Court Opinion

ID: 5648958
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 21:51:04.640673+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:38:29.501674
License: Public Domain

Wright, J.
The note in question was one of six notes, made by plaintiffs, on the 18th June, 1857, payable respectively at from two to seven' months, to the order of M. L'. Samuel & Co., for different sums, amounting in the aggregate to $11.190, and delivered to the payees under a written contract, whereby the payees agreed to give the makers $40C weekly, in Troy City Bank bills, in payment of the notes,'and the maker^ to take up the notes as they matured. On the 22d June, 1857 (four days after the arrangement), M. 1. Samuel & Co., the payees, indorsed and transferred the note, to the defendants, as collateral security for-a pre-existing debt. Samuel & Co', made one payment of $400 under the agreement, and no more, having failed in business within a month after its date, and were, at the time of the trial, insolvent. The note was made payable at the Bank of North America, and at its maturity (which was six months from date), was paid to the defendants by the bank from the plaintiffs’ funds, by a mistake or oversight, subsequently to a notice given by the plaintiffs to the bank qfficers not to pay it. Before the commencement of this action the defendants were requested to pay the plaintiffs the amount thus received, which was refused.
The .case involves the principal question whether the note.s executed and delivered, under the agreement of the payees, M. L. Samuel & Co., to pay the makers four hundred dollars weekly, are to be treated as business paper. If not accommodation, but business paper, made for consideration in the hands of Samuel & Co., I think the case is without merit.
The court below held that the transaction was, in substance, an exchange of the notes of the plaintiffs for the agreement of Samuel & Co. to pay them the weekly sum of $400, each being the consideration for the other. If this be correct, the notes given were not accommodation but business paper, made for consideration ; and Samuel & Co., on receiving them, were purchasers and holders for value, and *38at liberty to deal with the paper, in all respects, as if given for the price of goods sold, or money actually advanced. Indeed, it is not denied that this would be the character of the paper if the transaction is to be regarded as an exchange of the notes for the agreement of Samuel & Oo. to pay the plaintiffs the weekly sum of four hundred dollars. (Dowe v. Schutt, 2 Denio, 621; Cameron v. Chappell, 24 Wend., 94; Davis v. McCready, 17 N. Y., 262.)
I am of the opinion that that was in substance and legal effect the nature of the arrangement. The plaintiffs executed and delivered to Samuel & Co., the payees, six notes, for different sums, and payable respectively at from two to seven months; the payees agreeing, in writing, to give the makers $400- per week in payment of them; the makers to take up the notes as they matured. The agreement of Samuel & Co. to pay the plaintiffs $400 per week was unquestionably a good and valid consideration for the execution and delivery of the six notes provided for; and, if Samuel & Co. had performed their agreement, the plaintiffs could not have contested their liability upon the notes. The weekly payment of $400 provided for, if made, would equal the aggregate sum of all the notes; the plaintiffs having the advantage of the earlier payments. In effect, the transaction was just the same as if Samuel & Co. had given to the plaintiffs their notes for $400, payable weekly during seven months, for those given by the plaintiffs in pursuance of the agreement.
This being the nature of the arrangement, Samuel & Co. on receiving the notes were purchasers and holders for value; the notes were business paper in their hands, to be dealt with as they pleased; and any subsequent holder acquiring their title would not be subject to any defense .growing out of their defaults happening afterward.
A further point to be noticed is, were the defendants Iona fide holders of the note in suit upon a good consideration in law. I think they were. On the 22d June, 1857, Samuel & Co. transferred the note to them as collateral security for an antecedent indebtedness, which is still unpaid *39and exceeds the amount of the note. At the time of the transfer there was no default by Samuel & Co., in the performance of their contract with the plaintiffs, no $400 payment had become due, and that which first matured was paid by them. When, then, the note was transferred there was no infirmity in the title of Samuel & Co., and no equities existing which could have been set up against them by the plaintiffs, if the note had then been due. In this condition the defendants succeeded to the right and title of Samuel & Co., and them right is not subject to, and cannot be affected by, any equities which subsequently arose between the makers and payees. Their title could only, in any event, be affected by equities existing between the original parties at the time of the transfer. (Furness v. Gilchrist, 1 Sand. S. C., 53.) If at the time of the transfer of the note to the defendants it had been due, Samuel & Co., the payees, could have maintained an action upon it against the plaintiffs. By such transfer upon a good consideration, as between Samuel & Co. and ths defendants, the defendants succeeded to their rights, although they advanced no new consideration; and no equities subsequently arising between the original parties could impair the rights of the defendants.
These views render unnecessary the discussion of the question whetler the money was so paid to the defendants as to enable the plaintiffs to recover it back.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Campbell, J
In June, 1857, the plaintiffs entered into an arrangement with the firm of M. L. Samuel & Co., which was reduced t> wilting, as follows: “We agree to give Messrs. McSpedon & Baker $400 weekly in .Troy City Bank bills, in paymeit of their notes, they (McS. & B.) to take up the notes as tlsy mature, viz.” Then follows a list of six notes, of whicl the note now in controversy was one, and the contract signed by M. L. Samuel & Co. Were the notes issued under tint arrangement merely accommodation notes, or did they constitute what is called in commercial language business paper It seems to me there is hardly room for *40'doubt, either upon principle or authority. The makers of the notes were to take them up at maturity. They were to pay them, at all events, in coin, if the holders at maturity should require it. The parties receiving the notes agreed to pay therefor in a specific article, namely, Troy City Bank bills." These bills might or might not pass current as money when the notes should mature. They might be an article of purchase and sale by the brokers in the city of blew York, where the contract was made. A specified amount of these bills was to be given in payment of the notes, i There was no provision to indemnify the makers of the notes beyond the contract to furnish the bank-bills in payment — no provision to indemnify in all events; and that is the very essence of the contract, where a note is made by one person for the sole benefit of another. The principal element of an accommodation note was thus wanting. The point is in effect decided in Cameron v. Chappell (24 Wend., 94); Dowe v. Schutt (2 Denio, 621), and in Davis v. McCready (17 N. Y., 232). If the note in controversy was in legal effect business paper, as I think clearly it was, then it was good and valid in the hands of Samuel & Co., aid they could transfer it to the- defendant in payment of indebtedness, or as collateral security for the payment of such indebtedness. In point of fact there had been no breach of the contract on the part of Samuel & Co. when they transferred the note. But if the note was valid business paper in tleir hands, I do not see that this made any difference in legal effect. If the note had remained with Samuel & Co. and niatured in their hands, doubtless the plaintiffs would have lad their set-off or counter claim. If the foregoing views ale correct, then the defendant might have enforced the collection of the note against the plaintiffs; and the question whether the bank, where the note was made payable, paid it by mistake out of the funds of plaintiffs, is of no moment.
I think the case has been correctly disp)sed of in the courts below, and the judgment should be affimed.
All the judges concurring, ,
Judgment affirmed.