Case ID: blackf_5/html/0370-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Sullivan, J. \n      Per Curiam.\n    ", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Lewis v. Wilson for the Use of Vanblaricum.
    A sealed note, though payable at a chartered bank withinlmre state, is not within the statute placing certain notes on the same footing with inland bills of exchange.
    Monday, November 23.
    ERROR to the Marion Circuit Court.
   Sullivan, J.

This was an action of assumpsit by Wilson against Lewis, as the indorser of a sealed note. The note was made by M. Goodell and N. Goodell, payable to Lewis at the branch of the state bank at Indianapolis. The makers having failed to pay the note when it became due, the indorsee brought the present action against the indorser, without having first prosecuted the makers to insolvency, or without showing in his declaration any excuse for not doing so.' The declaration was demurred to by the defendant, but the demurrer was overruled and judgment given for the plaintiff. f The only question is, whether a sealed bill is a negotiable instrument according to the law-merchant, within the meaning of our statute? That statute is very similar in its terms to the 3 & 4 Anne, ch. 9, except that the note mentioned in our statute, in order to have the effect of an inland bill of exchange, must be made payable, in the first instance, at a chartered bank within this state.

We have not been able to find a solitary case in' the English books, in which the provisions of the statute of Anne have been construed to embrace sealed instruments./ By universal consent, it seems, the operations of the statute are confined to promissory notes. It is clear, we think, from the course of the decisions in the English Courts previous to the passage of the statute of Anne, and- which occasioned its enactment, that promissory notes were only intended to be made negotiable by the statute, notwithstanding, by its language, “all notes” are included, /in the exposition of our statute, we feel constrained to give great weight to the interpretation which the statute of Anne has received "in England, particularly as the language of both statutes, so far as respects the question before us, is almost identical, and the object of both the same. '

Although we can find no express adjudication in the British Courts on this point, there is a case somewhat analogous in the. Supreme Court of New-York, which sustains the view we are disposed to take of this case. That was an action brought by the indorsee against the indorser of a note executed by a corporation, with the seal of the company affixed. The principal question made on the argument of the cause was, whether the note was negotiable. It was held not to be negotiable because it was a sealed instrument. The Court said, that the seal of a corporation when affixed to any deed or contract by proper authority, is not distinguishable in its legal effect from that of an individual, the one is the seal of an artificial, the other of a natural person. The Court continued to remark, that promissory notes, which were made negotiable the same as inland bills of exchange by the statute of Anne, were not under seal; if they had been, since that statute, all specialties could have been made negotiable, and the advantage, in respect to the statute of limitations, would have introduced them into general use. Clark v. The Farmers’ W. M. Co. of Benton, 15 Wend. 256. See, also, Warren v. Lynch, 5 J. R. 239, referred to in the foregoing case.

C. Fletcher and 0. Butler, for the plaintiff.

J. Morrison, for the defendant.

In Massachusetts, it has been the immemorial usage for indorsees of promissory notes not negotiable, to declare against the indorsers as on a negotiable note. But the reason of that practice, as given by Ch. J. Parsons, is, that the statute of- 3 & 4 Anne, ch. 9, was never enacted in that state, but in practice, the provisions of the first section were early adopted, and the form of declaring on negotiable notes, resulting from that statute, was extended to notes not negotiable. It, therefore, came to be considered as the common law of the commonwealth, that all cash notes were negotiable, and that the indorsee might declare against the indorser of such notes in the same manner as if the notes were negotiable. Jones v. Fales, 4 Mass. R. 245. No such usage prevails here. On the contrary, the indorsee of a note not negotiable according to the. law-merchant, cannot sue the indorser without prosecuting the maker to insolvency, or showing a sufficient reason for not doing so.

/ Our conclusion is, that, a sealed note or other specialty is 'not a negotiable instrument within the statute, and that the demurrer should have been sustained, j

Per Curiam.

The judgment is reversed at the costs “of the relator. Cause remanded, &c.