McBride v. Farmers' Bank of Salem

12 N.Y. 450
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 N.Y. 450 (McBride v. Farmers' Bank of Salem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBride v. Farmers' Bank of Salem, 12 N.Y. 450 (N.Y. 1863).

Opinion

Balcom, J.

The most favorable view that can be taken of this case for the defendants, is that the notes against Paul & Pritchard, when received by the defendants, appeared by the indorsements thereon, to be the property of The Canal Bank of Cleveland, and that the defendants supposed the notes belonged to that bank when they received the money thereon and gave that bank credit therefor; and that the defendants had not previously drawn on the Canal Bank for the balance of $1,051.42 due them from that bank, because they expected to receive negotiable paper from such bank to collect and to credit the avails thereof to it, in satisfaction of such balance; and that the defendants did not afterwards draw on the Canal Bank for that balance, for the reason that they believed the notes against Paul & Pritchard were the property of that bank, and that they had the right so to treat them, and retain the money received thereon, and place it to the credit of such bank, in satisfaction of the aforesaid balance, and hold the residue as security for the payment of the draft of S. S. Stone, which the Canal Bank had indorsed and for whom the defendants had discounted the same. This view of the case must be adopted in determining it, for the reason that the court directed the jury to find for the plaintiffs; and the defendants have the right to say, if the jury had been permitted to exercise their own judgments upon the evidence, they might have found that this view of the case was the correct one.

It must be conceded that according to the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, in The Bank of the Me[446]*446tropolis v. The New England Bank (1 How., 284; S. C., 6 id., 212), the defendants acquired a lien on the notes against Paul . & Pritchard and the money received thereon, which enabled them to retain the same in satisfaction of the balance of account that the Oanal Bank owed them. But the rule laid down by the Federal Court in that case, has never been adopted in this State; and it is inconsistent with decisions of our courts which have been regarded as correct expositions of the law for more than forty years.

The decisions of our courts have been uniform from the time Coddington v. Bay (20 Johns., 637), was determined, that before the holder of a note can acquire a better title to it than the person had from whom he received it, he must pay a present valuable consideration therefor; and that receiving it in payment of, or as security for, an antecedent debt is not such a consideration. (Rosa v. Brotherson, 10 Wend., 86; Stalker v. McDonald, 6 Hill, 93; Youngs v. Lee, 2 Kern., 551.) And we must follow these decisions although they are in conflict with that of the Federal Court in Swift v. Tyson (16 Peters, 1).

The case is not altered materially by a. long course of dealing between the parties, by which the holder of the note has been in the habit of receiving payment of balances due him in notes, or because he has omitted to collect a balance due him, by reason of an expectation or promise of payment of it in notes, or in consequence of his omission to collect it after taking such a note in payment of it. He has not in either case parted with or paid any present valuable consideration for the note; and if he fails to collect it or hold it, he is in no worse situation legally, than he was before receiving it. He has only been disappointed by not obtaining payment of an antecedent debt; and that consideration is insufficient to prevent the true owner of the note from claiming the same or its avails, or the maker or indorser • from setting up a defence to it existing in his favor as against the payee of a former holder. The defendants never parted with anything or gave any credit, or relinquished any security, or assumed any burden or responsibility on the faith of the notes against Paul & [447]*447Pritchard, and in commercial language, were not bona fide holders thereof or of the money received thereon, for value.

According to the decisions of the courts of this State, Paul & Pritchard could have set up any defence to their notes, in the hands of the defendants, that existed in their favor as against the Canal Bank or the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank; and the defendants had no title- to the notes that enable them to retain the money they received thereon as against the true owner.

These views are not inconsistent with the opinions in the following cases. (Clark v. The Merchants' Bank, 2 Comst., 380; The Commercial Bank v. The Union Bank, 1 Kern., 203; Warner v. Lee, 2 Seld, 144; Scott v. The Ocean Bank, 23 N. Y., 289.) It may be remarked that the evidence would have justified the jury (if the case had been submitted to them to determine), in finding that the defendants had sufficient notice before they received the money on the notes or gave the Canal Bank credit therefor, to have put them upon inquiry as to whether that bank owned the notes; and thus brought the case clearly within the decision of Mr. Justice Hand in Van Amee v. The Bank of Troy (8 Barb., 312).

And I am satisfied the defendants were not justified by the facts in coming to the conclusion that the Canal Bank owned the notes at the time they received the money on them and gave that bank credit .therefor. But we cannot so hold by reason of the manner the cause was disposed of at the circuit.

The action must have been commenced by attachment, because the defendants are a foreign corporation. But we must presume the plaintiff is a resident of this State; for there is nothing in the case to show the contrary; and if he was not a resident of the State when the action was commenced, the defendants should have moved on affidavits and notice to set aside the proceedings in it, instead of answering the complaint.

The position taken by the defendants’ counsel that the plaintiff could not maintain the action because his assignors were a foreign corporation and could not commence an action [448]*448by attachment against the defendants in the Supreme Court of this State is clearly untenable. Besides this question was not within the issues tried; and it should have been raised by motion founded on affidavits.

The point raised by the defendants’ counsel, that the plaintiff should have demanded the money in question of the defendants before bringing the action, is answered by the fact that The Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank had demanded the notes of them, and they had refused to deliver them up, and had appropriated the money they received thereon, to their own use before that bank assigned their claim-for the money to the plaintiff, and he took that bank’s right of action for the money by the assignment, as well as its title to the money itself. (McKee v. Judd, 2 Kern., 622.) But no demand-of the money was necessary after they had appropriated it to their own use and had notice that it belonged to the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank. It then became the duty of the defendants to remit it to that bank, and as they did not do so thé plaintiff, as "assignee of that bank, rightfully brought this action. (Stacy v. Graham, 4 Kern., 492; 19 N. Y., 267.)

There is no other question in the case worthy of notice. The judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed, with costs.

Selden, J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.Y. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-farmers-bank-of-salem-ny-1863.