Burnham v. Spring
Burnham v. Spring
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was by
— The case shows that the defendant, at the time he drew the draft declared upon, had no funds in the hands of the drawee, so that the plaintiff has realized no part of his demand from that source. In such case a demand on the drawee, and notice of non-payment by him, need not be proved; unless the drawer had reasonable ground to expect that his draft would, nevertheless, be duly honored; and this, if relied upon by the drawer in his defence, should be shown by him. For this purpose, at the trial, he introduced an agreement in writing, signed by the drawee and himself, dated Sept, 10, 1835, in which the drawee stipulated, upon certain terms and conditions, to transfer the one half of certain “ notes and cash, received by him of Asa Hanson and others.” He did not show that, at the time of drawing the draft, or within a reasonable time thereafter, he had complied with any of those terms and conditions; and therefore did not show that he could reasonably have expected the draft would be paid.
The letters which were introduced, probably, as tending to show something of the kind, bear date, July 14 and 23, 1836,
Exceptions overruled — Judgment on the verdict.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Daniel Burnham versus John Spring
- Status
- Published