Roxborough v. Messick

6 Ohio St. (N.S.) 448
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1856
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio St. (N.S.) 448 (Roxborough v. Messick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roxborough v. Messick, 6 Ohio St. (N.S.) 448 (Ohio 1856).

Opinion

*J. R. Swan, J.

The question made in this case is, whether, if a debtor transfers to his creditor a negotiable note before due, as collatei’al security to a pre-existing debt, without any consideration other than the mere fact of a prior indebtedness (for all other consideration, in the case before us, is repelled by the testimony, particularly the testimony of the plaintiffs), the creditor holds it dichargod from all defenses and equities existing between the maker and debtor.

There are many rules of law which, in their application to particular cases, do great injustice, but which are inexorably applied, because the general benefits derived from them can only be obtained by uniform adherence to them ; and the individual cases of hardship are altogether outweighed by the public benefits and public confidence derived from uniform apiffication. Among these rules [452]*452.are some relating to negotiable paper. The necessities of the commercial world require that bills of exchange and promissory notes .should possess some of the attributes of money and exchangeable value; and to clothe them with these attributes, and to give parties confidence in their reception, it is necessary to protect them in the hands of a holder for value, from defenses growing out of the dealings of the prior parties. The rule frequently operates harshly and unjustly, and, being founded on commercial policy, is •therefore applicable only where the interests of trade require it. Hence the rule, tljatif the holder has not taken the paper for value, or in the usual course of trade, or in ignorance of the defects, he .stands in no better situation than the indorser from whom he received it. Commercial policy does not require such a holder to be protected against the defenses of the prior parties. But if the paper has been transferred before due, in the usual course of trade, for value, to a person who had no notice of such defects, commercial •^policy requires that such bona fide holder shall hold the paper [452 ■discharged from such infirmities. The exceptions above stated are as fundamental as the rule itself. The question now before us, then, is whether the plaintiffs in this case took the paper for value in the usual .course of trade.

The weight of authority seems to settle the principle, that where .a negotiable instrument of a third person is transferred before due, in payment of a pre-existing debt, and is bona fide received by the creditor, without notice, the defense existing as between the prior parties, can not be set up against such holder. Bond v. Central Bank, 2 Kelley (Ga.), 106; Valette v. Mason et al., 1 Ind. (Smith,) 89; Homes et al. v. Smythe, 16 Maine, 177; Williams v. Little, 11 N. H. 66; Reddick v. Jones et al., 6 Iredell, 107; Swift v. Tyson, 16 Pet. 1; Brush v. Scribner, 11 Conn. 388, where the English cases are reviewed; Carlisle v. Wishart, 11 Ohio, 172. The payment of a debt is as much a commercial transaction as a sale of goods ; and if. one parts with his goods or money upon the faith of a transfer of negotiable paper as payment, and is protected from equities, thei’e seems to be an equally good reason for holding, that if one, giving credit to such paper, parts with and discharges an obligation to pay money, he has, in contemplation of law, parted with property of as high a character as goods. After receiving negotiable paper in payment of a pre-existing debt, the creditor can not maintain an action, upon the debt he has thus discharged, merely because the [453, 454]*453, 454maker of the negotiable paper he has received in payment might have had some defense against it in the hands of the payee, from -whom he received it. For the creditor, having parted with a right, there is a sufficient consideration; and something more is-necessary, to enable him to recover his debt which he has sur453] rendered. He *may be restored to his right to recover the-amount of his debt, if the maker afterward avoids the note or paper in his hands, by a defense which arose prior to the indorsement. But the creditor, having thus parted with his property, is justly remitted to his original right to recover his deb¿, in like manner, and to the like extent, as where the negotiable paper-of a third person is taken for goods sold, upon failure afterward to recover upon the paper transferred in payment of the goods. There is, therefore, no substantial difference between the consideration for the transfer of negotiable paper in payment of a precedent.debt, or in payment of goods sold at the time of such transfer. Such was the principle decided in Swift v. Tyson; 16 Pet. 1, and in relation to which Chancellor Kent, in note to 3 Com. 81 (8 ed. 97, note c), says he is inclined to concur as the plainer and better doctrine.

It will be perceived that the ground upon which the holder of negotiable paper, taken in payment of a precedent debt, is held to 'be a holder for value, is, that he receives the paper as a payment of the original debt, whereby the original debt is, at least for the time being, discharged. The creditor is, in effect,-a purchaser of the negotiable paper ; and for it he parts with the original obligation of the precedent debt, changing thereby his relations to his debtor and the liability of the debtor to him. And it should be borne in mind that it is this new adjustment of the precedent debt that makes the creditor a holder for value. It seemed necessary to briefly refer to these cases in relation to the consideration growing out of the payment of a precedent debt, by the transfer of negotiable paper, to bettor understand the rule in relation to the rights of the holder of negotiable paper received as security merely for a precedent debt.

When the note of a third person is transferred bona fide *before due, as collateral security and for value, such as a loan or further advancement, or a stipulation, express or implied, of further time to pay a pre-existing debt, or a further credit, or a change of securities of a pre-existing debt, or the like, the assignee of such collat'eral will be protected from infirmities affecting the instrument be[455]*455fore it was thus transferred. If, however, a note is transferred as-collateral security to a pre-existing debt, without any consideration,, so that the transfer is a mere voluntary act on the part of the-debtor, and is received by the creditor without incurring any new responsibility, parting with any right, or subjecting himself to any loss or delay, and leaving the subsisting debt precisely in the condition it was before such collateral was transferred, the holder has-not taken the note for value, nor in the usual course of trade; and to hold otherwise, would be a departure from the established rules-of law governing the rights of parties to negotiable paper, and losing sight of the grounds of public policy upon which the law is-founded.

The case of Coddington v. Bay, 5 Johns. Ch. 54; 20 Johns. 637, has been frequently commented upon, and sometimes treated as a case relating to a transfer of negotiable paper in payment of a precedent debt, and sometimes as a case relating to the transfer of negotiable paper as security merely for liabilities previously incurred.. This confusioi? has arisen from what was said by senators in the-court of errors.

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Related

Swift v. Tyson
41 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1842)
Bay v. Coddington
5 Johns. Ch. 54 (New York Court of Chancery, 1821)
Coddington v. Bay
20 Johns. 637 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 1822)
Brush v. Scribner
11 Conn. 388 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1836)
Atkinson v. Brooks
26 Vt. 569 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio St. (N.S.) 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roxborough-v-messick-ohio-1856.