Somerville v. Brown

5 Gill 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Gill 399 (Somerville v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Somerville v. Brown, 5 Gill 399 (Md. 1847).

Opinion

Dorsey, J.,

delivered the following dissenting opinion.

The correctness of the court’s decision in overruling the appellant’s objection to the testimony of Charles Tiernan, being conceded, the only remaining inquiry is, did the county court err in refusing to grant the appellant’s second prayer, “ that if the jury believe that Charles . Tiernan at the time when this attachment was issued, and when he applied for the insolvent laws, was the holder of the note now in suit, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in this cause.”

To prove the appellant’s right to the instruction denied to him by the court, it has been broadly asserted, (and the assertion backed by an elaborate argument) that if an attachment be laid in the hands of the maker of a promissory note endorsed in [403]*403blank, and yet undue, to bind the interests of a holder thereof for a debt due by him to the plaintiff in the attachment, and the note be subsequently, and before its maturity, negotiated or sold by the holder to a third person in the due course of business, bona fide, for a valuable consideration, and without notice, that the plaintiff in the attachment is entitled under that proceeding to recover from the maker the amount of the note, and that by such transfer the third person thus holding the note, acquired no right of action against the maker thereof. And this doctrine, as I humbly conceive, so utterly inconsistent with all the principles of the law-merchant, as to bills of exchange and promissory notes, which law-merchant exists to as full an extent in Maryland as in England, is ascribed to the alleged true construction of the 1st section of the act of Assembly of 1795, chapter 56, which authorizes the levying of an attachment as well upon the the u credits of the debtor, as upon bis lands, tenements, goods and chattels.”

There is nothing in the language of this act of Assembly, or in the evils it was designed to remedy, or in the object sought to be accomplished by it, which should conduct us to the conclusion, that it was the intent of the Legislature to effect so impolitic and inconvenient an innovation upon the mercantile law and usages of the State; to interpose an obstacle to its commercial prosperity, so unwise and so uncalled for. Full import and meaning may be given to every word and expression in this act of Assembly, without imputing to the General Assembly that suicidal intent attempted to be imposed upon their act. If it were the design of the Legislature to change and repeal, to the extent ascribed to it, the law-merchant, as to the protection thrown around bona fide transferees for value of bills of exchange and promissory notes, no sound reason can be assigned, why all similar protection should not be wholly withdrawn from them, and commerce be deprived of those facilities and safeguards which commercial wisdom and experience have for ages cast around it as essential and indispensable to its prosperity.

And why is it, that this construction of the act of 1795, so disastrous to commerce and the best interests of the State is to [404]*404be resorted to ? Because the credits, as well as the goods and chattels of the debtor, are made liable to an attachment. Does the term “'credits,” as thus used in the act of Assembly, in any degree warrant the enlarged and forced construction attempted to be given to it ? I humbly conceive that it does not. The term “ credits,” when applied to the case before us, means the right which the debtor-holder of the note had to recover its amount from the maker. What was the nature of that right ? Was it an absolute, unqualified engagement of the maker to pay the amount of the note to Charles Tiernan, without reference to future events or contingencies? Unquestionably not. By the endorsement of the note in blank, though it might be held by Charles Tiernan, it was not an unqualified promise of the maker to pay the note to him, whether at its maturity, he should remain the holder therefor or not; but undeniably the promise was, as well in fact, as in contemplation of law, to pay the note to the bearer; or to him, who, at its maturity should be the Iona fide holder thereof. Can it then be contended for a moment that the service of the attachment in this case entirely changed the contract of the parties, and converted an agreement theretofore, contingent and conditional, into one, that was certain and unqualified ? The act of 1795, applied as well to contracts existing at its date, as to those subsequently entered into: to give it then the construction insisted on by the appellant, would be to impute to the Legislature in its passage an intention to impair the obligation of contracts, and violate the Constitution of the United States. An imputation which no court of justice should make, but from cogent necessity; and according to the best consideration I have been enabled to give the subject, could not be otherwise than gratuitously made on the present occasion.

In rendering credits the subject of attachment, all that the Legislature designed to effect thereby, in a case like the present, was to substitute, as it were, the attaching creditor to the rights of his debtor-creditor; and to enable the former to recover that which the latter would have been entitled to recover, had no attachment been issued. It did not mean to change the [405]*405nature of the credit, and to withdraw it from the operation of the law-merchant, the law of the land, and to give to the attaching creditor rights which would have been denied to the debtor-creditor, had no attachment have issued. It gave no higher or superior rights to the credit, to the attaching creditor, than those that would have belonged to the debtor-creditor, had no attachment intervened.

The design of the act of Assembly was simply to provide the means by which the attaching creditor could as effectually recover the credit as could the debtor-creditor, had no attachment been interposed. In conferring on the attaching creditor the power with which he was invested, by the act of Assembly, the Legislature never dreamed that they were repealing any part of the law-merchant in relation to bills of exchange or promissory notes; or that they were investing him with rights and powers superior to those which he would have possessed had a bona fide, absolute transfer and delivery of the promissory note been made to him by his debtor-creditor. For such a discrimination by the Legislature, no conceivable motive or reason can be assigned. Nay, so far from greater or superior rights being transferred to the creditor, in the former, than in the latter case, he is clothed with diminished and inferior rights. In his recovery of the credit, he would be subject to all the discounts, setts off, pleas in bar, and defences of which the maker of the note could avail himself, if the action on the note were prosecuted by the debtor-creditor himself; whereas, in the latter case, he would be exempt from all such defences.

It may be said that such a construction of the attachment laws would leave it in the power of the creditor-debtor, the holder of a promissory note endorsed in blank, to evade the effect of the attachment by making, to a person not notified of the attachment, a bona fide transfer and delivery of the note. To such a contingent defeat of all benefit from his process is an attaching creditor exposed.

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Related

Cruett v. Jenkins
53 Md. 217 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1880)
Manahan v. Sammon
3 Md. 463 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1853)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Gill 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/somerville-v-brown-md-1847.