Rhett v. Poe

43 U.S. 457, 11 L. Ed. 338, 2 How. 457, 1844 U.S. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 43 U.S. 457 (Rhett v. Poe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhett v. Poe, 43 U.S. 457, 11 L. Ed. 338, 2 How. 457, 1844 U.S. LEXIS 342 (1844).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

The instrument upon which this suit was instituted in the Circuit Court, was, as the aforegoing statement evinces, in form simply a common promissory note, signed by Benjamin R. Smith, made payable to William E. Haskell, endorsed by Haskell to Robert Barnwell Smith alias Robert Barnwell Rhett, and 'by this last individual to Robert F. Poe, cashier of the Bank of Augusta, the plaintiff in the action. Such being the nature of the instrument, and it appearing that the formalities of demand at its maturity, and notice to the endorsers have been regularly fulfilled by the holder, a question as to the justice of a recovery by the.latter could scarcely be suggested, if the rights and obligations of the several parties shall be viewed as dependent upon- their relation to the note itself considered as a distinct and separate transaction. Such, however, is not precisely the attitude of the parties to this controversy. It is in proof that there was held by the plaintiff below, beside this note, a draft for $8000 drawn by Timberlake on the 6th of May,j 1837, at sixty days, in favour of the. plaintiff) on Benjamin R. Smith, and' accepted by Smith;, and farther, that upon the note was written by the plaintiff’s agent, a memorandum in the following words: “ This note is collateral'security for the payment'of the annexed draft of D. Timberlake on B. R. Smith of $8000.” Upon the effect of both these instruments, as constituting .parts of one transaction, the questions propounded to the Circuit Court and brought hither for review have *479 arisen. The farther proofs contained in this record will be adverted to in the progress of this opinion, as notice of them shall become necessary to explain the instructions prayed for, and those given by the Circuit Court on the trial of this cause. The second series of instructions, embracing a more extended and .varied survey of the evidence than is contained in that preceding it, will be first considered. It is to the first, second, third, and fifth instructions of this second series that exceptions are taken. To the first proposition affirmed by the court in this first instruction, it is difficult to imagine any just ground of objection on the part of the defendant below, as that proposition concedes almost in terms the prayer of that defendant. To the second branch of this instruction it is not perceived that any valid objection can be sustained; for, although it might have been true that at the date of acceptance of Timberlake’s draft on Smith for $8000, the latter had been in possession of $10,000 placed in his hands by Timberlake, it would not follow under the circumstances proved, or under those assumed in the instruction, that Timberlake as the drawer of that draft was entitled to notice. If, as the instruction supposes, the acceptances for $21,500, which Smith had come under for Timber-lake, were drawn for the accommodation of the latter, upon the faith of funds to be furnished by him for their payment; that the $10,000 had been furnished by Timberlake in part for that purpose, but had been withdrawn by him for his own uses prior to the maturity of the drafffor $8000 — that he should have intercepted before the maturity of the draft all the funds against which he knew the acceptances of Smith were drawn, and that he the drawer, and Smith the acceptor, had, before such maturity, become notoriously insolvent, under such a predicament the law would not impose the requirement of notice to the drawer upon the holder. No useful or reasonable end could be answered by such a requisition. Where a drawer has no right to expect the payment of a bill by'the- acceptor, he has no claim to notice of non-payment. This is ruled in the following cases: Sharp v. Baily, 9 Barn. and Cress. 44; 4 Mann, and Ryl. 18; Bickerdike v. Bollman, 1 T. Rep. 405; Brown v. Meffey, 15 East, 221; Goodall v. Dolly, 1 T. Rep. 712; Legge v. Thorpe, 12 East, 171. If the $1000 said to have been in the hands of Smith were by the agreement or understanding between Smith and Timberlake • to be applied in payment of joint claims against them, and falling due before the draft for $8000, and had been so applied,, it had answered the sole object for which it had been raised, and could not in the *480 apprehension of these parties constitute a fund against which the draft of $8000 subsequently to become due was drawn. Those $10,000 were gone, were appropriated by these parties themselves. Then if, after this appropriation, there was, as this instruction assumes, an arrangement between Timberlake and Smith in respect to the hills drawn by Timberlake to the amount of $21,500, that he was to put Smith in funds sufficient to pay $13,500 of the amount just mentioned, which were to become payable before the $8000 draft, and that on Timberlake’s supplying those funds Smith was to pay the $8000 draft, and Timberlake failed to put Smith in funds to take up the $13,500^ and that the drafts for the same were protested, of which Timberlake had notice, he, Timberlake, could have no claim to notice of non-payment of the draft for $8000. There could be no reason for such a notice from the holder of the draft. Timberlake could have had no right to calculate on the payment of this draft; on the contrary, he was bound' to infer its dishonour. He knew that payment of the draft for $8000 was dependent upon a condition to be performed by himself, and he was obliged to know from the notice of the dishonour of all his bills, that he had not performed that condition, and had thereby intercepted the very funds from which the acceptances by Smith were to be met. He therefore quoad this draft had never any funds in the. hands of Smith, and consequently, never had any. claim to notice of non-payment from the holder.

The case of Claridge v. Dalton, in 4 Maule and Selw., is strongly illustrative of the principle here laid dowm. That was a case in which the drawer'had supplied the drawee with goods which were still not paid for. To this extent, then, the former- unquestionably had funds in the hands of the latter; but on the day of payment of the bill the credit upon which the goods were sold had not expired, and the court thereupon unanimously ruled that quoad the obligations of the parties arising upon these transactions, the drawer must be understood as having no effects in- the hands of the. drawee, and therefore, not entitled to notice. - The second instruction affirms in the first place, what must be admitted by all, and .what is not understood to be matter of contest here, viz.: that whenever a party to a bill or note is entitled to notice, such notice, if not given him in person, must be by a timely effort to convey it through the regular or usual and recognised channels of communication with the party, or his agent, or with his known residence or place of business. It is to so much of this instruction .a^ is applicable to What may amount to *481

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Williams v. District of Columbia
818 F. Supp. 2d 202 (District of Columbia, 2011)
Williams v. Johnson
District of Columbia, 2011
Decker v. Korth
219 F.2d 732 (Tenth Circuit, 1955)
Barger v. Healy
207 S.W. 499 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1918)
Iroquois Iron Co. v. Kruse
241 F. 433 (Eighth Circuit, 1917)
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Wilhoit
160 F. 440 (Eighth Circuit, 1908)
Mamerow v. National Lead Co.
69 N.E. 504 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)
Presbrey v. Thomas
1 App. D.C. 171 (D.C. Circuit, 1893)
Schuchardt v. Hall
36 Md. 590 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1872)
Adams v. Foley
4 Iowa 44 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1856)
Watson v. Tarpley
59 U.S. 517 (Supreme Court, 1856)
Fuller v. Hooper
69 Mass. 334 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1855)
Bashford v. Shaw
4 Ohio St. (N.S.) 264 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1854)
Administrator of Townsend v. Lorain Bank
2 Ohio St. (N.S.) 345 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1853)
Orear v. McDonald
9 Gill 350 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1850)
Minor v. Edwads & Price
12 Mo. 137 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1848)
Fear v. Dunlap
1 Greene 331 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1848)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 U.S. 457, 11 L. Ed. 338, 2 How. 457, 1844 U.S. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhett-v-poe-scotus-1844.