Pratt v. . Foote

9 N.Y. 463
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 9 N.Y. 463 (Pratt v. . Foote) 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
Pratt v. . Foote, 9 N.Y. 463 (N.Y. 1854).

Opinion

Selden, J.

This case comes up upon a bill of exceptions. But it is insisted by the respondent’s counsel that no question *465 can be raised under the general exception taken to the final decision of the judge who tried the cause; that the exception should have been specific, pointing out the precise error alleged to have been committed.

The rule no doubt is, that where a party excepts upon the trial to the charge of a judge to the juiy, he is required to specify the particular portion of the charge which he claims to be erroneous, or his exception will be of no avail. Perhaps the same rule applies to exceptions taken to the decision of a judge who tries a cause without a jury, when that decision involves a variety of points ; although the reasons for the requirement in cases of trial by jury do not apply with equal force to such a case. But when the whole decision consists in drawing a single conclusion of law from a state of facts which is undisputed, the rule can have no application. There being but a single point to which the party can except, no specification is required.

Again, it is insisted that the error in this case, if any, was an error in fact, and that it is not therefore within the province of this court to correct it. This court, it is true, will not assume to correct the erroneous conclusions of the court below upon mere questions of fact, and if the error alleged to have been committed in this case be of that description, the appellant is without remedy. Where, however, there is no conflict of evidence and no dispute about the facts of' the case, the conclusion to be drawn from these facts is a question of law. In the pr'esent case I see no discrepancy in any portion of the testimony. There is a perfect concurrence between the witnesses on both t sides, in respect to every fact concerning which they mutually speak. If the court below has erred at all, therefore, its error is as to the legal effect of these" undisputed facts; and this, even if one has been committed, it is the duty of this court to correct.

The real question in this case is not, as I conceive, whether an agreement was proved between the plaintiff *466 and defendant, that the former would accept the check of Scudder in satisfaction of the defendant’s note; but it is whether what was undeniably said and done did not amount to an actual payment of the first note. There are two distinctions which it is indispensable to make in order to arrive at a just conclusion upon this point. In the first place it is necessary to discriminate between the acceptance by a creditor from his debtor of a new security or obligation for an old debt, and the acceptance by a bank of a check drawn upon itself in payment of a note. The transactions are entirely different. The former is the mere substitution of one executory agreement or obligation to pay for another. In such a case there is no extinguishment of the precedent debt, unless there is an express agreement to accept the new obligation or security as a satisfaction of the old. One executory agreement is not a satisfaction of another unless by virtue of some contract between the parties ; and this contract cannot be inferred from the mere acceptance of the new security, but' must be proved by evidence aliunde. But when a bank receives upon a debt a check drawn upon itself by one of its customers, and charges it in account, it thereby admits that it has funds of the drawer sufficient to meet the check; and the acceptance is per se an appropriation of those funds to the payment of the check. A transaction of the former kind operates only by way of accord and satisfaction, and must be pleaded as such; while one of the latter sort operates directly as a payment of the debt. It is evident from the reasoning of the supreme court in this case, that this distinction was not adverted to. All the cases cited by the learned justice who delivered the opinion of the court below, belong to the former of these classes.' They are cases of the substitution of one security or promise to pay for another ; where of course it became necessary to furnish evi-' dence, independent of the fact of acceptance, of an agreement to receive the new security in satisfaction of the debt. They are cases of accord and satisfaction.

*467 But in addition to this distinction, it is necessary further to discriminate between an executory agreement on the part of the bank to accept the check at a future time, and an actual acceptance of it in •jnrasentL If the defendant relied exclusively upon the agreement made at the time the check was deposited with the cashier, as binding the bank to accept the check, it would of course be incumbent upon him to show the conditions performed; that is, that the account of Scudder, or at least the check, had been made good. But this is not the strongest aspect of the defence. What was said and done at the time of leaving the check is not otherwise important than as showing that the check was deposited for the purpose of meeting the note, and that although the cashier was not then willing to accept it, it was left by the defendant in the expectation that the bank might thereafter conclude to receive it in payment. It cannot be doubted that the bank was at liberty at any time after the check was left to receive and apply it in payment of the note, without reference to the state of Scudder’s account. It had the consent and even request of the defendant to do so. On the 25th of November, five days after the note fell due, the bank decided to receive the check in payment of the note, and actually made the application by charging over the check and crediting the note as paid. But, says the justice before whom the case was tried, “ this did not extinguish the note, because the original agreement to receive the check in payment, made when it was deposited, was conditional, and the conditions were never fulfilled; and it does not appear that any subsequent agreement was ever made.”

It is evident that the learned justice had in Ms mind that class of cases, to which I have already referred, in which a new security is taken, which operates if at all upon the previous debt by way of accord and satisfaction. But tMs is a case of payment, and not of an agreement to receive something else in lieu of payment. If the check had been drawn *468 upon some other bank, as was the case in Olcott v. Rathbone (5 Wend., 490), cited in the court below, it would then have been necessary to show a distinct agreement to accept the check in satisfaction. But when the bank upon which a check is drawn accepts it upon its own debt, the same act of acceptance pays the check to the payee and the debt to the bank. Instead of paying the money upon the check, the bank cancels the debt. It is the same in effect as if the money was first paid to the payee of the check, and instantly repaid to the bank. There can be no necessity in such a case for showing an express agreement to accept the check in payment. The transaction is per se a payment. So far as any agreement is necessary it arises by implication from the acts done.

The force of the entries in the books of the bank is in no degree impaired by what took place when the note was left by the defendant. The cashier refused

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-foote-ny-1854.