Kirby v. Sisson
This text of 2 Wend. 550 (Kirby v. Sisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
On the argument of the case here, the plaintiff is met with the objection, not made on the trial, that he cannot recover because the note is lost. This objection, considering the stage of the suit in which it is made, cannot claim our favorable notice ; and if the counsel for the plaintiff had suggested, or we could conceive any way which it is probable that such objection, if taken on the trial, could have been obviated, we would not now regard it.
It is urged, in the first place, that the objection could have been removed by the giving security to the defendant to indemnify him against being called upon again for the same demand. The power of a court of law to provide in this manner against such a contingency is denied by Lord Eldon. (6 Vesey, jun., 812.) In the case of Pierson v. Hutchinson, (2 Campb. 211,) the plaintiff, before bringing his suit, offered the defendant unexceptionable indemnity, but that was not considered sufficient to remove the difficulty; and Lord Ellenborough observes in relation to it, that whether an indemnity be sufficient or insufficient, is a question of which a court of law cannot judge. The doctrine that a court of law can take such indemnity, is repudiated by him as contrary to the judicial system of England.
Again; it is said if the objection had been made known at the trial, the plaintiff might have induced the circuit judge to withdraw a juror, to the end that he might go to the court of [552]*552chancery, if that was his only remedy, or to make further search, or to obtain time so that accident might bring the note to light. As it respects making further search, and getting further time, the reply is, that sufficient time it is to be presumed was taken, and diligent search made by the plaintiff before he determined to go to trial; and the suggestion that an application might have been made to let the cause go off, in order to seek a remedy in chancery, is not a reason for this court to set aside the nonsuit. The plaintiff’s way to chancery is not obstructed by the nonsuit. This view of the case seems to admit that if the objection had been made at the trial, it would have prevailed ; but it supposes that the situation of the plaintiff might have been better than it will be if this court do not interfere with the nonsuit. Such, I apprehend, would not have been the case.
It is further urged that the plaintiff might have shewn that the note was lost after the suit was commenced, and during a lis pendens concerning it. If such was the fact, it would not have removed the objection. In the case" of Poole v. Smith, (1 Holt. 144,) the bill of exchange on which the suit was brought, was lost after the plaintiff had noticed his cause for trial, and the objection to his recovery on the ground of the non-production of the bill was sustained.
As this case stood at the trial, I do not see how the plaintiff could have disposed of the objection if it had been taken there ; and we are therefore not at liberty to disregard it when presented to us here.
It has been deliberately settled by this court, in the case of Rowley v. Ball, (3 Cowen, 303,) that an action cannot be sustained on a note payable to bearer which is lost. The objection therefore disposes of the motion for a new trial, and renders it unnecessary to consider the other points made in the case.
New trial denied.
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