Lail v. Coram & Co.
Lail v. Coram & Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition and summons, upon a bill of exchange, under the act of 1837, (3 Stat. Law, 491.) Coram & Co. the plaintiffs, state (in the petition,) that they are the holders of a bill of exchange on the defendants, Charles Lail, as drawer, and William A. Withers, as acceptor, in substance as follows, and then set forth the bill, ver batim, with the signature of Charles Lail, and the address to Wm. A, Withers, but do not set forth any
It is contended that the introductory statement in which the defendant, Withers, is called “acceptor,” is a sufficient averment of the fact that he did accept the bill afterwards set forth; and that the insertion of the acceptance, though expressly required by the statute,“is but matter of form, or mere evidence, of the fact already averred. But it is obvious, upon inspection of the statute of .1837, and of the original statute creating the remedy by petition, that the Legislature intended, in giving the form of the petition, to require that the plaintiff, instead of averring the substance of the defendant’s contract, and of his own title to it, as might be done in other cases, should evince the liability of the defendant and his own right to sue upon that liability, by actually setting forth the written evidence of the contract, and of any assignment thereof. The office of the introductory statement is to show the character in which the plaintiff sues, and in which the defendant is sued. And it is the proper office of the body of the petition to show, as far as the prescribed form will allow, the facts on which the character and liability of the parties, as intimated in the introduc. tory statement may depend.' If these facts are intrinsic and not connected with the contract, such as the death of a party, and the grant of administration or probate, or the association of several persons under the name of a firm, as the form of the petition allows of no distinct averment of these facts, the mere descriptive statement in the introduction is properly held to be a sufficient averment; for if it were not so, a large class of cases would be excluded from the benefit of this’remedy, without any substantial reason. But with regard to the contract itself, or the assignment of it, the case is entirely different. It is the essential characteristic of this remedy, as it was undoubtedly an essential object of its institution; that the contract itself, on which the defendant is to be made liable, and any transfer of it under which the plaintiff
There is no analogy between the omission to insert the acceptance and the omission in a petition on an assigned note, to insert, after setting out the note and assignment, the words “whereby the plaintiff has become the proprietor thereof,” which words are nothing more than the legal inference from the facts previously appearing. They
The omission in the present case to insert or even to state the contract of the defendant, Withers, is, in our opinion, a fatal defect in the petition, entirely unaided by the statute of Jeofails.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded, with leave to amend the petition.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.