Turnbull v. Trout

1 Hall 336
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1 Hall 336 (Turnbull v. Trout) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turnbull v. Trout, 1 Hall 336 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1828).

Opinion

Jones, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of assumpsit on a promissory note by the holders, against the endorsers. The note was made by one Richard H. Arnold, for the payment of $169 89-100, to the defendant ninety days after date, and dated January 19th, 1828.

It was admitted that the name of the defendant endorsed upon the note, was not written by the defendant himself, but by Arnold, the maker. And it was alleged, that the same was so written and endorsed by Arnold, with the assent and by the authority of the defendant, and proof was offered to show the authority.

[339]*339One witness testified to the admission of the defendant, that he had authorized Arnold, the maker, to endorse his name upon the note, and that if it had been brought to him, he would have v - ten his name upon it himself. Some evidence was offered on .> part of the defendant tending to show that this conversation had reference to a different note: and evidence was alsoprroducetHiy the plaintiff, conducing to the conclusion that the maker had the authority of the defendant to make the endorsement. The question upon the testimony was left to the jury, who gave a verdict for the plaintiff, thereby establishing the fact, that the note was endorsed by the authority of the defendant, and the point on which the defendant now relies for his defence is, that a parol authority to endorse a note for the debt of a third person, which he affirms this to be, is void under the statute of frauds. This point was raised at the trial, and overruled by the judge, and it now comes before us on an exception to his opinion.

I state the exception in the terms of the case; but it is observable, that the facts disclosed to us do not bear out the position it assumes, that the note in question was given for the debt of a third person, within the meaning of the statute. On reference to the case, it appears that the note was drawn by Arnold in favour of Trout, the defendant, and passed by the maker with the name of Trout upon it, as endorser to the plaintiffs—for what consideration, whether in payment of an antecedent debt, or for value received upon the credit of the paper I'lcelf, at the time of the negotiation for it, does not appear. But it ic a negotiable note in the hands of an endosee, and in the absence of all proof to the contrary, must be taken to have been negotiated by the maker for value in the usual course of business, and the question will be whether payment of such a note can be successfully resisted by the defendant on the ground taken upon the argument.

In support of the objection, it is contended, I. as a general proposition, that the engagement of the endorser of a promissory note, is a collateral undertaking within the statute, to answer for the debt of another, and to be obligatory, must be in writing.

[340]*340II. That the authority of an agent to endorse for his principal must also be in writing, as a parol authority would introduce the very mischief against which the statute is intended to provide.

III. If such parol authority is good, it can only be so when given to a third person, who is not to be benefitted by the exercise of the power; and from these premises the conclusion is drawn, that the authority in this case being by parol and to the person, whose debt the endorsement guaranteed, that authority was invalid.

I cannot accede to the views taken by the defendant’s counsel of the nature of the endorser’s engagement, nor to, the opinion, that the authority to endorse the note was void, because it was by parol. The only engagement of the endorser is for the payment of the note he endorses; and when he is the payee, (as, in the regular course of negotiating, the first endorser generally is,) the note is payable to himself, and is his own debt. When he transfers it to another by endorsement he assigns or passes over to his endorser the note or debt thus due, and payable to himself; and the legal effect of his endorsement is to superadd his own personal obligation as endorser for the payment of the note to the endorsee.

This is the process and legal operation of the transfer of the note by endorsement as between the maker, the payee and the endorsee of the note. And to this pure unmixed case of the note of a maker to a payee and endorsed by the payee to an en- . dorsee, who continues as the holder, we must look for the true nature and legal effect of the engagement of the endorser. In it no feature of an undertaking of the endorser to answer the debt of a third person within the meaning of the statute for the prevention of frauds, is discernable. It is the transfer in such cases permitted by law, of the debt (which the note makes payable to him,)by him to the transferee ; and the obligation the endorsement creates is, that the debt thus transferred by him to the endorsee, in case of the non-payment of the maker at the maturity of the note upon demand, shall upon due notice of the maker’s default be paid by him (the endorser) to the holder. There is no debt due, or owing, or about to be contracted by the maker of the note to the endorsee, for which the payee thus gives his en« [341]*341dorsement. The first connection the endorsee has with the note is the negotiation and transfer of it to him, for the value he then ,o pays for it: and that value he gives for the endorsed note, as he receives it with all the engagements and liabilities of the parties to it—as well endorser as maker—for the payment of its contents.

Such was in effect the negotiation of this note to these plaintiffs. They received the note, it is true, from the maker, and not from the payee. But the payee having made the maker his agent for the negotiation of the paper with his endorsement upon it, the negotiation of it by the agent was the same as respects the defendant—his constituent, as if he had conducted the negotiation himself in person. Or, if the circumstance differs, the case it makes is still stronger against the defendant. It is in evidence that the note was endorsed by the defendant for the accommodation of Arnold the maker, by Arnold himself, as the agent of the defendant, and was negotiated with the name of the defendant upon it as endorser, by Arnold to the plaintiffs for his own benefit. The negotiation was necessarily of the entire endorsed note, for a consideration to the maker. The delivery of the note to, the plaintiffs gave it no vitality as operative negotiable paper. The only aliment for the promise of the maker, or the engagement of the endorser, was the consideration paid for the note by the plaintiffs. And the endorsement was, under such circumstances, emphatically an original engagement of the defendant, as endorser to the plaintiffs, for the payment of the contents of the note.

The case of Ulen v. Kittridge, 7 Mass. 233. was that of a guaranty by the defendant of his promissory notes, made by one Eliphalet Butman, for one hundred dollars each, payable to Alen or order. The plaintiff declared upon the guaranty, and averred, that in consideration of his forbearance (by his agent) to sue until his return from sea, the defendant promised to guaranty the payment of the notes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bowers v. City of Porterville
E.D. California, 2024
Ju v. Lacombe
W.D. Washington, 2019
Fuller v. Scott
8 Kan. 25 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1871)
Spann v. Baltzell
1 Fla. 301 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1847)
Perkins v. Catlin
11 Conn. 213 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1836)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Hall 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turnbull-v-trout-nysuperctnyc-1828.