Riddle & Co. v. Mandeville & Jamesson

9 U.S. 322, 3 L. Ed. 114, 5 Cranch 322, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 442
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 9 U.S. 322 (Riddle & Co. v. Mandeville & Jamesson) 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
Riddle & Co. v. Mandeville & Jamesson, 9 U.S. 322, 3 L. Ed. 114, 5 Cranch 322, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 442 (1809).

Opinion

March 13.

Marshail, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the court.as follows:

This suit is brought by the holder of a promissory note to recover its amount from- a remote endorsor. In a suit between the same parties, this court had previously, determined that the plaintiff was without remedy at law; . It is now to be decided whether he is entitled t'o the aid of a có.urt of equity.

■. 3Lf, as vas stated by. the counsel' for. the defendants, the question, is, whether a court of cbaiicery *329 Would create contracts into which individuals had never entered, and decree the payment of money from person's who had never undertaken to pay it, the time of this court has been very much misap- ’ plied indeed in attending to the laborious discussion of this cause. The court would, at once, have disclaimed such a power, and have terminated-so extraordinary a controversy.

But the real, questions in the case ate understood to be, whether the plaintiffs, as endorsees of a promissory note* have a right, under the laws of Virginia, to receive its amount from the endorsor on the insolvency of the maker; whether the defendants, as the original endorsors of the note, are ultimately responsible for it; and whether equity will decree the payment to be immediately made, by the person ultimately responsible, to the person who'is actually entitled to receive the money.

This note came to the hands of M‘Clenachan, endorsed in blank by Mandeville and Jamesson. M‘Clenachan had a right to fill up the endorsement, to himself, and he has done so.' fhe law, as understood in Virginia, immediately implied an assumpsit fróm Mandeville and Jamesson to M‘Clenachan to pay him the amount of the note, if he should use due diligence, and should be unable to obtain payment from the maker. M‘Clenachan endorsed this note to -the plaintiffs, and, by so doing, became liable to them in like manner as Mandeville and Jambsson were liable to him.

The maker having proved insolvent, , the plaintiffs have.a legal right to claim payment from M‘Clenachan, and, on making that payment, M'Clenachan would be reinvested with all his original, rights in the note, and would be entitled to demand-payment from Mandeville and Jamesson.

If there were twenty successive endorsors of a note, this circuitous course might be pursued, and, *330 by the time the ultimate endorsor was reached, the value of the note woüld be expended in the pursuit. This circumstance alone would .afford a strong reason for enabling .the holder to bring all the endorsors into that court which -could, in a single decree, put an end to litigation. No principle adverse to such a proceeding is perceived. Its analogy to the familiar cáse pf a suit in chancery by a creditor against the legatees of his debtor is not very remote. If an executor shall have distributed the estate of his testator, the creditor ha • an action at law against him, and he has his reme - dy against ,the. legatees. 1'he creditor has po ac - tion at law against the legatees; Yet it has never been understood that the creditor is . compelled to resort to his legal remedy. He may bring-the executor and legatees both before a court of chancery, which court will decree immediate payment from those who are ultimately bound. If the executor and his'securities should be insolvent, só that a suit at law must be unproductive, the. creditor would have no other remedy than in equity, and his right to the aid of that court could not he questioned.

If doubts of his right to sue in chancery could be entertained while the executor was solvent, none can exist after he had become insolvent. Yet the' creditor would have no legal claim on the legatees, and- could maintain no action at law against them. • The right of the executor, however, may, in a court of equity, be asserted by the-creditor, and,. Ss the legatees would be ultimately responsible for his debt, equity will make them immediately responsible.

In the present case, as in that which has' been stated, the insolvency of M‘Clenachan furnishes strong additional motives for coming into a court . of chaPcery. Mandeville and Jamesson are ultimately bound for this money, but the remedy, at law is defeated, by the bankruptcy of an- intermediate endorsor. It is only a court of equity which' can afford á remedy.

*331 This subject may and ought to be contemplated in still anothér point of view. It has been repeatedly observed that the action against the endprsor is not given by statute. The contract on which the suit is maintained is not expressed, but is implied from the endorsement itself, unexplained and unaccompanied by any additional testimony.. Such a contract must, of necessity, conform to the general understanding of the transaction, peneral opinion certainly attaches credit to a note, the maker of which is doubtful, in proportion to the credit of the endorsors, and two or more good endorsors are deemed superior io one. But if the last endorsor alone can be made responsible to the holder, theh the preceding names are of no importance, and would add nothing to the credit of the note. But this general opinion is founded, on the general understanding of the nature of thé contract. The endorsor is understood to pass to the endorsee' every right founded on the note which he himself possesses. Among these is his right’ against the prior endorsor. This right is founded on an implied contract, which is not,' bylaw, assignable. Yet if it is capable of being transferred in equity, it vests, as an equitable interest, in the holder of the note. No reason is perceived why such an interest should not, as well, as an interest in any other chose in action, be transferible in .equity. And if it be so transferable, equity will of course afford a remedy. The defendant sustains no injury, for he may defend himself in equity against the holder as effectually as he could defend himself against his immediate assignee in a suit at law.

The case put, of the sale and delivery of a per-' sonal thing, is not thought to be analogous to this. The purchaser of a personal thing does not, at the time of the contract, look beyond the vendor. He does not trace the title. It passes by. delivery. But-suppose the vendor held it by á bill of salé containing a warranty of tide, and should assign that bill to his vendee; is it clear that, on. loss of the property for delect of title, no recourse could *332 not prepared' to answer this question in the affirmative..

It is contended that the endorsee of the nóte holds it subject to every equity to which it was liable-in the hands of the endorsor.

If this'be ■ admitted, it is not perceived that the admission, would,, in any mánner, affect this case;

It is also contended that the plaintiff can only recover what he actually paid.

•Without indicating any opinion on this point, the couft considers it as very clear that the ¡endorsement •fe prima facie evidence of having endorsed for full value, and it is incumbent on the defendant to show the real consideration, if it was an inadequate one.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 U.S. 322, 3 L. Ed. 114, 5 Cranch 322, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riddle-co-v-mandeville-jamesson-scotus-1809.