Todd v. Bank of Kentucky

66 Ky. 626, 3 Bush 626, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 42
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 Ky. 626 (Todd v. Bank of Kentucky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Todd v. Bank of Kentucky, 66 Ky. 626, 3 Bush 626, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 42 (Ky. Ct. App. 1868).

Opinion

JUDGE WILLIAMS

delivered the opinion oe the court:

The appellee, as holder, brought suit upon a bill of exchange for seven thousand dollars, at six months’ time, dated July 4, 1.867, drawn by Gray & Todd to order of Ii. I. Todd, addressed to R. P. Pepper, Frankfort, Kentucky, which appears to be accepted by him, payable at the Northern Bank, Lexington. The place where drawn does not appear in the bill.

Todd, as indorser, resists any recovery against him, because, as he avers in his answer, that, when he indorsed the bill, Pepper had accepted it by writing his name across -the face; that he was a mere accommodation indorser, and got none of the proceeds, which was well known to the bank when it took the bill; and that, at the sole instance and procurement of the bank, the words accepted, payable at the Northern Bank, Lexington,” were written over the acceptor’s name, without the knowledge or consent of the indorser; but it. nowhere avers that this was done without the consent of the drawers and acceptor, or either of them; and it is evident, from the answer, that either the drawers and acceptor of the bill, or one ■ of them, negotiated it.

To this answer a demurrer was sustained and exceptions. Another issue was formed and found against the indorser, which, being justified by the evidence, no further notice will be taken of it.

The third paragraph of the answer, to which a demurrer was sustained, also depends on the question above stated and relied upon in the first paragraph; therefore, it need be not otherwise noticed than as connected with the first defense.

It is insisted that, by the commercial law, as recognized-in England and the American States, and which should-prevail in Kentucky, that the writing the name across. [628]*628the face of the bill by the drawee was a general and unqualified acceptance; and that the words placed over his signature afterwards, without the ind.orser’s consent, turned this general, unconditional acceptance, into a qualified one, and was a material alteration of the contract, which released the indorser, as he had no knowledge of it.

In Story on Bills, section 239, it is said: An acceptance is general when it imports an absolute acceptance, precisely in conformity to the tenor of the bill itself. It is conditional or qualified, when it contains any qualification, limitation or condition, different from what is expressed on the face of the bill, or from what the law implies, upon a general acceptance. It is qualified when the drawee absolutely accepts the bill, but makes it payable at a different time or place, or for a different firm, or in a different mode from that which is the tenor of the bill.

And in section 243, it is said that an acceptance, whether it be in writing or verbal, may be by express words or by reasonable implication.

Any written words, clearly denoting a present intention to accept or honor a bill, will be deemed an acceptance, although, certainly, the appropriate mode is to express in positive terms; as, for example: “January 1, 1842. Accepted to pay according to tenor of the bill;” or, “I accept to pay this bill;” or, simply “accepted;” but any other words will suffice, if expressive of the same intent, or admitting of no other reasonable and just interpretion, as “ honored,” or “ presented,” or “seen,” or his own signature in blank. Such circumstances, if not otherwise explained, would be deemed an acceptance; so, if he should write his name across the face of the bill.

[629]*629And in section 240 it is said, the holder is entitled to have an absolute, unconditional, and unqualified acceptance of the bill as drawn; and he is not bound to take any other; and approvingly quotes from Mr. Justice Bayley, in his work on Bills (chap. 6, sec. 1, p. 175), that, though any acceptance varying from the tenor will bind the person making it, the holder of a bill is entitled, from the undertaking of the drawer and indorser, to expect an absolute acceptance for the full sum of money mentioned therein, according to its tenor, specifying (if none be mentioned for the purpose) a place for its payment; and he may reject any other. Still, the holder may, at his peril and risk, take a conditional or qualified acceptance ; and if the holder should take an acceptance varying in any respect from the tenor of the bill, whether conditional or qualified, or otherwise, in such case he must give notice thereof to the antecedent parties; and if he does not, they will not be bound by it, but will be absolved from all responsibility upon the bill. Indeed, it seems that notice, of itself, would not be sufficient without a protest for non-acceptance, according to the tenor of the bill. And in section 48, Story says: The place of payment is understood to be the place where the drawee resides, or where, on the face of the bill, it is addressed to him, unless some other place is stated upon the face of the bill. If, therefore, the bill is meant to be made payable at any other place than' that where the drawee resides, or where the address to him is, it should be so expressed on the face of the' bill; as, for example, a bill drawn on Liverpool, if intended to be accepted, payable in London, should be expressly so stated, otherwise it will be payable in Liverpool; but, in general, unless otherwise required by statute, the place of payment need not be slated; but will be [630]*630implied, in the absence of all controlling circumstances, to be by law the place of residence of the drawee, or where his address is on the face of the bill. And then the author gives various circumstances which will control this inference.

From all this it will be seen, that the place of payment is only an implication when no definite place is fixed; and whether' it was contrary to the tenor of the bill for the acceptor to designate a place in such cases, was long a mooted question in England; but, in the case of Rowe vs. Young, 2 Broadhead & Bingham, 165; 2 Bligh’s Reports, 391, it was decided by the House of Lords that it was a qualified acceptance. This rule was afterwards altered by ■ Statute 1 and 2 George, which provided that such an acceptance should be deemed general, unless exclusive words were added, such as “ and not elsewhere,” or other equivalent words. But there seems to be no direct decision by these authors upon the question whether, in the'absence of any specified place of payment in the face of the bill, an implied power in the acceptor to- appoint a place should be inferred.

The approved quotation from Bayley by Story, in section 240, certainly indicates that both these authors are inclined to regard this as an implied power in the acceptor; for it is there said, the holder has the right to “ expect an absolute acceptance by the drawee for the payment of the full sum mentioned therein, according to its tenor, specifying, if none be mentioned for the purpose, a place of payment.”

If the holder has a right, in such cases, to expect the acceptor to appoint a place of payment, and he should do so, this would repel the implication that it was to be paid at the residence of the drawee, or place addressed to him; and perhaps a distinction was intended be[631]

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Related

Whitesides v. Northern Bank
73 Ky. 501 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ky. 626, 3 Bush 626, 1868 Ky. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/todd-v-bank-of-kentucky-kyctapp-1868.