Nagel v. Lutz

41 A.D. 193, 58 N.Y.S. 816
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 A.D. 193 (Nagel v. Lutz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nagel v. Lutz, 41 A.D. 193, 58 N.Y.S. 816 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Hardin, P. J.:

The instrument set out in the complaint is a novelty. It contains two promissory notes, one of which is negotiable and was given for $750 ; the other is non-negotiable and was given for $750. The first runs to the plaintiff Nagel, and the second runs to, and is made payable to, the plaintiff Callahan. Plaintiffs have set out facts meagrely in respect to the indorsements made by the appellants, with a view of bringing the case within the doctrine laid down in Moore v. Cross (19 N. Y. 227), in which case it was held, viz.: “ One who, for the accommodation of the maker, indorses his note payable to the order of a third person, is liable thereon to such payee as indorser.”

In the case from which the quotation has been made, the note was payable to the order of James Moore, and the question in the case was whether Moore could recover against the indorsers; and it having been made to appear that the indorsers placed their names on [196]*196the note, with a view of giving credit to the maker with the pajee, that such liability could be enforced. In the course of the opinion it was said : “ It seems to me that, under the present system, if a right so to indorse appears, and it may be done even at the trial, that substantial justice is promoted by regarding it as done, and looking upon its actual doing as the merest matter of form.”

The doctrine laid down in that case has been approved in several subsequent cases. (Meyer v. Hibsher, 47 N. Y. 265; Coulter v. Richmond, 59 id. 478 ; McMullen v. Rafferty, 89 id. 458; New York Security & Trust Co. v. Storm, 81 Hun, 36; Montgomery v. Schenck, 82 id. 24; Richards v. Warring, 1 Keyes [N. Y.], 576; Witherow v. Slayback, 158 N. Y. 657.)

As already observed, the $750 note to Callahan was non-negotiable. However, the appellants, by placing their names upon the back of the note, if the facts as stated in the complaint are true, became liable upon it.

In Cromwell v. Hewitt (40 N. Y. 491) it was held : “ One who writes his name upon the back of a non-negotiable note may be held liable by the holder as guarantor or maker, and is not entitled to notice of demand or non-payment.”

In McMullen v. Rafferty (89 N. Y. 456) “ One H. executed and delivered to plaintiff a non-negotiable note, made payable on demand, upon the back of which the defendant had written his name. In an action thereon, held, that defendant did not, in a commercial sense, become an indorser, but could be treated by plaintiff either as maker or guarantor, and in either capacity the cause of action accrued against him immediately upon the execution of the note and without demand * * * .”

In the course of the opinion delivered in New York Security & Trust Co. v. Storm (81 Hun, 33) it was said : “As to notes not negotiable in form, it has been regarded, since the decision in Richards v. Warring (1 Keyes, 576) and Cromwell v. Hewitt (40 N. Y. 491), as authoritatively settled in this State that the payee or holder may charge the party who puts his name on the back of the note as either maker or guarantor, according to the actual intention. These cases substantially proceed upon the principle that, as to notes not negotiable, no contract of indorsement, in a legal sense, can be presumed from the position of a person’s name upon the back of the [197]*197notes, and as lie must have intended to hind himself in some capacity, the court will construe his contract to be that of either co-maker or guarantor of the maker.”

Plaintiffs’ complaint does not set out a joint cause of action in favor of the two plaintiffs. Each plaintiff has an independent, separate cause of action against the appellants, and has improperly united the several causes of action in a joint complaint.

In Murray v. Hay (1 Barb. Ch. 59) it was held: “As a general principle, several complainants, having distinct and independent claims to relief against a defendant, cannot join in a suit for the separate relief of each. Nor can a single complainant, having distinct and independent claims to relief against two or more defendants severally, join both or all of them in the same bill.”

In Hees v. Nellis (1 T. & C. 118) a bond had been executed for the payment of $400 to the heirs of J. L., and an action was brought by one of the heirs separately for one-eighth of the $400, and it was held that the plaintiff could maintain a separate suit on the bond, and need not join the other payees as parties.

In Mann v. Marsh (35 Barb. 68) it was held, viz.: “ When two or more plaintiffs unite in bringing a joint action, and the facts stated do not show a joint cause of action in them, a demurrer will lie.”

Near the close of the opinion of Allen, J., in that case, it was said: “ I am of the opinion, 1, that when two or more plaintiffs unite in bringing a joint action, and the facts stated do not show a joint cause of action in them, a demurrer will lie * *

In Hynes v. F. L. & T. Co. (31 N. Y. St. Repr. 136) it was held that two independent causes of action were improperly joined, as the complaint did not show any joint interest in the several plaintiffs. In the course of the opinion delivered in that case it was said : “ As a general principle, several plaintiffs having distinct and independent claims against a defendant cannot join in a suit for the separate relief of each.”

In Hufnagel v. Village of Mt. Vernon (49 Hun, 287) a joint action was brought to recover damages by a husband and wife. The damages accrued on one occasion when the husband owned the property, and on another occasion when the wife owned the property, and as the damages were sustained at different times and in favor [198]*198of different owners, it was held, a joint action would not lie in the name of the husband and wife.

In Gray v. Rothschild (48 Hun, 596; S. C. affd., 112 N. Y. 668) it appeared by the complaint that seven different firms, who had sold goods at different times to some of the defendants, united in an action to recover “ damages amounting to the aggregate sum owing to the several firms, joined as plaintiffs, for th'e sale of their goods and merchandise.” A demurrer was interposed on the ground of misjoinder of plaintiffs, and it was held that causes of action had been improperly united and the demurrer was sustained. When the case was decided in the Court of Appeals, in the course of the memorandum prepared by Danfoeth, J., he said : “ It may very well be that each plaintiff has a good cause of action against the defendants, but the plaintiffs have none common to all or jointly with each other. Each individual and each firm may have been defrauded by similar, although not the same representations, but the complaint shows that each has suffered separately, and its whole scope and meaning is inconsistent with the idea that the plaintiffs, or any two- or more of them, are jointly prejudiced. As the objection appears upon the face of the complaint, the demurrer was well taken.” _

In Nichols v. Drew (94 N. Y. 22), in the course of the opinion delivered, an objection was considered to the uniting of two causes of action, and it was said : t; Those arising on contract and affecting all the parties may be joined.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A.D. 193, 58 N.Y.S. 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nagel-v-lutz-nyappdiv-1899.