Price v. . Sharp

24 N.C. 416
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 N.C. 416 (Price v. . Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. . Sharp, 24 N.C. 416 (N.C. 1842).

Opinion

This was an action of assumpsit. The suit commenced by original attachment, returnable to January Term, 1842, of Caswell County Court, and the following facts were agreed upon by the counsel:

Peebles, Hall Co., of Petersburg, Virginia, on 10 July, 1841, drew two bills in favor of Francis E. Rives on the defendant, Sharp, who lived in Danville, Virginia, one payable at ninety days, for the sum of $783.85, the other payable at four months, for the sum of $787.71. The bills were presented after maturity, and accepted by the defendant. At maturity the bills were presented for payment and dishonored. Peebles, Hall Co., after protest for nonpayment, took up the bills and paid off the same to Rives. The defendant had property, both real and personal, in North Carolina, which Peebles, Hall Co., wished to subject to attachment, and, in order to do so, on 10 December, 1841, indorsed the (418) bills, without consideration to the plaintiff, who was a citizen of Caswell County, North Carolina, and who, immediately upon the assignment to him, sued out the attachment which is the original process in the case. The defendant replevied the property attached, and pleaded to the action the general issue, etc. It was further agreed that the defendant had been for some years before the suing out of the attachment a citizen of Virginia, where he resided when the attachment was taken out, and that he had not left this State secretly, fraudulently, or with a design to avoid the ordinary process of law. Upon this statement of facts, his Honor was of opinion that the law was with the plaintiff, and so instructed the jury, who returned a verdict for the plaintiff. A new trial having been moved for and refused, and judgment rendered according to the verdict, the defendant appealed. This is an action of assumpsit on two bills of exchange by the plaintiff as an indorser of Peebles, Hall Co., against the acceptor. The bills were drawn on 10 July, 1841, by Peebles, Hall Co., of Petersburg, in Virginia, in favor of F. E. Rives, on the defendant Sharp, of Danville, in Virginia, who accepted them, but failed to pay them when they fell due. The one was for $783.85 at ninety days, and the other for $787.71 at four months from date. Upon the failure of Sharp, the payee, Rives, returned the bills to the drawers, Peebles, Hall Co., for payment, and they accordingly paid him and took up the bills. On 10 December, 1841, Peebles, Hall Co. indorsed the bills to the present plaintiff, who resides in Caswell in this State, and immediately commenced this action by original attachment levied on the estate of the defendant situate in Caswell. The indorsement from Peebles, Hall Co. to the plaintiff was without consideration, and was made for the purpose of enabling Price to take out an attachment in his name for the (419) benefit of Peebles, Hall Co., and the present action was accordingly brought for their use. Upon the return of the attachment the defendant gave bail, and appeared and pleaded, first, nonassumpsit, and, secondly, by way of special plea in bar, the facts stated respecting the indorsement and the purpose of it. Upon the trial the facts were agreed upon as here stated, and upon them his Honor was of opinion for the plaintiff, and so instructed the jury, who found a verdict accordingly, and from the judgment the defendant appealed.

For the defendant it has been insisted that the plaintiff cannot maintain this action, commenced by original attachment, because it is not brought for his own benefit, but in evasion and fraud of the act of 1777, for that of Peebles, Hall Co., who could not have brought it in their own names, according to Broghill v. Welborn, 15 N.C. 511. Whether this objection be valid or not, if taken in apt time, it is now necessary to say; for, if good, it comes too late. Undoubtedly the holder of a bill may indorse it to another, in trust for himself, or to collect as his agent, and the indorsee may have an action against the acceptor of the bill. The objection is not, therefore, that this plaintiff could not maintain assumpsit on these bills, but that he cannot commence that action by attachment, but should have done it by capias. The imputed defect lies in the writ, and the answer is obvious that, by accepting the declaration and pleading to it, the party waives all defects in the process. This point should have been raised by a plea in abatement or in some other method before pleading in bar.

But in the opinion of the Court there is another objection to the plaintiff's recovery which has more force. It is that the bills could not be put into circulation by the indorsement of Peebles, Hall Co., after those persons had paid them to Rives. If Rives' name had been put on the *Page 297 bills, the case of Beck v. Robley, 1 H. Bl., 89, is a direct authority against this action. In that case a bill was drawn by Brown on Robley, payable to Hodgson or order. Hodgson put his name on the bill, and, not being paid when due, Hodgson, without striking out his blank indorsement, returned the bill to Brown, and he took it up, and afterwards passed it to Beck, who brought the action. It was held that when (420) the bill came back unpaid, and was taken up from the payee by the drawer, it ceased to be a bill; for it could not then be negotiated by him without making Hodgson liable thereon, for which there was no color. Between that case and the present there is but one point of difference, and that but increases the difficulties in the plaintiff's way. Hodgson's name was on the bill when he returned it to Brown; whereas it does not appear that Rives ever put his name on these bills, and it cannot be assumed that he did. But, waiving that for the present, the case cited is conclusive for the defendant, even if Rives' indorsement were on the bills. The counsel for the plaintiff, however, opposes to that case the more recent one of Callow v. Lawrence, 3 Maule and Selwyn, 95, and the language there used by Lord Ellenborough, "That a bill of exchange is negotiable ad infinitum until it has been paid by or discharged in behalf of the acceptor; and that if the drawer has paid the bill, it seems he may sue the acceptor on the bill; and if, instead of suing the acceptor, he put it into circulation upon his own indorsement only, it does not prejudice any of the other parties who may have indorsed the bill, that the holder should be at liberty to sue the acceptor." But it seems to us that neither the case itself nor the doctrine here quoted, when correctly understood, shakes the principle of Beck v. Robley, but rather sustains it. No one can deny that a bill is negotiable indefinitely until payment. But the question is, By whom may it be negotiated? Why, by the payee or by any person entitled under his indorsement; and the acceptor will be as much bound to pay it to such indorse, however remote, as he was to the payee himself, before he indorsed it. But it does not follow that the drawer of a bill, who takes it up, after dishonor, from the payee, is to be considered the indorsee of the payee. Far from it; for, instead of claiming from the payee under him, he was, in truth liable on it to the payee, in default of the acceptor, and in discharge of that liability took it up. Then he could not look to the payee to make the bill good to him, and by consequence, he could not by his subsequent indorsement give to his indorser the right to recourse against the payee. But as that would be the necessary effect of such (421) indorsement, if allowed at all, it resulted that in such a case the law would not allow the drawer again to put the bills into circulation.

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20 N.C. 488 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1838)

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.C. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-sharp-nc-1842.