The Cayuga County Bank v. . Warden

6 N.Y. 19
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 N.Y. 19 (The Cayuga County Bank v. . Warden) 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
The Cayuga County Bank v. . Warden, 6 N.Y. 19 (N.Y. 1851).

Opinions

*Gardiner, J.

— When this cause was first before us, we held, in substance, that enough *- 4 appeared upon the face of the notice, to justify the application of the extrinsic evidence by which the note *24 in question was identified; that the description there given was true in part, hut not in every particular, and that the maxim fa Isa demonstratio non nocet applied; because, after striking from the notice all that was false, enough remained to authorize the paroi evidence, by which' the note in controversy was identified, as the subject of that notice. The doctrine of that decision, and the propriety of its application to the case then before us, has been questioned; and it may be well, therefore, to refer to some cases illustrative of both. 1

Goodtitle v. Southern (1 M. & Selw. 299) was a devise of land; the premises were described as “ Trogues farm, now in the occupation of Bthat part of the description relating to the possession, was rejected as false, and effect was given to the devise by what remained. In Jackson v. Loomis (18 Johns. 81), the premises were described in the grant by their number, and by monuments, courses and distances; the number was rejected. In Lusk v. Druse (4 Wend. 313), the lot, on the contrary, was described by metes and bounds, and by number; the number was adopted to give effect to the demise, and the boundaries rejected. Those who are curious to ascertain how frequently a principle, coeval with the common law, has been recognised and acted upon, will find some of the authorities collected in Cowen & Hill’s Notes, from p. 1362 to 1382.

In this case, the note was described as “ S. Warden’s note payable at the Cayuga County Bank, and indorsed by” the defendant; the amount was stated in the body of the notice to be $300, and in the margin, were the figures $600, *which, in dollars, was the true ^ -• amount of the note protested. The extrinsic facts were — 1st. The note in suit: 2d. The knowledge of the defendants, that this note was in the Cayuga Bank; established by evidence, that it was given on a *25 renewal of a former note, held by the plaintiffs, made and indorsed in the same manner with the one in controversy : 3d. That it was the only note in the bank, or, so far as appeared, made payable there, made by S. Warden, and indorsed by the defendant, according to the call of the notice.

This court held, that construing the notice in the light of these facts, all of which were known to the defendants, the note in question was primd facie sufficiently identified, by the name of the maker, the place of payment, the indorsement of the defendant, and the sum stated in the margin. That the amount in the body of the notice might, and under the evidence of surrounding circumstances, ought to be rejected, and that the note would then be designated by other parts of the description. This was the whole decision. It was the application of a familiar principle to a case imperatively demanding it.

There was nothing in the judgment that would seem to call for the authorized dissent of a member of this court, who, for reasons satisfactory to himself, took no part in the decision, but who, we were informed upon this argument, subsequently expressed his views in opposition to those of his associates, in a communication to the counsel of the defendants. 2

We were told upon the former argument, and it has been again repeated, that a note for $300 was not a note for $600. This is certainly true; and it was equally true, in Jackson v. Loomis (supra), that lot 24 was not lot 25. Effect, however, was given to the grant, in that case, by locating the land according to other parts of the description, and rejecting the number, and by this court, to the notice in this case, by rejecting the number of dollars in the body of it, and identifying the instrument by the other particulars mentioned.

*26 *An attempt was made to distinguish the cases referred to from the present, by the consideration, that in grants and wills, the intention of the parties and of the testator, was the only thing to be ascertained. But the intention is to be gathered from the language of the instrument, and not otherwise; and the purpose of the grantor or devisor, to convey a particular piece of land, depends upon the description which will identify, and enable others to locate the parcel. So, the design' of the notary in this case, was to inform the indorser of the dishonor of a particular note; whether he has succeeded, depends, in like manner, upon the terms of the notice. If the subject is there described, so as to be identified, upon proof of extrinsic facts, which in the language of Lord Coke, “ stand with the notice,” the object will be accomplished; although the description may not be true, in every particular; and the defendant would be bound by it, although as dull of apprehension, as his counsel proposed to prove him. There 'is no difference in principle, therefore, between the case before us and those cited; certainly, nothing that should exempt an ordinary commercial notice, from a rule, which has been resorted to in the construction of wills, grants, and even of statutes.

Remer v. Downer (23 Wend. 626), which the counsel for the defendant supposes this court to have overruled, is in conformity with the principles above suggested.In that case, the note was made by one Young, and Berner, who was sought to be charged, was second indorser. The notice, upon its face, was addressed to “ N. Williams, cashier,” and informed that person, that' “James Young’s note indorsed by you,” was protested, &c. The letter containing the notice was, upon the outside, addressed to Berner, at his place of residence. The court of errors assumed that the notice was not addressed to the indorser, but to Williams. The chancellor accordingly remarks, “that Bemer could not have sup *27 posed that James Young’s note, for a larger amount, indorsed by Williams, to whom the notice was addressed, was the one intended.” *As the chancellor f ^ viewed the facts, every part of the notice, as to l the note in controversy was false; false as to the amount, the indorser, and the address; and Berner could only suppose, as the opinion states, that the letter was wrongly directed upon the back, by mistake.” The supreme court, on the contrary, assumed, under the finding of the jury, that the notice was addressed to Berner. On this supposition, Berner was informed, that James Young’s note, payable at, &c., indorsed by Mm,

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.Y. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-cayuga-county-bank-v-warden-ny-1851.