Willock v. Riddle & Co.
Willock v. Riddle & Co.
Opinion of the Court
The declaration contains three counts, 1. For money had and received. 2. For money lent and advanced. ■ 3. Upon an inland bill of exchange drawn by Willock in Norfolk, upon Carey of Alexandria, payable, five days after date, to Travers, or order, for $ 100, value in account, and protested for non-payment. The jury found a verdict for $ 115 damages. The bill, (although not made part of the record, being inserted by the clerk,) appears to have been drawn on the 12th of April, 1798; to have been accepted by Carey, but at what time does not appear; and to have been protested, for non-payment, on the 10th of July following.
On the trial the defendant Willock, moved the court to instruct the jury, that the endorsee of an inland bill of exchange was bound to make application for its payment to the drawee, within a reasonable period from the time when it became due, and that unless such application was made in such reasonable time, the endorser had no recourse against the drawee of the said bill. The defendant also moved the
The matter stated in the second part of this bill of exceptions and which relates only to the case of non-acceptance, seems to bear no relation whatever to the case stated in the declaration, in which nothing is said about the non-acceptance of the bill by Carey, but only charges that he did not pay it when demanded. This part of the court’s instruction may, therefore, be thrown wholly out of the ques= tion, as having no relation to the cause.
But with respect to that part of the court’s opinion which declares, that, although application for payment of an inland bill of exchange be not made within a reasonable time, that still the endorsee might have his recourse against the drawer, and might recover, unless there were evidence of insolvency in the drawee, or other damages occasioned by the neglect, I incline to think the court not so correct in its instruction as it might have been. For I accord with the opinion of chief justice Eyre, 2 H. Black. 569, that, in the case of inland bills of exchange, what is reasonable time must depend upon the particular circumstances of the case, and the judges who gave the instruction seem to have been of this opinion in the latter part of their direction, although in the former part, they may be supposed to have entertained a
As parties ought not to propound, nor courts to answer, mere abstract questions no how essential to the cause, questions which are obscurely worded in a bill of exceptions, ought to be understood with reference to the actual case before the court: But, if questions of that character are propounded, and the court decide them rightly, their decision shall not be reversed for error, according to the maxim, utile per inutile non vitiatur.
The question here propounded was not an abstract question, however, but it went beyond the case made by the last
Under the latitude of the question put to the court by the defendant, their opinion is not erroneous; for the party, without such notice, may recover the principal.
Their opinion then, is not to be taken to be erroneous; and there may have been, for any thing that appears, other testimony to warrant the recovery. I think, therefore, that the judgment ought to be affirmed.
The act of assembly does not make the loss of the principal, the consequence of the failure to give notice to the drawer; for, as to him, the penalty, for the neglect, is the loss of the interest and damages only. Besides, it does not appear that all the evidence was stated in the bill of exceptions; nor upon which of the counts the verdict was taken: And there might have been testimony sufficient to support the money counts. I am therefore for affirming the judgment.
Concurring Opinion
concurred, that the judgment ought to be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.