Willis v. Green

5 Hill & Den. 232
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Hill & Den. 232 (Willis v. Green) 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
Willis v. Green, 5 Hill & Den. 232 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

By the Court, Nelson, Ch. J.

It has already been decided in this case that the suit was properly brought in the name of the plaintiff, as Johnson and Green were the payees of the note, and the legal title properly derivable through them by the endorsement. ( Willis v. Green, 10 Wend. 516.)

If notice of protest be material to charge Green as co-payee and endorser, it is equally important that it should be brought home to Johnson before either can be made liable. They were not partners, and therefore notice to one will not answer. It xvas once supposed, in a like case, that the endorsers were part[234]*234ners quoad the particular transaction; (Carvick v. Vickery, 2 Doug. 653, n.;) but that doctrine was repudiated when the case afterwards came on for trial before Lord Mansfield. (Id. 654.) It has ever since been the settled commercial rule that co-payees, not partners, must each endorse in order to negotiate the paper. (Chitty On Bills, 66, 67, 254, ed. of 1840.) It would seem consistently if not necessarily to follow from this doctrine, that their interests, though joint as to the remedies against them on the paper, are so far distinct and separate as it respects each other, that notice of the default of the maker should be given to both. In the ordinary case of a partnership the interest is not only ¡joint, but each member is a general agent of the concern; and hence notice to one is notice to all. But here no such agency exists, as is sufficiently shown from the fact that each party must act for himself in the negotiation of the note.

I do not see but the case of joint endorsers, not partners, stands on the same footing as that of joint makers of a note who are not .partners; and in respect to them it is settled that presentment must be made to each, in order to charge the endorser. The argument is about as strong both upon reason and analogy in favor of giving effect to a demand upon one of the co-makers, as it is in favor of giving effect to .a notice to one of the co-endorsers. The question has been very fully and satisfactorily examined by the supreme court of errors in Connecticut, and a decision made in conformity with these views. (Shepherd v. Hawley, 1 Conn. Rep. 367.)

The plaintiff failed to show that the estate of Johnson had been charged by notice of non-payment. If the notice relied on for that purpose had been sent to the proper place, no doubt it would have been sufficient, under the circumstances of this case, though directed to Johnson after his death. (Stewart v. Eden, 2 Caines, 121; The Merchant's Bank v. Birch, 17 John. 25.)

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Related

Stewart v. Eden
2 Cai. Cas. 121 (New York Supreme Court, 1804)
President of Merchant's Bank v. Birch
17 Johns. 25 (New York Supreme Court, 1819)
Willis v. Green
10 Wend. 516 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)
Tebbetts & Pearce v. Dowd
23 Wend. 379 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)
Shepard v. Hawley
1 Conn. 367 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1815)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Hill & Den. 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-green-nysupct-1843.