompanied by the endorsement of Beach, and placing it unqualifiedly to his credit, they lost all right of action against him; they canceled his indebtedness, and so they parted with security upon the faith of the note. This is a begging of the question. If by reason of the fraud of Beach, a recovery by the plaintiffs is defeated, the plaintiffs will have the same right to recover against Beach they had before the transfer. If he passed to them a note which was tainted with fraud, and induced them to pass it to his credit, concealing from them its defects, I cannot doubt that he is liable for the original debt to them. (Fulton Bank v. Phenix Bank, 1 Hall’s Supr. Ct. R. 574.)

Whatever views I might entertain of the question, whether a precedent debt is alone a sufficient consideration to protect a transferee, without notice, from any impeachment of a note for either want or failure of consideration or fraud therein, I feel bound by the decisions in this state to say, that where fraud is set up as the defence, such transferee is not a holder for value in such a sense as excludes proof of the fraud.

But if this question were doubtful, the circumstances under which this note was received, deprive the plaintiffs of all claim to be deemed bona fide holders for value, without notice of the fraud found by the jury.

The fraud complained of consisted in exaggerated representations of the good qualities and safety of the ship Apollo, made to induce the makers of the note to take passage therein to San Francisco, and give the note in question, endorsed by the defendant as further security, for the passage money.

[160]*160Had the plaintiffs, at the time they received the note in question, notice of this fraud ?

The following facts are proved by the oath of one of the plaintiffs, and may be taken against them as true :—-The plaintiffs knew that M. Y.

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Related

Brown v. Taber
5 Wend. 566 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
Coddington v. Bay
20 Johns. 637 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1822)

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1 E.D. Smith 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-v-mix-nyctcompl-1851.