Whiteman v. Childress
Whiteman v. Childress
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions in this cause for the consideration of the
On the 1st day of September, 1841, Wm. S. Whiteman was the owner and holder of a paper writing in the words following, viz:
“$920 55-100. Nashville, March 8th, 1841.
“Twelve months after date I promise to pay W. H. Hunt, or order, nine hundred and twenty dollars 55-100, for value received, payable at the Bank of Tennessee, Nashville, in current bank notes of Tennessee. P. NEGRIN.
“Endorser, W. H. Hunt.”
With the view to have this note sold in market for what it would bring, it having then something over six months to run before maturity. Whiteman placed his name on the back of said paper, as did also R. C. K. Martin and Robert H. McEwen, for his (Whiteman’s) accommodation. In this situation, about the first of September, 1841, he placed the paper in the hands of Wm. Allen, a broker, requesting him to sell it in the market. Allen did sell it about the 5th of September, 1841, to Edwin H. Childress at the rate of eighteen per cent discount, and received from said Childress for said paper, with the names so written on the back, eight hundred and fifty dollars, which he paid over immediately to said Whiteman. Nothing further was done by either party till the paper came to maturity, when it was duly protested for non-payment as a promissory note and notice in due time of non-payment given to the said Whiteman, Martin & McEwen, and all other steps taken necessary to charge said White1 man in case said paper is a promissory note.
Upon this case agreed the Circuit Judge gave judgment for the plaintiff, to reverse which this writ of error is prosecuted.
The first question for determination is whether the paper contract set forth in the case agreed is a promissory note.
Mr. Story in his Commentaries upon promissoiy notes, ch. 1, sec. 1, says, “A pronfissorymay be defined to be a written engagement by one person to pay another person therein named absolutely and unconditionally a sum of money certain at a time specified therein.” This definition of a promis
In the case of Looney vs. Pinckston, 1st Tennessee Rep. 384, it was held that a note for money which may be discharged by the delivery of a negro, is not negotiable. In the case of Childress vs. Stewart, Peck’s Rep. 276, it was held that a note payable in bank bills is not a note for money, and therefore not negotiable. In Lawrence vs. Dougherty and Gwin, 5th Yerger, 435, it was held that a note for money which may be discharged in cotton, is not for the payment of money but property, and therefore not negotiable. In the case of Gamble vs. Hatton and Whyte, Peck’s Rep. 130, the court decided that debt will not be upon a note for six hundred and twenty-nine dollars in current bank notes, because current bank notes do not mean gold and silver, and all the plaintiff can ask in case of non-payment of the contract, would be as much gold and silver as the bank notes were worth at the time. In the case of Kirkpatrick vs. M’Culloch, 3d Humphreys, this court held that “a note payable in current bank notes is not a note for money upon which debt will lie, and is not a negotiable paper.” All the Tennessee decis
We think all the decisions of the State are in harmony upon this subject, and feel no disposition to overrule any one of them.
The •written contract then, out of which this suit arises not being a promissory note, and therefore not negotiable, a second question is presented for our consideration, and that is, whether Whiteman is liable as an endorser thereof. In the case of Looney vs. Pinckston, 1st Tennessee Rep. 384, it was held that the assignor of a paper not negotiable, is not liable unless he has been guilty of a fraud.
In the case of Kirkpatrick vs. M’Culloch, 3 Humph., the same doctrine is recognised, and it is there said that the endorser of such paper is only liable where he expressly contracts to be so, or where he transfers such paper fraudulently, and in the latter case not upon the endorsement, but by special action for the consideration, and by the endorsee. We thus see that there have been a train of decisions'ranging from 1st Tennessee Rep. down to 3d Humphreys, in 1842, upon this subject without conflict or contradiction, sustaining the proposition that the endorser or assignor of paper not negotiable is not liable by virtue of his endorsement, but only where he specially so contracts to be, or for fraud in the transfer? To hold otherwise wouldbe to overrule these decisions which we are not disposed to do.
But is there any reason why these decisions should be overruled as being in conflict with principles adjudicated elsewhere. We think not. In discussing this branch, of the subject it must be borne in mind that the paper sued on is held not to be negotiable because it is not a promissory note, and that it is not a promissory note because it is not for the payment of money in specie, but, to use the words of Mr. Story before quoted, in something “susceptible of deterioration and loss, and variation of quality or value,” and not because of the want of negotiable words in the face of the instrument, such as order or bearer, which are necessary by the statute of Anne in England, and by the statutes copied therefrom in many of our States. To make a promissory note negotiable, no such words are required by our statute; on the contrary they are expressly dispensed with, and the paper sued on would have been a promissory note and negotiable if it had been for the payment of money in specie.
Let us now proceed and examine the principles as laid down by Mr. Story upon this subject which are supposed to conflict with our decision, to see if they do.
In section 128 of the work before referred to, Mr. Story says, “a promissory note may be non-negotiable and payable
We are therefore of opinion that the instrument set forth in this special agreed case is not a promissory note, that it is not therefore negotiable; that the endorser is not liable upon any implied promise arising out of such endorsement; that having committed no fraud in the transfer, and not having made himself responsible by a special promise for the performance of the agreement, he is not liable to this action.
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