Peoples' Bank of City of New York v. . Bogart

81 N.Y. 101, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 204
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 81 N.Y. 101 (Peoples' Bank of City of New York v. . Bogart) 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
Peoples' Bank of City of New York v. . Bogart, 81 N.Y. 101, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 204 (N.Y. 1880).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The plaintiff is a banking corporation, organized under the banking laws of this State, carrying on business in the city of New York. The defendants compose the firm of Orlando M. Bogart & Co., note-brokers, and dealers in commercial paper, also carrying on business in that city. The action is brought to recover of the defendants $34,453.83, the sum paid by the plaintiff on the purchase from the defendants on the 20tli, 21st and 22d days of July, 1875, of certain acceptances of Duncan, Sherman & Co., a banking and commission firm in the city of New York, of drafts drawn upon them by one Alexander Burgess, dated at New York, July 19, 1875, payable three months after date. Duncan, Sherman & Co. *104 failed on the 27th of July, and the plaintiff, on the day of the maturity of the paper, tendered it back to the defendants and demanded the repayment of the money paid on the purchase, claiming to rescind the contract for the fraud of the defendants. The fraud alleged is that the defendants concealed from the plaintiff the knowledge possessed by them in respect to the paper, viz.: that the drawer was a salaried clerk in the employment of Duncan, Sherman & Co., having no other business relations with the firm than as such clerk, and that the acceptances were purchased by the defendants directly from the acceptors.

The evidence shows that the defendants, for several years prior to the transaction in question, had been accustomed to purchase from Duncan, Sherman & Co., their acceptances of paper drawn by Burgess, and selling it in the market. The transactions of this character were frequent, and the plaintiff purchased large amounts of the paper from the defendants, and also from other brokers. The defendants, on the 19th of July, 1875, purchased of Duncan, Sherman & Co. $70,000 of this paper, paying therefor the nominal amount less their commissions, and interest to the maturity of the paper at the rate of five and one-half per cent per annum. In pursuance of their custom to notify their customers of what paper they had for sale, they immediately sent a written notice to the plaintiff to the effect that they had for sale, acceptances of Duncan, Sherman & Co., and stating the price they had paid, and the price for which they would sell the paper, which was a small advance upon their purchase. The plaintiff’s president came to the defendants’ office and purchased $15,000 of the paper. The next day he applied to purchase $15,000 more. The defendants having, in the meantime, sold the whole amount of the $70,000 of paper purchased on the 19th, purchased on the 20th, of' Duncan, Sherman & Co., $30,000 more of similar paper from which they supplied the additional $15,000, desired by the plaintiff, and on the succeeding day the plaintiff’s president purchased another acceptance of the same character, for $5,000, which he selected from a large number of securities of other parties which the defendants had for sale. *105 There was no representation of any kind made ky the defendants to the plaintiff on the sale of the acceptances beyond Avhat was implied in the offer to sell acceptances of Duncan, Sherman & Co. The plaintiff’s president made no inquiry as to their origin, character or consideration. It is- to be assumed that the defendants knew that the drafts were not draAvn against funds and that they were issued by Duncan, Sherman & Co., as a means of borroAving money (for that is the clear import of the transaction), and that the plaintiff had no knowledge of these circumstances. But there is no evidence Avhatever that the defendants had any knowledge or ' information that Duncan,-Sherman & Co. were in embarrassed pecuniary circumstances. The evidence is undisputed that for many years, and up to the day of their failure, the firm of Duncan, Sherman & Co. enjoyed the highest financial credit and standing. The confidence of the defendants in their solvency is indicated by their purchasing Duncan, Sherman & Co.’.s paper in large amounts on their own account, and although they purchased for sale and not for investment, yet they took the risk of their solvency, between the time of the purchase and the resale. The plaintiff, in purchasing the paper from the defendants, relied upon the credit of the acceptors as is manifest from the circumstances. The plaintiff’s president or officers did not know the drawer, and had purchased the same description of paper on previous occasions, and neither, at the time of the transaction in question nor before, did they make any inquiry to ascertain the drawer’s identity or responsibility, The plaintiff took the paper without the indorsement of the sellers, and made no inquiry and exacted no warranty. The plaintiff’s president Avas well acquainted with the commercial credit of Duncan, Sherman & Co., and upon that, and that alone, did he rely in purchasing the paper.

We are of opinion that the plaintiff failed to establish a cáse which would have justified the jury in finding that the defendants committed a fraud in the sale of the paper. The fact that the defendants offered to sell the paper, and did sell it as acceptances of Duncan, Sherman & Co. Avas not, we think, a *106 representation that it was business paper, drawn against funds- or credits of the drawer, in the hands of the drawees, or in the ordinary course of business transactions between them. The paper had all the essential requisites of accepted bills of exchange. The drawer and drawees were different parties, and upon the transfer of the paper by Duncan, Sherman & Co., both became liable to the holder upon distinct and independent contracts. Prima facie, every acceptance affords a presumption of funds of the drawer in the hands of the acceptor, and of an appropriation of these funds for the use of the drawer [Raborg v. Peyton, 2 Wheat. 385), and upon this presumption remedies are administered. The acceptance is evidence of money had, received by the acceptor for the use of the holder, and an action for money had and received will lie in his favor against the acceptor, and he cannot defeat the action by proof that he accepted without funds. Story, J., in the case cited, referring to the presumption that the bill is drawn against funds, says: “ The case may indeed be otherwise, and then the acceptor pays the debt of the drawer, but as between himself and the payee, it is not a collateral but an original and direct.undertaking.” Acceptances without funds, or accommodation acceptances, are certainly not unusual commercial transactions, and this must be well understood among commercial men. In re Hammond (6 De Gex, M. & G. 699) the Lord Justice Knight Brdoe says: “How I do not think that the mere circumstance of a man parting with a bill, without saying, this is an accommodation bill, amounts to an implied representation that it is not an accommodation bill; I am not aware of any sufficient reason or authority for so extensive a proposition.” The law on the sale of commercial paper implies a warranty on the part of the vendor of title and that the instrument is genuine [Littauer v. Goldman, 72 N. Y. 506; see, also, Lobdell v. Baker, 1 Met.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y. 101, 1880 N.Y. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-of-city-of-new-york-v-bogart-ny-1880.