Wilamouicz v. Adams

8 Ark. 12
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ark. 12 (Wilamouicz v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilamouicz v. Adams, 8 Ark. 12 (Ark. 1852).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Johnson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The record sent up in this case raises two distinct questions for our consideration. The first involves the legal sufficiency of those counts which are based upon the acceptance endorsed upon the order considered in the light of bills of exchange; and the second relates to those which are framed upon a supposed special contract.

The declaration contains ten counts, and exhibits two separate orders upon the defendant in favor of the plaintiff and drawn by a certain’ George B. Hayden. The orders do not differ in any essential particular except as to date and amount. They are both addressed to the defendant in the character of Treasurer of the State of Arkansas, and request him to pay at a future time the respective sums, therein specified, to the plaintiff in State Scrip or Treasury Warrants, out of any moneys in his hands due him (Hayden,) for printing the Acts and Journals of the State, and are each signed by Hayden, as printer to the State.

This court, in the case of Gwinn v. Roberts, (3 Ark. Rep. 72,) said, “The statute declares that the term ‘Bill of Exchange,’ as used in. this; act, Shall be so construed as to- include, all- drafts, or orders drawn by one.person on another for the payment of a sum of money specified therein. From the least observation, it will be perceived that the writing in question is neither a bill of. exchange, draft, or order for the payment of a’ sum of money specified therein, because the drawee is- not requested thereby to pay any sum of money whatever to the payee or any other person. The defendant simply requests Mr. Sangrain to let Mr. Chambers have merchandize in his store to- the value of $32 38, and to charge him, Roberts, with the amount, which was evidently the understanding of the parties, and such is the operation and legal construction of the writing, which cannot be regarded either as a bond, bill, promissory note, draft or order, within the operation of the law merchant, nor any statutory provision whatever in force in this State.”

This court, in the case of Hawkins v. Watkins, (5 Ark. Rep. 483-4,) also said that “Bills of exchange derived' their negotiable quality from the usages and well established principles of the mercantile law. The negotiability of bills of exchange were confinend to such instruments in that form as were drawn for the direct payment of money; and such is the definition of the term under our statute, p. 151, sec. 13, Rev. Stat. By the common law, therefore, this is not a bill of exchange. Ch. on Bills 152. Rex v. Wilson, Bailey 11. Jones v. Fales, 4 Mass. 245. Liber v. Goodrich, 5 Cowen 186. McCormick v. Trotter, 10 Serg. & Rawle 94. Lunge v. Kohne, 1 M. C. 115, and 3 Ark. Rep. 73, Gwinn v. Roberts. And although bank notes are, for many purposes, equivalent to money, yet a bill or note for the payment of them is not deemed a bill of exchange at common law or a promissory note within the 3 and 4 Ann., chap. 9, and consequently not assignable. Many peculiar and legal qualities belonged to such instruments which distinguished them from choses in action. They were assignable • by endorsement so far as to transfer the legal title and property in them and. enable the en-dorsee to sue upon them in his own name. From their commercial character, they imported a consideration, 2 Bl. Com., and they raised against the parties to them a legal liability and were sued on as the foundation of an action. These qualities do not belong to the instrument here sued on unless it is aided by the statute upon assignments before referred to. A note for property would be assignable because the payee has a right of action on the privity of contract; but could the payee of this bill have sued Hawkins on his acceptance in this form of action? We think not. The liability of an acceptor is one raised by law applicable to mercantile instruments, and he was never liable as such except upon those instruments. No right of action lay in favor of any party against an acceptor upon the bill itself in any other case; and inasmuch as the statue did not intend to give a right to the original payee, where none in this form subsisted before, it is clear that by the endorsement the assignee acquired no new or better right. We are therefore clear that the instrument in question was never assignable as a bill of exchange at common law, nor embraced within the provisions of our statute.” The instrument sued upon in that case was in these words, “You will please pay to the order of Col. L. C. Howell four hundred dollars in Arkansas money of the Fayetteville Branch, it being the balance of the five hundred dollar bill I sent you to exchange, your particular attention to this will greatly oblige.” This draft was drawn by L. W. Wallace upon Hawkins, and by him accepted generally. Howell assigned the draft to Watkins, who declared upon it by a simple count in the ordinary form on bills of exchange. The judgment of the circuit court was reversed in that case and sent back, when the plaintiff (Watkins) filed an amended declaration, and in which he counted upon the original consideration and made an exhibit of the order as evidence to be used in the cause, whereupon he obtained a judgment, which was afterwards affirmed by this court. (See 1 Eng. Rep. 291, Hawkins v. Watkins.)

The case of Coyle’s executrix v. Satterwhite’s adm’rs, p. 124, 5, and reported in 4 Monroe, is directly in point. The declaration was in assumpsit, and set out a demand created by the sale and assignment of a note by the plaintiff’s intestate to the testator of the defendant, for the price of which said testator owed a balance of $400, due in hemp yarn at eight cents per pound, payable on demand. It then set forth that the plaintiff (or rather his predecessor in administration, the then plaintiff being an administrator de bonis non) demanded the yarn, and that the testator of defendants drew an order for it on Thomas H. Pindell, of the following tenor: “Thomas H. Pindell, sir: Please to pay to the executors of William Satterwhite, dec’d, four hundred dollars in yarn, at eight cents per pound, and this shall be deemed your sufficient receipt for the same, agreeably to the contract between you and myself. Lexington, Sept. 10, 1814. C. Coyle.” That the representative of Satterwhite presented this order and Pin-dell would not accept or pay it, of which Coyle had notice; and that Pindell had no funds of the drawer, and that Coyle still refused to pay the yarn. The court in delivering their opinion, said ‘<Upon the trial the principal questions which seem to have arisen, proceeded from the parties’ treating this order as a bill -of exchange. It was insisted that due diligence was not used in presenting it, in causing it to be presented and giving notice to the drawer, and that the evidence conduced to prove a reasonable expectation in Coyle that the bill would be honored; and therefore he was warranted in drawing it, and entitled to due diligence and notice. These same questions have been repeated in this court. On one palpable ground, we dismiss the whole of that part of the controversy. This writing is not a bill of exchange. It does not come within the provisions of the law merchant, and none of its doctrines can be applied to it.

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Related

Jones v. Fales
4 Mass. 245 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)
Gwinn v. Roberts
3 Ark. 72 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1840)
Berry v. Singer
5 Ark. 483 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1850)
M'Cormick v. Trotter
10 Serg. & Rawle 94 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1823)

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8 Ark. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilamouicz-v-adams-ark-1852.