Pollard v. Bowen

57 Ind. 232
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 57 Ind. 232 (Pollard v. Bowen) 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
Pollard v. Bowen, 57 Ind. 232 (Ind. 1877).

Opinion

Yiblack, J.

This action was originally brought by Robert M. Barkley, in Carroll County, and was based on a check drawn by the appellee on the banking house of Messrs. Lockwood & Company, of New York, requesting them to pay to the order of the said Robert M. Barkley the sum of eleven hundred and seventy-two dollars and fifty cents. The venue was first changed to Cass County and afterward, by agreement, from that county to the Tippecanoe Circuit Court.

During the pendency of the action, the death of the said Barkley was suggested, and the appellant, as his administrator, was substituted as plaintiff*.

The complaint was in two paragraphs:

The first paragraph averred due presentment of the check to the drawees for payment, and its dishonor.

The check constituted a part of the complaint, and appears to have been dated at Delphi, Indiana, May 27th, 1869, and to have had no time of payment specified in it.

The second paragraph contained the same averments as the first, with the following additional ones: “And the plaintiff further avers and charges, that, at the time ’ said defendant made and executed the said draft to the said plaintiff', there was a verbal agreement made by and between the said plaintiff and defendant, which was as follows : That, at the time the said defendant executed the said draft, he asked the plaintiff' if he desired or wished to use the draft immediately; that the plaintiff told the defendant -that he would not want to use the draft until fall, and perhaps not then, as he was going out West tO' purchase land, and when he found land to suit him he. [234]*234would then want to use the draft; that at the time it was agreed to and understood by and between the said plaintiff and defendant, that the said plaintiff should not present said draft immediately to the said Lockwood & Company, but that he should hold on to the same until Fall, or at such time as such plaintiff should desire to use the said draft; as he, the said defendant, would like to have the use of said money until the plaintiff wished to draw the same. That the plaintiff, acting under and by virtue of said agreement and understanding so made with said defendant, did not present said draft until he desired to use' said money, and until he purchased said lands, which was in the month of January, 1870, andatthat time he presented said draft to the said banking house of Lockwood & Company, where the same was protested for non-payment, of which .the said defendant was duly notified.”

Demurrers were sustained to both paragraphs of the complaint, and judgment on demurrer was rendered for the appellee.

The sufficiency of the complaint, therefore, is the only question presented for our consideration.

The first paragraph does not state when the check was presented for payment, and, hence, no question of diligence as to the time of its presentation arises in the consideration of that paragraph. It is true, the protest for nonpayment, in which is contained a statement when the check was presented, is filed with the complaint, and referred to as a part of it, but it is, nevertheless, not properly a part of the record in the cause, and the matters stated in it can not be used to supply omissions in the averments of the complaint. The action is not founded on the protest, and it is not a written instrument or a copy of one which has to be filed with the complaint, within the meaning of section 78 of our code of civil procedure. See Wilson v. Vance, 55 Ind. 584.

A protest of a check is not necessary in case of its non[235]*235payment, but if it were necessary it would only afford evidence of tbe matters properly embraced within it, and would not constitute the foundation of the action. A protest, in other words, is only to be used as evidence on the trial concerning the instrument in writing to which it relates, and not as a written instrument constituting the basis of the action.

The first paragraph does not allege that the appellee had notice of the non-payment of the check, nor does it show any excuse for not having given him such notice. That omission we regard as fatal to the sufficiency of the paragraph.

It has been decided by this court, that in an action by the holder of a check against the drawer, when'payment has been refused, the complaint must show that notice was given of the non-payment of the cheeky or aver a legal excuse for not giving such notice. See Griffin v. Kemp, 46 Ind. 172.

The second paragraph of the complaint presents a question of much greater difficulty, and as to which there seems to be considerable conflict between many of the authorities respectively cited by the parties, and otherwise brought to our attention. Notice of the non-payment of the check is averred, and a certain alleged cotemporaneous and verbal agreement between the parties is set up as an excuse for the long delay in presenting the check for payment. Whether the matters thus, set up as an excuse for that delay are sufficient to justify and excuse it, is the real question presented by the second paragraph.

The same rule applies substantially to checks as doés to hills of exchange and indorsed promissory notes, as to the diligence to be used in presenting them for payment. They must all be presented within a reasonable time, to charge the drawer or indorser, and what is reasonable time depends to a very great extent upon the circumstances of each particular case, and the relations [236]*236which the parties sustain to each other. See Edwards Bills & Prom. Notes, pages 57, 389, 390 and 391.

In discussing the rule, however, above laid down, which: we regard as one well sustained by authority as a general rule, Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (see vol. 1,, p. 449,) says: “ Some of the text writers treat of bills,, promissory notes, bankers’ cash notes, and checks, as falling within one rule; and a failure to discriminate between these various classes of commercial paper has confused the decisions upon the subject, and left them in a state of contrariety and antagonism which it is impossible to-reconcile.”

In Seaver v. Lincoln, 21 Pick. 267, Shaw, C. J., said, in respect to the time within which it is necessary to present for payment a note payable -on demand, in order to> charge an indorser, that “ It depends upon so many circumstances to determine what is a reasonable time in a particular case, that one decision goes but little way in establishing a precedent for another.”

Notwithstanding this contrariety and antagonism between many of the text writers, and notwithstanding the' conflicting nature of a large class of reported cases on the subject, certain general rules, as to what constitutes due diligence in presenting the various classes of commercial paper for payment, have been laid down 'and are now generally recognized. These rules are usually of easy application, and it is only in exceptional cases that the greatest difficulty is experienced.

In most cases, this question of due diligence is one of mixed law and fact, and when the facts are ascertained it is for the court to declare the law upon them. When it arises on a demurrer to a pleading, it is for the court to apply the law to the facts as they are alleged.

The facts, as they are presented in the paragraph before us, make the case an exceptional one, and as such we must consider and decide upon it.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Ind. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollard-v-bowen-ind-1877.