S. O. Nelson & Co. v. Richardson

36 Tenn. 307
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 36 Tenn. 307 (S. O. Nelson & Co. v. Richardson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. O. Nelson & Co. v. Richardson, 36 Tenn. 307 (Tenn. 1857).

Opinion

McKinney, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiffs, who are commission merchants of New Orleans, brought this action of assumpsit in the Common Law Court of Memphis against Caleb Worley and the defendant in error Richardson jointly, as the drawers of a bill of exchange accepted by the plaintiffs for the accommodation of Worley and Richardson, and paid at maturity by them with their own funds. The following is a copy of the bill of exchange:

“Exchange for $5000. Memphis, Term., May 6th, 1854.

“ Seven months after date of this our first of exchange, (second unpaid,) pay to the order of H. C. Walker five thousand dollars, value received, and charge to account.

“Your obedient servants,

“ Caleb WoRley,

“ C. G-. Richaedson.

“To Messrs. S. O. Nelson & Co., New Orleans, La.”

The bill was endorsed by Walker, the payee, and also by Pickett, McMurdo & Co. The declaration contains the common counts, for money paid and advanced by the plaintiffs for the use of the defendants; to which the defendants jointly pleaded non assumpsit. Judgment in the Court below was in favor of the plaintiffs as to Wor-ley, but against them as to Richardson, and to reverse the judgment as to the latter the case is brought to this Court by the plaintiffs.

[310]*310The foregoing bill, and another of the same date and amount, -were drawn at Memphis, where Worley and Richardson both resided, and whore Walker, the payee — who was a member of the firm of S. 0. Nelson & Co.— likewise resided.

It is left in doubt from the proof whether the bills were drawn for the purpose of obtaining an advance of money upon them from Nelson & Co., or for the purpose, in whole or part, of procuring an extension of credit, for the period the bills had to run, upon a preexisting debt due from Worley alone to Nelson & Co. But be this as it may, it is not important' in our view to the determination of the question as to the liability of Richardson,

The proof establishes that Walker, with whom on behalf of the plaintiffs the arrangement -was made for the acceptance of the bills, refused to accept them, when applied to for that purpose before the bills were drawn, unless Worley would give the name of some responsible man on the bills as a joint drawer with him; and that the agent of Worley proposed to give the defendant Richardson, and Walker agreed to accept him; and thereupon the bills were drawn by Worley and Richardson jointly, and were accepted by the plaintiffs on the faith and credit of the joint drawers.

The proof also establishes that Richardson was a mere surety for the accommodation of Worley, and that this fact was known to the plaintiffs at the time they accepted said bills. It is likewise proved that the drawers failed to furnish funds for the payment of the bill sued on, and that it was paid at maturity by the plaintiffs with their own money.

On thi@ state of facts, it is insisted by the counsel of [311]*311Richardson that he is not liable to the plaintiffs in this action. The argument in substance is, that Richardson •was merely a surety for Worley, as was known to the plaintiffs; that his liability was upon the bill alone, as drawer; that he could only he charged in an action founded on the hill itself, and that only in favor of the payee or an endorsee or holder thereof, hut not in favor of the drawees, because a hill of exchange imports no obligation on the part of the drawer to pay the amount of the bill to the drawee; and, furthermore, because, upon taking up the hill by the drawees, it had performed its office, and became a nullity as to all the parties. The argument concedes that payment of the bill by the drawees with their own money would, in law, raise an implied promise, as against Worley the principal, to reimburse them the amount paid in taking up the bill; but it is insisted that no such promise can be implied in their favor as against Richardson the surety drawer, whose only liability was upon the bill itself. And it is further insisted that if such a promise could be implied on the part of Richardson, or even if an express promise by parol were proved to have been made by him — that as surety he would repay the money advanced by the plaintiffs in taking up the bill — the promise in either case would be a collateral undertaking on his part for the debt or default of another, and consequently void under the statute of frauds. And these principles are recognized in several New York cases referred to in the argument. Wing vs. Terry, 5 Hill, 160; Suydam vs. Westfall, 4 Hill, 211; Griffith vs. Reed, 21 Wend., 502; Phelps vs. Garrow, 8 Paige, 322.

His Honor, in his instructions to the jury, adopted [312]*312the doctrine of these cases, and held the law to he as assumed in the argument for the defendant.

We cannot assent to the correctness of this doctrine. In our opinion, it is not supported either upon sound principle or authority.

It may he remarked at the outset of the discussion, that, so far as respects the liability of Richardson in the .present action, we deem it of no importanpe whether the hill was drawn to raise money upon it, or to obtain an extension of time upon a prior indebtedness on the part of Worley to the plaintiffs. In either aspect, we regard the defendant Richardson as equally liable.

The contract was a lawful one, fairly entered into, and founded on a sufficient consideration. The plaintiffs refused to accept the bill without the additional name of a responsible person as a joint drawer. This was known to Richardson, as we are warranted in assuming from the proof in the record before us; and with this knowledge, as an inducement to the plaintiffs to accept the bill, he agreed to become and did become joint drawer of the bill with Worley. Upon the credit of his name mainly, as a co-drawer, the plaintiffs accepted the bill. By his voluntary act he caused the plaintiffs to do what they would not otherwise have done, and he cannot complain of being held to all the liability which the law attaches to his act. He assumed by his act all the liability created or implied by law on the part of a joint drawer of a bill of exchange, as well in respect to the acceptors as all other parties. He must be held to have known the law by which the nature and extent of his liabilities as drawer were defined, and to have intended to take upon himself whatever obligations or liabilities, [313]*313express or implied, belonged to the relation in which he placed himself. He must be taken to. have put his name on the bill in view of the well-established principle of law, that if the drawer has no funds in the hands of the drawee to meet the payment of the bill at maturity, in consequence of which the latter has it to pay with his own funds, a right of action instantly arises in his favor, not indeed upon the bill, but in assumpsit, to recover the money thus advanced, founded upon an implied promise. This is one of the known, fixed, legal consequences resulting from the relation of drawer. When, by reason of the want of funds of the drawer’s in his hands, the drawee has to pay the bill, the relation between the parties is reversed: the drawee, instead of being debtor, becomes creditor of the drawer for the money advanced.

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Related

Griffith v. Reed
21 Wend. 502 (New York Supreme Court, 1839)
Phelps v. Garrow
8 Paige Ch. 322 (New York Court of Chancery, 1840)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Tenn. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-o-nelson-co-v-richardson-tenn-1857.