Van Arsdale v. Boardman

3 How. Pr. 60
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1847
StatusPublished

This text of 3 How. Pr. 60 (Van Arsdale v. Boardman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Arsdale v. Boardman, 3 How. Pr. 60 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1847).

Opinion

Harris, Justice.

According to the law merchant of Europe, the act of drawing a bill, implies an undertaking from the drawer to the payee, and every subsequent holder; that the person, on whom the bill is drawn, will accept it, on presentment, and will pay it when it becomes due. On the failure of the person upon whom the bill is drawn to accept it when presented, or to pay it at maturity, the drawer becomes liable to the holder for the amount of the bill, the expenses of protest, and the re-exchange between the place where the bill was payable, and the place where it was drawn. (Ohitty on Bills, 7th American from 7th London ed., 106; 3 Kent’s Com. 115.)

This liability for re-exchange exists only against the drawer and endorser. The acceptor is only chargeable with the sum specified in the bill, with interest. But in this country a different usage has always existed. It had its origin in the relation which existed between Great Britain and her American colonies. It was established for the benefit of the English merchant, through whom the colonial merchant made all his payments in Europe. It was one of the badges of colonial dependence. By this usage the holder of a bill of exchange drawn in the colonies upon Europe, was entitled to twenty per cent, in addition to what [62]*62he would be entitled to receive under the general law merchant; this usage, strange as it may now seem, continued until 1830, when by the adoption of the Revised Statutes, the rate of damages upon bills drawn in this state upon any person in Europe, was fixed at ten per cent., to be determined without reference to the rate of exchange between the place where the bill was drawn, and where it was payable. The same statute also regulates the rate of damages upon bills drawn in this state, upon persons in other states or places on this continent.

The counsel for the Plaintiffs insists that the statute referred to, (2 R. S., 770, § 18,) charges the damages recoverable under it, upon all the parties liable for the payment of the bill, that although by the law merchant the acceptor of a bill is not liable for damages upon the protest thereof, yet by the provisions of this statute he is chargeable to the same extent as the drawer or endorser. But I do not so understand the statute. Prior to 1819, there was no law or custom in this state regulating the payment of damages upon protested bills of exchange drawn in this state, and payable in another. In that year an act was passed by which, after reciting that “ no certain and legal usage or custom hath yet been established within this state for subjecting the drawers and, endorsers of bills of exchange drawn in this state upon other states, territories, and places on and adjacent to this continent, and north of the equator, to the payment of damages for refusal to accept, and delays of paymentit is provided that whenever any such bills shall be returned unpaid, and shall have been duly protested for nonpayment, the holder shall be entitled to recover of the drawer or endorser, the damages prescribed in that act, over and above the amount of the bill, and interest thereon. The provisions of this act are, with some modifications in the Revised Statutes, with a more extensive regulation, by which the rate of damages upon all bills of exchange is fixed.

There is nothing in the provisions of the Revised Statutes on the subject from which it can be inferred that the legislature intended to change the liability of the parties to a bill of exchange. On the contrary, it seems to me very clear that the only object of the legislature was to establish a fixed rate of damages, to be recovered in all cases in which by the commercial law such damages were recoverable, leaving that law to determine who should, and who should not be liable for the payment of the damages thus regulated. The language of the statute is, “the rate of damages to be allowed and paid upon the usual protest of bills of exchange, shall be ” as therein specified, without in any way indicating who shall, or who shall not be liable for such damages. [63]*63The Defendants are therefore only liable for the amount of the bill and interest, and the motion must be granted with costs. The Plaintiffs however may retain their judgment upon stipulating to deduct therefrom, the sum of $124.88, being the amount of the damages, and interest thereon, allowed by the clerk.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 How. Pr. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-arsdale-v-boardman-nysupct-1847.