Court Opinion

ID: 3661422
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:12:50.144885+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:08:33.199814
License: Public Domain

This was assumpsit for goods sold and delivered. Plea,nonassumpsit. The plaintiffs, on 1 April, 1836, sold goods to the firm of Joseph  John Atkinson, of Pitt County, who were the defendants in this action. The firm of the Atkinsons was dissolved in September, 1836. On 15 April, 1837, the two Atkinsons gave to the plaintiffs their promissory note for the price of the goods. Some payments were made on the note which reduced it to the sum of $500. And on 18 June, 1837, John Atkinson, in his own name, drew a bill of exchange in (263)  favor of the plaintiffs, on Mitchell  Co. of New York, for $500 at sixty days, and took up the promissory note. When the bill fell due, it was duly presented for payment, but payment was refused for want of funds of the drawer. No notice was given to the drawer of the dishonor of the bill. There was no proof that the bill had been returned to the drawer, or that the plaintiffs offered to surrender it at the trial.
The plaintiffs were nonsuited, and appealed.
Notice need not be given to the drawer of a bill of exchange when he has no effects in the hands of the drawee, unless he had reasonable grounds to believe the bill would be honored. Notice is required to enable the drawer and indorsers immediately to withdraw their effects from the drawee. But if the drawer had no effects in the hands of the drawee from the time the bill was drawn until it became payable, he could not be prejudiced for the want of notice; and consequently, under such circumstances, he is not entitled to any. Bickerdike v. Bollman, 1 Term, 405; Legge v. Thorpe, 12 East, 171; Chitty on Bills, 467; Leigh's Nisi Prius, 452, note 1, where are to be found the names of all the American cases on this subject.
Secondly, there is no evidence in the case that the plaintiffs agreed to take the bill in discharge of the antecedent debt due them from the two Atkinsons.
If the plaintiffs, therefore, had surrendered the bill, even on the trial, they might have recovered upon the original consideration; for the taking of the note first and then the bill did not merge the original consideration, as a bond would have done. But as this negotiable bill is still outstanding, and may be in the hands of an innocent indorsee or holder, we are of opinion, from the cases, that the plaintiffs cannot recover, and that the nonsuit must stand. Holmes v. De Camp, 1 Johns., *Page 203 
34; Angel v. Felton, 8 Johns., 149; Pintard v. Tackington, 10 Johns., 105;Burdick v. Green, 15 Johns., 247; Hugs v. Wheeler, 8 Cowen, 77.
PER CURIAM.                                 Nonsuit affirmed.
Cited: Gibson v. Smith, 63 N.C. 105; Mauney v. Coit, 86 N.C. 471;Bank v. Bridgers, 98 N.C. 72; Cotton Mills v. Cotton Mills, 115 N.C. 487;Bank v. Hollingsworth, 135 N.C. 571; Bank v. Jones, 147 N.C. 425.
(264)