Vaughan v. Potter

131 Ill. App. 334, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 48
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 7, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,005
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 131 Ill. App. 334 (Vaughan v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Potter, 131 Ill. App. 334, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 48 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Edwin A. Potter, as receiver of the National Bank of Illinois, brought suit in the Superior Court of Cook county against J. C. Vaughan as indorser on the following note:

“$114.12. Chicago, Oct. 26, 1896.
Sixty days after date I promise to pay to the order of J. C. Vaughan one hundred fourteen and 12/100 dollars at Midland National Bank, Kansas City, Mo., value received with interest at seven per cent, per annum, after maturity until paid.
Johan Schneider,
921% Walnut Street, Kansas City.
Due Dec. 26, 1896.”
Indorsements:
“ J. C. Vaughan.
Dec. 28,1896,
protested for non-payment.
David Thornton,
Notary Public.”

This is the copy of the note which appears in the bill of exceptions as the transcript of Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1.

By what purports to be a copy of the same note attached to the notary’s certificate of protest, hereinafter described, and also admitted in evidence as a plaintiff’s exhibit, there appears another indorsement which from the rest of the record it is plain must have been on the note at the time it was presented at the place of payment at Kansas City, but which did not appear thereon when offered in evidence.. It is:

“Pay to the order of any Bank or Banker. Dec. 18, 1896.
The National Bank op Illinois, Gael Moll, Cashier.”

We mention this, not because we hold it to be a part of the note as it appeared in evidence, but to render clearer our subsequent discussion of the presentment, protest and notice,

The cause was submitted to the court without a jury, and after evidence had been heard, a finding and judgr ment for the plaintiff for $186.52 were entered by the trial judge. The defendant excepted to the finding and judgment, and has appealed to this court from the same, with a sufficient assignment of errors to cover the objection he makes to the judgment, which is that the necessary steps were not taken at the maturity of the note to hold him as an indorser. It is conceded the only liability of the defendant on the note is that 'of an indorser, but the plaintiff contends that everything requisite under the law has been done to fix that liability.

Indeed, as an alternative proposition he makes the contention that no “presentment,” “protest” or “notice” was necessary on this note to hold the indorser, because the maker at the time of its maturity resided out of the state. To that he cites Barber v. Bell, 77 Ill. 490, decided in 1875. There might be many more cases decided before the Illinois statute of 1895 on the liability of assignors and holders was passed, holding, as did Barber v. Bell, that no “presentment” to the maker or “notice” to the indorser, as those terms are used in the law merchant, were necessary to fix the liability of an indorsing assignor of a note in Illinois, and that although prosecution of the maker to insolvency with diligence was necessary in most cases before the indorser could be made to respond, yet such prosecution was not necessary where the maker had absconded from or resided out of the state when the note became due.

But these decisions and this former state of the law in Illinois have nothing to do with this note, which was given and indorsed more than a year after the law of Illinois concerning promissory notes payable in money was changed and brought into conformity with the law merchant prevailing elsewhere.

“Protest,” it is true, as is hereinafter pointed out, was not made by the legislature necessary to fix the liability of an indorser on a promissory note. It never had been necessary by the law merchant. But “presentment” and “notice” were so made necessary by the following provision: “The rights of the lawful holders of promissory notes payable in money, and the liability of all parties to or upon said notes shall be the same as that of like parties to inland bills of exchange according to the custom of merchants.” This was practically an enactment for the first time in Illinois of the well known statute of 3rd and 4th Anne, which brought to an end the opposition of Lord Holt and other common law judges to considering promissory notes as within the provisions of the law merchant in relation to negotiable instruments. By this act of the Legislature, approved June 4, 1895, the former requirement of prosecution of the maker to insolvency and its correlated exceptions were retained, so far as notes payable in other things than money were concerned, but abolished as to the ordinary notes payable in money. The liability of an indorsing assignor as to such notes was made the same as “that of like parties to inland bills of exchange according to the custom of merchants.” The “liability of an indorser of an inland bill of exchange according to the custom of merchants” is only that he will pay the same after due presentment on the day of maturity at the place it is made payable, or to the person primarily liable, if it is there or by such person dishonored, provided notice of such dishonor is given to him (the said indorser) within the time required by law, which, in the absence of statute regulating it, has been usually held to be the day of dishonor and the succeeding day. If these requirements are not complied with, the indorser of an inland bill of exchange is discharged, and since the Act of 1895 the same thing is true of an indorser of a promissory note payable in money in Illinois.

Presentment at maturity and notice of dishonor are excused in certain exceptional cases, not necessary to be here enumerated. Neither the maker’s residence in another state or abroad, nor his insolvency, furnishes such an excuse. The note in this case was made payable at a designated place, and unless presented there for payment within reasonable hours on the day of maturity, and notice of dishonor given within forty-eight hours thereafter to the defendant, he is not liable on his indorsement.

The plaintiff in this case attempted to make proof of this due presentment and notice by the introduction of the certificate of a notary public for the county of Jackson, in the State of Missouri, that on December 28, 1898, at the request of the Union National Bank of Kansas City, he presented the note at the Midland National Bank of Kansas City and demanded payment, which was refused, and that he thereupon protested the paper, of all of which he certifies, £<I have given due notice to the parties concerned as follows, by written notice of protest duly sent by U. S. mail to them, respectively, to-wit:

To J. C. Vaughan, all addressed Carl Moll, Cashier.
To Carl Moll, Cashier, all addressed National Bank of Illinois, Chicago, Ills. ’ ’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 Ill. App. 334, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-potter-illappct-1907.