Coulter v. Richmond
Coulter v. Richmond
Opinion of the Court
There is considerable, diversity of sentiment among the courts of the different States as to the nature of the contract implied by a blank' indorsement of a negotiable note before delivery to the payee. In some of the States such an indorser is prima facie regarded as a guarantor, in others an indorser, and in others a joint promisor. (Parsons on Xotes, 119, and notes e, f, g, and cases there cited; 40 N. Y., 492, reporter’s note.) In this State, it has been repeatedly held, and is too strongly settled by authority to be disturbed, that a person making such an indorsement is presumed to have intended to become liable as second indorser, and that on the face of the paper, without explanation, he is to be regarded as second indorser, and, of course, not liable upon the note to the payee, who is supposed to be the first indorser. (12 J. R., 159; 17 id., 326; 37 N. Y., 614; 50 id., 69.) As the paper itself furnishes only prima facie evidence of this intention,.it is competent to rebut the presumption, by parol proof that the indorsement was made to give the maker credit with the payee. (Id.) Such, among others, was the case of Moore v. Cross (19 N. Y., 227), where the indorsement was
In this case the judge before whom it was tried found that the note was indorsed by the defendants’ intestate at the maker’s request, and to enable him to purchase of the payee $5,000 of United States bonds, and that the note was used for that purpose, and it is insisted by the learned counsel for the defendants, that there was no evidence to justify this finding. We are called upon, therefore, not to determine the .fact, but to say whether the circumstances proved were sufficient to justify the inference that the fact existed, or, in other words, whether the evidence tended to prove it; if so we are foreclosed by the finding. The principal facts bearing upon this point were, that the defendants’ intestate and the maker were brothers, and that for three years respectively, prior to the making and delivering of the note in question, the maker had borrowed of the payee the same bonds, and secured their return each year by a note of $5,000, signed by himself and the defendants’ intestate as makers, the latter being surety, and that as each note was delivered, the prior note was taken up, and that when the note in suit was delivered the bonds were purchased, and the last note given for the loan of the bonds was taken up.
The defendants’ intestate had been for three years the surety to the payee for his brother in respect to the bonds. The form of that paper indicated that it was intended to he used to obtain a credit with the payee, and the surety was chargeable with notice of that purpose, and when he became surety upon the fourth note, although in a different form, for the same amount at the end of the last year, is it not a legitimate inference that he knew the purpose of this note, and supposed that it was to be used, as it was, to take up his other note and obtain a like credit ? The change in form of the suretyship to that of indorser is not inconsistent with such
This intention is confirmed by the terms of the note. It ran a year, which is longer than ordinary commercial paper, and it was payable at the house of the payee, thus indicating a purpose or expectation that the payee would hold it until it was due, a circumstance inconsistent with the idea that the payee was to become a mere indorser.
It is also objected that the plaintiff had no title to the note, it having been assigned to one Merriam on the 27th of June, 1872. The assignment provides in effect that it is not to prejudice the collection of the note against the indorser, thereby evincing an intention not to part with or relinquish this claim, and to make the transfer subordinate to it. It is unnecessary to consider whether the obligation against the maker and indorser could be separated, and owned by different persons, or whether, if not, the transfer or the reservation would be nugatory. It is evident that the transfer was for a particular
The judgment must be affirmed.
All concur, except Grover, J., dissenting.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.