Welch v. Mayer

4 Colo. App. 440
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Colo. App. 440 (Welch v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. Mayer, 4 Colo. App. 440 (Colo. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit by the appellee against the appellant upon an instrument of which the following is a copy :

“Denver, Nov. 19, 1891.
“Mr. A. L. Welch:
“ Please pay to George Mayer the sum of (1500) five hundred dollars out of money due us for brick work done on your building at Sixteenth and Champa, and charge same to our account. The same to apply on the first money due us.
“ Louis Groth & Co.”

The complaint averred the making of the order by Louis Groth & Co., its delivery to the plaintiff, and its acceptance by the defendant. ■ The complaint also alleged that money to more than the amount of the order was, at the time,- due from the defendant to Groth & Co., but it contained .no averment that the order was given for any valuable or other consideration. The answer was a general denial. The .cause was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment given against the defendant for the amount of the claim. From this judgment the defendant appealed.

The only evidence in the case was that introduced by the plaintiff. The defendant offered. none. We have before us tlie testimony of four witnesses, being all who testified, in which we find the following facts: On November 19,1891, the day on which the order was drawn, it was presented by the plaintiff to the defendant for payment. The defendant [442]*442read the order, said that it was all right, and that he would pay it. He asked the plaintiff to leave the order with him, and told him to call on the following Monday, when the money would be paid. The plaintiff accordingly called on that dajq but the defendant, saying that he did not have the money then, requested him to come again on the next Saturday, when he would pay the order. Plaintiff went as requested, but the defendant was still unable to pay; the reason, as stated by him, being that he had just been building, and had collected no rents; but he said that he would pay the amount immediately after the first of December following. At that time, in answer to, plaintiff’s demand for payment, defendant said that he had still collected no money, and the order was unpaid. The order was returned to the plaintiff on the 7th day of January, 1892, and this action was commenced immediately afterwards. The plaintiff, in answer to a question by bis counsel, stated that the consideration for the order was a loan by him to Groth & Co. of $500. After the question had been asked and answered, the defendant objected to it as irrelevant and immaterial, and the objection was sustained. Against the objection of the defendant, Ferdinand B. Becker, a member of the firm of Groth & Co., testified that on January 7, 1892, there was due from the defendant, on account of the brickwork mentioned in the order, the sum of $594. The brickwork spoken of was done under a written contract between Groth & Co. and the defendant, which was introduced in evidence. By the terms of that contract, the work was to be entirely finished on'or before the 24th day of October, 1891. The contract price was $1,850, subject to additions or deductions on account of alterations which might be made, and was payable within sixty days after the completion of the work; provided, that the architect should certify that the work had been done to his satisfaction, and provided that, before payment, Groth & Co. should give the architect sufficient evidence that the premises were free from all liens or claims chargeable to Groth & Co.; the defendant having the right, in case there were such [443]*443liens or claims, to retain out of the amount owing by him a sufficient sum to indemnify him against them. There was no evidence of the time when the work'was completed, or any certificate of the architect that it was satisfactorily done, or of any showing made to the architect that the premises were free from liens or claims.

Several reasons for the reversal of the judgment are urged by counsel for the defendant, in an able and comprehensive argument; and the questions presented are entitled to careful consideration. These questions relate to the character of the instrument sued on, the rights of .the plaintiff under it, and the kind and amount of proof necessary to enable him to recover. The order set out in the complaint, and introduced in evidence, is certainly not a negotiable instrument. It is payable out of a particular fund, which might or might not be sufficient. If the sum of $500 or more was dué on account of the brickwork, then, if other necessary conditions concurred, the entire amount of the order was payable; but if that sum was not due on that account, then the recovery would be confined to what was actually due; and it would be entirely immaterial how much the defendant might owe Groth & Co. on any other account, because it was only to the amount due for the brickwork that the order applied. This instrument was therefore not a bill of exchange, and the rules by which it would be governed are essentially different from those which would apply to a negotiable bill. Not being a bill of exchange, the only effect which it could have, would be as an assignment to the plaintiff of a right to receive from the defendant money which he owed to Groth & Co. on the account mentioned. If it had been drawn so as to cover the entire demand against the defendant, then, upon notice to him, it would have been an assignment of the whole indebtedness; but it was not so drawn, and it was 'therefore an attempted transfer of a part of the fund, which could not be perfected by mere notice to the drawee; and to become operative as an assignment it must have been made with his consent, or he must have subsequently ratified it. [444]*444Upon such consent or ratification the assignment would be complete, the debt which the defendant formerly owed to Groth & Go. would be payable to the plaintiff, and would be the consideration upon which his liability to his new creditor would rest. Wadlington v. Covert, 51 Miss. 631; Grain v. Aldrich, 38 Cal. 514; Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277.

The evidence of acceptance both by consent and ratification is abundant; and, in addition, there is the very important fact of an express and unequivocal promise to pay. But counsel insist that, conceding it to be true that defendant accepted the order, yet it, being paj^able out of a specific fund, was not an assignment pro tanto of the fund, unless it was made upon a valuable consideration; and that, therefore, to entitle the plaintiff to a recovery, he must aver and prove a consideration for the order moving from himself to Groth & Co. An attempt to prove such consideration was made, as we have seen, but the testimony, after it was given, was objected to, and the objection sustained. The plaintiff claims that the objection came too late, and that therefore the evidence ought to stand. We think the objection, so far as its grounds are concerned, was well taken. The evidence was not relevant because it supported no issue made by the pleadings ; and we think it was immaterial, so that, whether it be allowed to stand or not is not, in our judgment, a matter of much importance. As between drawer and payee, indorser and indorsee, or assignor and assignee, there is no doubt that the question of consideration may be material. A drawer cannot be held liable to his payee, or an indorser to his indorsee, on account of a bill for which he has received no value; and this rule applies alike to negotiable and non-negotiable paper.

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Tarbell v. Sturtevant
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Mandeville v. Welch
18 U.S. 277 (Supreme Court, 1820)
Wadlington v. Covert
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Bluebook (online)
4 Colo. App. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-mayer-coloctapp-1894.