Semmes v. Wilson

21 F. Cas. 1060, 5 D.C. 285, 6 Cranch 285

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1060 (Semmes v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Semmes v. Wilson, 21 F. Cas. 1060, 5 D.C. 285, 6 Cranch 285 (circtddc 1837).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court (Thruston, J., absent,) as follows :

The first prayer required the Court to instruct the jury that they may infer that the plaintiffs agreed to run the risk of the note’s being a forgery, because it was passed to them long after it was dishonored, and at ten per cent, (and interest) less than its nominal amount; and in refusing that instruction, it is said the Court erred.

When a person sells a note he is always understood as affirming that it is what it purports to be ; that is, that it is a genuine note. If it is not what it purports to be it is nothing, and may be treated as a nullity; and it is not material whether it be given in payment of an antecedent debt, or in exchange for goods immediately sold and delivered, or to be sold and delivered at a subsequent day. In the first case it would'be no payment; in the second and third cases there would be a total failure of the consideration ; and the party who has parted with his property in expectation, of a consideration which has failed, may resort to his original cause of action.

A deduction of ten per cent, and interest upon a dishonored note, not indorsed by the party who offers-it for sale, would only justify an inference that the party who purchased it had agreed to take the risk of the responsibility of the parties whose names appear upon the note. No one who purchases a note ever thinks of taking upon himself the risk of its being a forgery; nor does he ask the vendor whether it is, as it purports to be, a genuine note. The question, among merchants, would be deemed an insult. It would imply that the vendor knew whether it was or not a forgery; and that if it wras, he must be a knave to offer it. He must be considered, therefore, as offering it as a genuine note; and ten per cent, is a moderate discount upon a dishonored note, even if it be a genuine note of solvent parties.

[288]*288The longer the note remained in the hands of the defendant after it was dishonored, the greater right had the plaintiffs to suppose it to be a genuine note;; for it would be reasonable to infer that the defendant would inquire why the note was not paid at maturity; and that if it were not genuine, the forgery would have been discovered.

The plaintiff could not suppose that the defendant intended to sell him a counterfeited or a forged note; and as the defendant had had time to discover the forgery, if it was one, the plaintiff must have had full confidence in the genuineness of the note.

Neither the length of time since the note became payable, nor the rate of discount, would have justified the jury in inferring that the plaintiffs took on themselves the risk of the note being forged. The plaintiff was not put upon inquiry, by the defendant, as to the genuineness of the note; on the contrary, the length of time that it remained in the hands of the defendant, after it was dishonored, tended to lull him into security upon that point.

We think, therefore, that the first instruction prayed by the defendant, was correctly refused.

The second instruction prayed by the defendant’s counsel was, that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover “unless the jury should believe, from the evidence, that the said note was a forged note; and that such forgery was known to the defendant at the tíme he passed it to the plaintiffs, and not known to the said plaintiffs, and that so knowing the same, the defendant fraudulently passed the said note to the plaintiffs after the same had been due and unpaid for the space of nine months and upwards, and that the plaintiffs paid him the sum of $136.75, being the amount due, after deducting the interest and ten per cent, on the gross amount of said note.”

This instruction was refused by the Court, because they were of opinion that it was not necessary to the plaintiffs’ right of action, in this case, that they should prove any of the facts stated in this second prayer, other than that the note was a forged note, and passed, by the defendant, to the plaintiffs for a valuable consideration after it was dishonored. There was no evidence that nine months had elapsed, after the dishonor of the note before it was passed to the plaintiffs. The note fell due on the 10th - 13th of April, and it appears from the due-bill given by the plaintiffs to the defendant for lumber, that it was passed to the plaintiffs on the 27th of May, forty-four days after it fell due.

The Court, however, do not deem the length of time material; except, that the longer it was the less excuse had the defendant for not having discovered the forgery.

The Court is still of the opinion that the plaintiffs’ right to [289]*289recover in this action, does not depend upon their proving fraud in the defendant, and that this second instruction was properly refused.

The third instruction prayed by the defendant’s counsel, was, “ that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover in this action unless the jury shall be satisfied, by the evidence, that suits were instituted by the present plaintiffs against the drawer and indorser of the said note, and that in such suits the' plaintiffs failed to recover.”

Among the cases cited, and many others which have been examined, where suits have been brought to recover money paid upon forged instruments, not one has been found to support the doctrine contained in this prayer. In nil of them the forgery has been primarily and directly proved, or attempted to be proved, in the action against the party who passed the forged paper to the plaintiff; and no intimation or suggestion that there should be a suit first brought against the parties whose names were forged.

We think this instruction also was correctly refused ; and that the plaintiffs had a right to give the note in evidence, and to prove the forgery in this action. The specific grounds alleged for a new trial are, therefore, overruled.

But there is a general allegation that the verdict was against law and evidence.

The whole evidence is not stated, but we believe the facts which it tended to prove were as before mentioned. It did not appear at what time the plaintiffs first discovered the forgery, nor when they first gave notice of it to the defendant.

It seems to be well settled by the cases which have been cited and examined, that if the innocent, bond fide, holder of a forged note which he has received for a valuable consideration, passes it to another innocent person, bond fide, and for a valuable consideration, without indorsing it, although not liable upon the note, he is liable for the amount he has received for it, provided the other party has not been guilty of such negligence as would deprive the person, from whom he received the note, of his remedy against prior parties who might be liable to him, and has given notice, and offered to return the forged paper in a reasonable time. See Jones v. Ride, 5 Taunt. 488; Wilkinson v. Johnson, 3 B. & C. 428; S. C. 5 D. & R. 403; Fuller v. Smith, 1 Ryan & Moody, 49; S. C. 1 Carrington & Payne, 197; Chitty on Contracts, 191, who cites the above cases; Gloucester Bank v. Salem Bank, 17 Mass. 33; Markle v. Hatfield, 2 Johns. 455; Young v. Adams, 6 Mass. 182; Smith v. Chester, 1 T. R. 654; Price v. Neal, 3 Bur. 1354; Puckford v. Maxwell, 6 T. R. 52; Owenson v. Morse, 7 Id.

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Related

Markle v. Hatfield
2 Johns. 455 (New York Supreme Court, 1807)
Young v. Adams
6 Mass. 182 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1810)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1060, 5 D.C. 285, 6 Cranch 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/semmes-v-wilson-circtddc-1837.