Palmer v. Whitney

21 Ind. 58
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 Ind. 58 (Palmer v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Whitney, 21 Ind. 58 (Ind. 1863).

Opinion

Davison, J.

The appellee, who was the plaintiff, sued Geo. W. Palmer and Thos. J. Richards, alleging in the complaint that the defendant, Palmer, on the 10th of August, 1857, at Bartholomew county, drew a bill of exchange on Burris Moore, and thereby required him, three months after the date thereof, to pay to the order of J. Lakin, at the Bank [59]*59of Louisville, in the State of Kentucky, 1,000 dollars, value received; that on the day of the date of the bill Moore, the drawee, accepted it, and Lakin, the payee thereof, indorsed and delivered the same to the defendant, Richards, who after-wards, on the same day, indorsed and delivered it to said Lakin, and that Lakin afterwards, and before the maturity of the bill, for value received, indorsed it to the plaintiff', who, when the bill matured, presented it for payment at the place where payable, and demanded payment, but payment thereof was refused, and the same was protested for non-payment.' It is averred that on or about the time of the indorsement to Richards, he resided in said county, and his post office address then, or about that time, was at Columbus, in said county; that Lakin, when he sold and indorsed the bill to the plaintiff', was inquired of, by the plaintiff, where the drawer and indorsers resided, and he, Lakin, in answer to that inquiry, then and there stated that Richards resided in Bartholomew county, and his post office address was Columbus, and that plaintiff, upon the presentation and non-payment of the bill, instituted further inquiry as to the residence and post office address of Richards, and was told by persons who knew him, and where he resided, shortly before that time,that he resided in said county, and that Columbus was his post office address; and further, it is averred that plaintiff, on the 14th of November, 1857, the day on which he received notice of said protest, put in the post office at Madison, Indiana, post paid, notices to Palmer and Richards, severally, of the presentment, non-payment and protest aforesaid, and that he did not learn that Richards had removed from said county until after the commencement of this suit. And the plaintiff, in fact, says that the sum specified in the bill, with interest, &c., is due and unpaid; wherefore, &c. Richards, one of the defendants, demurred to the complaint; but his demurrer was overruled, and he excepted. The defendants answered [60]*60by a denial. The Court tried the issues and found for the plaintiff. Motion for a new trial denied, and judgment.

As has been seen, LaJcin, the payee, indorsed the bill to the defendant, Richards, who indorsed it back to Lakin, and he indorsed it to the plaintiff; hence it is argued that Lakin, having become the indorsee of Richards, was placed in his original position of payee and first indorser, and could not, therefore, have held Richards liable on his indorsement; and, that being the case, Richards is not liable to the plaintiff', because the plaintiff, as indorsee of the bill could have no right of action against Richards, not held by Lakin when he indorsed it. "We are referred to Chitty on Bills, p. 442, where it is said that, “ unless under circumstances which must be specially stated on the record, no action can be maintained on a bill against a person who became a party subsequently to the holder, or plaintiff, for if it were otherwise the defendant in such action might, as indorser, deriving title from the plaintiff, be entitled to recover back again in another action against the plaintiff, the identical sum which the plaintiff had previously recovered from him, which would introduce a circuity of action; and, therefore, where A having brought suit .against B, on a promissory note made by C to A, and indorsed by him to B, and by B again indorsed to A, and having obtained a verdict, the judgment was arrested.” See, also, Bishop v. Hayward, 1 T. R. 470, and Mainwaring v. Newman, 2 Bos. and Pul. 125. These authorities are referred to by Judge Story in his treatise on bills, &c., with seeming approval. Story on Bills of Exchange, sec. 218. In this case the bill, with its indorsements, was filed with the pleading; they are in the usual form, and it must be conceded that, in the complaint, there is nothing specifically stated, which, in any degree, tends to show that the indorsements were made, under any circumstances, other than those which ordinarily attend such transactions. If, then, the authorities to which we have [61]*61been referred express the law, and we think they do, it is very clear that Lakin, when he indorsed to the plaintiff, could not have maintained an action against Richards as his indorser. Can the plaintiff in this action recover against Richards as a party to the bill? The appellee contends that, in view of the alleged facts, it must be presumed that the indorsement of Richards was made by him to enable Lakin to raise the money by the negotiation of the bill, and that he was, therefore, a mere accommodation indccser, and as such, though he was not responsible to Lakin, is liable to the plaintiff. There are authorities in support of that position. Thus, in Mauldin v. Branch Bank, 2 Ala. 502, it was decided that, “if a prior indorser offer a note to a bank to be discounted, on his own account, the transaction imports upon its face that the subsequent indorsement was made for the accommodation of the prior indorser.” See, also, Wallace v. Branch, 1 Ala. 565. These decisions are cited and relied on in Runyon v. Reed, 6 Am. Law Reg. p. 302, which was an action against Lsaac Reed, upon a promissory note made by Osmon Reed in favor of James Whetham, who indorsed it to the defendant, who indorsed to the maker, and he, before the maturity of the note, indorsed it to Runyon, the plaintiff Held, that the indorsement of the maker was, when standing unexplained, evidence that the indorsements prior to his name were for his accommodation. The principle involved in the decisions to which we have just referred evidently applies to the case at bar, and we are inclined to follow them. In the absence of contrary proof, it must be presumed that Richards indorsed the bill for the mere purpose of enabling Lakin to raise the money by its negotiation. This conclusion seems to be consistent with the present mode of making and indorsing a bill of exchange, intended to be discounted at a bank, for the use of one of its parties, and the result is, we must, in view of the ease made by the complaint, regard the defendant an indorser [62]*62for the accommodation of Lakin, and as such liable to the plaintiff.

The next question to settle is, was the the notice of protest sufficient? The record does not, as required by rule 30 of this Court, purport to contain “all the evidence given in the cause.” But the evidence before us, so far as it relates to the notice, proves, in effect, the same facts alleged in the complaint. The facts proved areas follows: Richards for many years resided in Bartholomew county, but some five months prior to the time he indorsed the bill removed from that county to Tipton

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Bluebook (online)
21 Ind. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-whitney-ind-1863.