Yeaton v. Bank of Alexandria

9 U.S. 49, 3 L. Ed. 33, 5 Cranch 49, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1809
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 9 U.S. 49 (Yeaton v. Bank of Alexandria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeaton v. Bank of Alexandria, 9 U.S. 49, 3 L. Ed. 33, 5 Cranch 49, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 416 (1809).

Opinion

March 10.

Marshall, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the court as follows, viz.

The question in this case is, wfieth.er the endorsor of a note negotiable in the bank of Alexandria, if such endorsement be for accommodation, may be sued by the bank, before a suit shall be instituted against the maker, if the maker be solvent.

In Virginia; the endorsor of a promissory note was not, when the town of Alexandria was separated from that state, liable to the holder by any express statute. He was only liable under the implied contract created by his endorsement. This implied contract, by the general understanding of the country, was, that he would pay the debt, if by due diligence it could not be obtained from the maker. ,Thi3 condition, howe.ver, was nót express* *52 ed. Yét'it was just, because, it was consistent with genera) usage, and, therefore, was the real undérstanding with which such an endorsement was’ made and received -

But in banks, this is probably not the usnge ; and if it be not, then the same reason does not exist for ■annexing such a. condition to the contract created by endorsement. If banks are , understood to receive notes made negotiable with them, as subject to the law which governs inland bills of exchange, then it. would seem reasonable, in the case of notes actually negotiated with them, to imply, from the act of endorsement, an undertaking conformable to that usage. If, then, the case showed that such was the. usage'of the bank, and such the understanding under which notes were discounted, this court is- not prepared to say that the undertaking created by the endorsement would not be so fashioned as to give effect to the real intention of the parties,

But the incorporating act removes any doubt-Which, might otherwise exist on this pointi

The 2Qth section of that act declares, “ that when? ever any person or persons indebted to the said bank on bonds, bills, or notes, given or endorsed by them,, with an express consent, in writing, that they may be negotiable at the said bank, and shall refuse or.neglect to make payment at the time the same may become due, and. a suit shall thereupon be coihmenced, &c. judgment is to be rendered in a sum-mar.y manner.

A person, then, may becoiné indebted to the bank on a.note endorsed by him, as well as on a note made by him ; and the question is, when • dpes hé become indebted.The act appears.-to answér this question in the succeeding member of the Sentence. The words are, “and shall refuse or .neglect'To-make, payment at the time the same may'- become due,” To what antecedent does-the word “ same”' refer ? Most obviously to the words “ bond, bill pr note.” When the bond, bill or note becomes *53 due, the maker or endorsor, who shall refuse or neglect to make payment, is within the description of the act.. No man can be said to refuse or neglect to make payment, before-the money is demandable from him, and till then no action can be brought. But the.law proceeds to say, “and a suit shall thereupon be commenced.” • The word “ thereupon must refer to the note, or tot the circumstances previously stated. ■ Give it the one meafiing or the other, and the 'law obviously contemplates a suit against the maker or endorsor, on his' refusing or neglecting to pay such note, when it shall’ become due. The act then proceeds to say, that, when this suit shall be so commenced, the court shall render judgment thereon in a summary way.

It is alleged that the preceding part of the section is all recital, and cannot,. therefore, be construed to give a tight- to sue, where that right did not before exist: that the enacting clause gives no remedy where one did not.before exist; but- substitutes a summary , mode of proceeding, for that.more tedious action which the previous laws had given.

It is true that the first part of this section is recital; but it describes the precise case in which judgment shall be rendered in a summary way. That precise case is, where a .person indebted, by making or endorsing a' note negotiable and negotiated in the bank, shall refuse or neglect to. make payment thereof, when such note shall become due. The time when he becomes indebted is declared to be," when the note becomes due.

It is alleged that an accommodation endorsor cahno.t then become indebted. This distinction was completely overruled in the case of Violet and Pat-topi The consideration moving from the bank to the maker of the nóte, on the credit of the endorsor, charges both the maker and the endorsor. The endorsor is; in this respect, as liable, both in reason and in law, to the claim of the bank, as if he had placed his name on the face instead of the1 back of thénote..

Judgment affirmed with costs.

*54 Johnson, J. Both the questions, * argued in this-case, arise oüt of the act-of-Virginia incorporating the bank of Alexandria.

On the point of the summary jurisdiction, I concur with my brethren, and think this opinion perfectly consistent with the decision, at the last term, relative to the right of appeal. ' I remember that my opinion in that case was founded on the idea that ■ the provisions of that act, relative to the'summary recovery of debts, was entirely a judicial regulation. That the judicial power was unalienable from the sovereignty of a country, and must, therefore, in all its modifications’, remain subject to the will of succeeding legislatures. That it was, in fact, a subject in which a peculiar, indefeasible right could not be vested in an individual. t I thought .it, therefore, from its nature, unaffected by the clause of -the act of acceptance reserving to the bank its corporate rights, and of coufse affected by the law which gives an appeal, generally, from the courts of .this district to the supreme court, above a. certain amount. I have no'doubt of the power of congress to deprive them also of their summary remedy; but it has not. yet legislated to that effect.

On the other question, I entertain a¡ very strong opinion in opposition to that'of the court.

The doctrine has been repeatedly sanctioned™ this court, that, in the state of Virginia, the holder oí a promissory note cannot recover against an endorsor without proving the insolvency of the drawer, But it is contended that the act, incorporating this bank, has placed the notes negotiable therein on a different footing; and that an endorsor of such a note may be sued as soon as it is dishonoured, without any evidence of the insolvency of the drawer. The following are the words.of the clause, so far as they are material to this case: “ And whereas it is *55

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Bluebook (online)
9 U.S. 49, 3 L. Ed. 33, 5 Cranch 49, 1809 U.S. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeaton-v-bank-of-alexandria-scotus-1809.