Court Opinion

ID: 3615599
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:58:49.955674+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:18:06.861774
License: Public Domain

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The first objection presented by the pleadings on the part of the defendant is, that the written instruments set forth in the declaration are payable to the trustees therein named or theirsuccessors in office, and that the uncertainty as to which of the two, the payment is to be made, invalidates them as promissory notes, though not as agreements.
I am unable to perceive any such contingency in the contracts.
If the plaintiffs are to be considered as the representatives of a corporation, and the suit instituted for the benefit of their principal, the payment must be made to them, as trustees. If their term of office expired before the commencement of the suit, then, and in that event only, would a right of action enure to their successors. There never was a time, consequently, when the maker of the notes could discharge himself by a payment made at his election, to these plaintiffs, or their successors.
The term successors, implies one who takes a place that another has left.
It might be as reasonably contended, that the payee was contingent, where a note was made payable to A. or his executors, or administrators, c.
It has been determined, that an undertaking to pay C. or D., or his or their order, is not a promissory note; because payable to either of the payees, and that only on the contingency of its not being paid to the other. (Story on Prom. Notes, § 37; 4 Wend. 575; 2 B.  Ald. 417.) The distinction between those cases (even if the doctrine thereby established is sound) and the present, is, that the contingency in them was apparent in the face of the instrument. Here there was no uncertainty in the contract, when the notes were made, or became payable; the ambiguity, if any, would arise from a change of trustees after the note took effect as a perfected contract. *Page 133 
Secondly. If the plaintiffs were not the representatives of a corporation, as the defendant insists, they could sustain the action in their own name; the word "Trustees," would be merely a designation of the persons, and the phrase "their successors," may be rejected as surplusage. It has been decided that a note payable to a trustee, or agent, or executor, will maintain a suit in the name of the person mentioned. (3 Harrington, 385; 3Mass. R. 103; 2 English (Ark.) R. 382. And see 9John. 334; 8 Cowen, 31, and cases there cited.) I think therefore, that these contracts are promissory notes, and consequently negotiable.
2. It is said the declaration is bad, because it is not the action of the plaintiffs as individuals suing in their own right, but a suit by them as "trustees" of a company.
A contract payable to the trustees of a company not incorporated, would not be a note within our statate. But there is no averment or pretense that the Apalachicola Land Company was ever incorporated; and if not, there cannot be a contract with the plaintiffs, as trustees. The allegation of a promise to them "as trustees," is repugnant to the contract, as stated, and the other distinct averments in the declaration.
They are, therefore, to be rejected as unnecessary. (1 Chittyon Plead. 265.) Again, the expression "Trustees of the Apalachicola "Land Company," indicates the relation in which the payees of the note stand to the company, but that does not affect their legal right in, and their right to sue in their own namesupon the contract.
3d. It is insisted, that the action should have been brought in the names of the individuals composing the land company.
The legal interest in the notes, as we have seen, was in the persons named as payees; and even if it should be granted, which does not appear, that the consideration moved from the company, the action was properly brought in the names of those to whom the promise was expressly made.
4th. Another point made is, that the notes are usurious upon their face. *Page 134 
The answer to this point, is found in the facts stated in the declaration, to wit, that the notes and the assumpsit of the defendant, were made at Apalachicola in the state of Florida. That the rate of interest was regulated by statute in that state, or that the common law prevails there, are mere matters of conjecture. Suspicion alone will not invalidate a contract, and there is nothing else in this case.
The sixth and seventh points, as to the variance, and the erroneous assignment of the breach of the contract stated in the declaration, depend upon the assumption, that the promise to pay the plaintiff is in the alternative. This has already been considered.
It is contended under the 8th point, that the notes were payable to the plaintiffs in their official capacity. That the pleas which show them out of office, and other trustees in their place, is a bar to the action. As the promise was made to the plaintiffs, as trustees of an unincorporated company, the action must be brought in their names, although other persons had been subsequently appointed.
In Townsend v. Goewey, (19 Wend. 427,) the association was for the purpose of building an exchange in Albany; the defendant subscribed for stock, and the association was subsequently incorporated; after which the action was brought in the names of the original trustees, agreed upon before the association was incorporated. The promise was to the trusteesor their successors; Held, that the action must be brought in their names, and that their successors took the beneficial interest, as assignees, without a formal assignment.
The next question arises upon the plea, or rather the replication, to the defendant's plea of the statute of limitations.
It appears that the defendant's intestate, Mitchell, when the note was made, and the cause of action accrued, was without this state, and continued out of the state until his death. That the defendant on the first of June, 1844, was duly appointed administrator, and took upon himself the burthen, c. And *Page 135 
that the action was brought within six years after the granting of administration.
The replication is, I think, a perfect answer to the plea, according to Benjamin v. DeGroot, (1 Denio, 156,) andDouglass v. Forrest, (4 Bing. 686.) In the last case, the testator resided and died abroad. The action was on a Scotch judgment, obtained by proclamation against the testator, when he was in India. It was held, that his executors in England might be sued within six years, after taking out probate. And in the case from Denio, that where the statute did not begin to run in the lifetime of the testator, it could not commence running, until there was a personal representative, against whom a suit could be brought.
The replication does not in terms negative the fact, that administration was not granted prior to the time specified, to the defendant or some other person. But I think this a defect of form rather than substance, and that it is waived by the rejoinder, which attempts to sustain the plea, upon the sole ground that the debt was not contracted, nor was the decedent ever within or amenable to the jurisdiction of this state. The judgment should be affirmed.
A majority of the court concurred in the foregoing opinion.
FOOT, J. dissented, on the ground that the instruments declared upon were not promissory notes, there being a contingency as to the persons to whom payment was to be made.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 136 
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