Simon v. Huot

15 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 378
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 378 (Simon v. Huot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. Huot, 15 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 378 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1876).

Opinion

Daniels, J. :

The plaintiffs as the indorsees, for value without notice, of a promissory note, were allowed to recover the amount due upon it at the trial, by the direction of the court, and the exceptions taken to that direction, and to the refusal to direct a verdict for the defendants, were ordered to be first heard at the General Term, and judgment in the meantime was suspended. The note was made by the defendants who were then residents and citizens of the State of Florida, on the 8th day of September, 1873, and by its terms they promised to pay to the order of Louis Sylvester $1,655.97, at their office for value received, in twelve months after [379]*379date. The plaintiffs received the note from the payee properly indorsed by him, on the 9th of June, 1874, for the purchase-price of goods sold and delivered by them to him, and amounting to the sum unpaid by its terms.

Both the complaint and the answer of the defendants averred that the note was made by them, and delivered to Sylvester, the payee, at Fernandina, in Florida, and it was payable at the defendant’s office in that place. After the making and delivery of the note and on the 3d of March, 1874, an action was commenced by Charles B. Ely and others against Sylvester, the payee, in the Circuit Court of the fourth judicial circuit of that State, for the recovery of a debt claimed to be owing from him to them. The court had jurisdiction over the action and the summons in it was served personally on the defendant on the next day. At the time of the commencement of the suit, upon a proper affidavit and bond, an application was made for an attachment against the debtor, and a writ of garnishment against Huot, Kelly & Co., the present defendants, as persons who had property, money and effects in their hands belonging to Sylvester, the debtor. That writ, as well as the attachment, were issued, and the writ was served on these defendants on the 3d of March, 1874, the day on which it issued. They appeared, as it required them to do, and filed their answer in which, among other things, they set forth the making and delivery of the note in suit, and stated that it was then still held by Sylvester, which appears to have been the fact. The action proceeded to judgment against Sylvester on the 16th day of May, 1874, and against the makers of the note on the 29th of October, 1874. By the judgment against them they were adjudged liable to pay the plaintiffs in that action the sum of $1,762.06, besides five dollars and fifty cents costs, and that payment was required from them, by reason of their liability to Sylvester, upon the note received by the plaintiffs, for the other note made by them was shown to have passed out of his hands before the proceedings against them were instituted. Upon this judgment execution was issued on the 3d of December, 1874, and levied upon the defendants’ goods. But at their instance the goods were released, and a levy made upon real estate owned by them in lieu of the goods, and the proceedings remained in that condition when this action was tried, it having been commenced in October, 1874. The court [380]*380held that these proceedings, although taken in conformity to the statute of Florida, constituted no defense to the plaintiffs’ action upon the note; and whether it was right in that position is the important point now required to be considered and decided by this court.

As the note was made and delivered, and was also payable in Florida, its effect as a contract depended, as far as they had been enacted upon the subject, on the laws of that State. And by those laws, as they were proved upon the trial and appear in the case, any person indebted to a defendant proceeded against was rendered liable to be summoned to appear and state on oath, in writing, whether he, she or they were indebted to the defendant, and in what sum, at the time of the service of the summons. And when the garnishee confessed the indebtedness, as that was done by the answer filed by the defendants, then it was provided that if the plaintiff should be “ satisfied with the statement, admission, confession, or discovery, the court shall -award judgment against said garnishee for the amount so confessed, and execution may issue for the same against said garnishee.” These provisions included all debts, without reference to the form in which they were contracted, and for that reason were applicable to the note in suit. It was sufficient for the application of the statute, that the party proceeded against was in fact indebted to the defendant in the action, at the time when the proceedings were taken, and how the debt was created or by what instrument it may have been evidenced, was, therefore, not an important consideration. The liability depended on the existence of a debt, not on the form of the obligation taken for it. And for that reason to that extent it necessarily qualified the negotiability of commercial paper made and delivered within the State of Florida, and rendered the debt for which it should be given liable to be applied in payment of debts against the holder, as long as the paper continued in his hands as his property. It was not relieved from that liability by the circumstance that it was not due, and might afterwards be negotiated by the holder having possession of it, to an innocent purchaser. That was a contingency for which no provision was made by the statute. The right of the creditor to have it appropriated to his payment was made complete, by reason of the circumstance that the debt was owing to the debtor; upon that the statute intervened for the protection of the [381]*381creditor, and rendered his right to sequestrate the debt absolute. It looked no further, and did not undertake to guard against the ulterior consequences which might have been expected to arise from a subsequent unauthorized negotiation of the paper. Legislation of this general nature affecting the negotiable qualities of commercial paper is not uncommon, and to some extent it has been enacted in this State, rendering such paper void in the hands of even innocent holders, when made in contravention of its provisions. That is the case as to betting, gaming, usurious and other transactions forbidden by law.

The holder of the note though shown to reside beyond the limits of the State was actually within it, and so was the note, when the action against him was commenced, and the process issued for that purpose was personally served upon him. By that service, and the service of the summons upon the present defendants, complete jurisdiction was acquired over the subject-matter and the parties to the action, and the note in suit was subjected to the power and authority created over it by the statute. And whoever purchased it afterwards from the defendant Sylvester took it as it was affected by the proceedings taken, and subordinated to that authority, even though that rule would not ordinarily be applied to the holder of negotiable paper. (Leitch v. Wells, 48 Barb., 641, 649; Hopkins v. McLaren, 4 Cowen, 667-678, 679; Story on the Conflict of Laws [5th ed.], §§ 548, 551.)

A similar point, under circumstances less favorable to the defendants, arose in the case of Hull v. Blake (13 Mass., 153), where like proceedings which had been prosecuted in the State of Georgia were held to be a bar to an action brought upon notes by a tona fide holder for value, who received them before they were due. In the course of the decision of that case, after holding' that the notes derived their validity as contracts from the laws of the State of Georgia, it was further held by Paexee, C. J., and concurred in by the court,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-huot-nysupct-1876.