Spies v. . National City Bank

66 N.E. 736, 174 N.Y. 222, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1323
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 736 (Spies v. . National City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spies v. . National City Bank, 66 N.E. 736, 174 N.Y. 222, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1323 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

The Appellate Division having unani- ‘ mously affirmed the judgment entered on the report of the referee, the legal effect thereof was to conclusively establish the. findings of fact made by the referee, which are as follows:

*224 “ In and prior to April, 1893, Francis Spies, the plaintiff’s testator, was doing business in the City of New York in the name of Marcial and Co. At his request in April, 1893, at New Yol'k City, the defendant discounted for him a note for $4,786.62 made in New Orleans by B. M. Ong to the order of Marcial and Co., dated the 11th day of April, 1893, and payable in four months thereafter. Spies indorsed the note in the name of Marcial and Co. to the defendant. At that time the defendant held certain railroad bonds which Spies had deposited with it as security for the indebtedness then due to it from him and as security also for ‘ any other note or claim ’ the defendant might have against him.. The defendant discounted the above-mentioned note, relying upon the said securities. The note was not paid when due and was duly protested and due notice was given to the plaintiff —■ Spies, the indorser, having in the meantime died. In February, 1894, this defendant recovered judgment upon the note against Ong, the maker, in the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans, in Louisiana, where Ong resided. A few months later the defendant sold and transferred the said judgment to Alfred Hiller for fifty per cent, of its face value. An order of subrogation was entered in the action in which the said judgment had been recovered, which declared that Hiller ‘be subrogated to all the plaintiff’s rights, claims and demands in and to the judgment therein against the defendant B. M. Ong.’ In this transaction, all of which took place in Louisiana, Hiller represented Ong, and acted in his behalf and for his benefit, and Ong became the owner of the judgment. When this defendant sold and assigned the said judgment to Hiller it was with an express reservation of all of the defendant’s rights and claims against the indorsers of the note, to which reservation both Hiller and Ong assented. In or about January, 1899, the defendant sold the railroad bonds above referred to, and applied a part of the proceeds to the payment of the sum due to the defendant on the indebtedness for which the said bonds had been originally pledged by Spies. The balance of said proceeds, amounting to $1,469.06, the defendant applied on *225 account of his alleged claim, against Spies as indorser of the Ong note.
“By the law, both of Louisiana and Hew York, the effect of the said transaction between this defendant and Hiller and Ong was to release Ong from all liability upon the note as maker. Such release operated to discharge the liability of Spies (or Marcial and Co.), the indorser. The liability of the indorser was not preserved or continued by the reservation by the defendant of its rights and claims against the indorser when it sold and assigned the judgment.
“ The plaintiff is the duly qualified executor of the said Francis Spies, and, before the commencement of this action, demanded of defendant the said sum of $1,469.06, which the defendant refused to pay.”

While the note was a Louisiana contract, having been made in that stare by a resident thereof, payable at a bank therein, the contract of indorsement was an independent contract governed by the law of the state where it was made and took effect, for in the case of every negotiable instrument there are as many separate contracts as there are indorsements, each being governed by the law of the place where made, unless the intention is to negotiate the instrument elsewhere. (Story on Conflict of Laws, § 314 ; Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, §§ 867, 868, 899 ; Aymar v. Sheldon, 12 Wend. 439 ; Allen v. Merchants' Bank, 22 Wend. 215 ; Cook v. Litchfield, 9 N. Y. 279, 290.) The note was made payable to the order of Marcial and Co., under which name the plaintiff’s testator did business in the city of Hew York, and it was by him duly indorsed to the defendant, at its banking house in Hew York, before maturity. The contract of indorsement was, therefore, a Hew York contract, and the defendant having presented the note for payment when and where it was made payable, and, upon the refusal to pay, having caused the same to be duly protested for non-payment and notice thereof to be given to the plaintiff, it thereupon became entitled to enforce payment, and still retains that right unless it has done, or *226 omitted to do, some act which, under the law of this state, has destroyed that right.

While the holder of a note may enforce collection from either the maker or indorser, or both, he must take care not to impair the remedy of the indorser against the maker, for to the extent that he destroys the indorser’s claim against the maker he releases his claim against the indorser. (Shutts v. Fingar, 100 N. Y. 539 ; Pitts v. Congdon, 2 N. Y. 352 ; Brown v. Williams, 4 Wend. 360.)

In Shutts’ case it is said, in the course of a very full and careful discussion of the general subject, that an indorser who pays a note “ is entitled to demand its possession from the •creditor with the right of subrogation to all securities and remedies possessed by him against the prior parties thereon unimpairéd by any act or laches of such creditor.”

In Pitts' case it is held that “ he ” (the holder) “ cannot discharge the party primarily liable and then sue the indorser, because the latter would in this way be deprived of his remedy over.” ,

In Brown's case the court said, “if the holder releases the principal debtor, he ought not to recover against the indorser, for, by releasing the debt, he discharged the principal from all liability upon the note to the indorser as well as himself.”

The principle established by these cases is that if the holder of a note so deals with'the maker that he becomes discharged from all liability thereon as against subsequent indorsers, then the indorsers cannot be compelled to pay it.

How, the plaintiff’s claim throughout this litigation is that the defendant cannot enforce the contract of indorsement because it has destroyed the plaintiff’s remedy against Ong, the maker of the note.

Turning to the findings of fact, for the purpose of learning whether this contention be well founded, we find that the defendant recovered a judgment against the maker of the note, Ong, in the state of Louisiana, and later sold and assigned the judgment to one Hiller for fifty per cent of its face value, and caused or permitted an order to be entered in *227 the action which declared that Hiller “ be subrogated to all the plaintiff’s (defendant here) rights, claims and demands in and to the judgment therein against the defendant B.. M. Ong.” A reservation, not mentioned in the assignment or order of subrogation of the defendant’s rights against the indorser was also made by the defendant with the. assent of both Hiller and Ong.

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 736, 174 N.Y. 222, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spies-v-national-city-bank-ny-1903.