QJnrnpU Haui ^rl|0nl ICibrary cornel. OnWersityUbrarv KF957.B59 ,ui„s notes, and Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31 92401 8854038 ELEMENTS OF THE LAW OP BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES AND THE ENGLISH BILLS OF EXCHANGE ACT iFor StuJmts BY MELVILLE M. BIGELOW, Ph.D. Harvard BOSTON LITTLE, BKOWN, AND COMPANY 1893 Copyright, 1893, By Melville M. Bigelow. c 2SntiitrsitB ^tEss : John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A. /2, ',7 A '/7?e .t^yrr/jf^f/ym^'''''^ ' r/' , /^A^-^M .:€/.v..r^. /-• ^^^^ l^M«9'1'^': .^^^^uul^^-f^ TO THE RT. HON. SIR EDWARD FRY, IN WHOSE KETIREMENT FROM THE BENCH ENGLISH JURISPRUDENCE EVERYWHERE SUFFERS LOSS. NOTE. The English Bills of Exchange Act, 1882, forms the last chapter of this book. For purposes of com- pai'ison, and, wherever the American Law is incom- plete, uncertain, or unsatisfactory, for purposes of suggestion, the statute will be found helpful. A Selection of Cases, following the order of the text, will soon be issued as a companion volume. The reference 'L. C.,' of the notes, signifies Bige- low's Leading Cases on Bills and Notes." August 15, 1893. CONTENTS. Pace Cases Cited ix Chapter I. Introduction 1 II. Physical Requisites 10 III. The Maker's Contract 27 IV. The Acceptor's Contract 36 V. The Drawer's Contract 47 VI. The Indorser's Contract 61 VII. Indokser's Contract continued : Proceed- ings before Dishonor 81 VIII. Indorser's Contract continued : Proceed- ings UPON Dishonor 106 IX. Indorser's Contract continued : Excuse or Steps 143 X. Accommodation Contracts 157 XI. Contracts op Guarantor and of Surety 161 XII. Holder's Position 170 XIII. Legal ok Absolute Defences 174 XIV. Equities 206 XV. Discharge of Surety : Dealings with Prin- cipal Debtor 231 XVI. Payment 242 XVII. Conflict of Laws 249 XVIII. English Bills of Exchange Act .... 256 Index 305 CASES CITED. A. FAOE Abel V. Sutton 65 Adams v. Blethen . . . . 69 V. Frye 184 V. King 13 ^tna Ins. Co. v. Winchester . 190 Akers v. Demond 252 Aldotis V. Cornwell .... 182 Aldrich v. Smith 181 Alexander v. Burchfleld ... 56 Allaire v. Hartshorne . . . 229, 230 Allen v. Brown 235 i;. Kemble 255 V. King 51 V. Merchants' Bank . . . 253 Alvey V. Eeed 201 American Bank v. Blanchard . 21 Anderson v. Drake 85 Andrew v. Blackly .... 53 Andrews v. Boyd . . . 147 V. Franklin 23 V. German Nat. Bank . . 57 Angle V, Northwestern Ins. Co. 227 Atmstrong v. Armstrong . 27 V. Christiani 114 V. Thruston 118 Arnold v. Cheque Bank 176, 178, 179, 192, 193, 195 V. Dresser . . 82, 84, 104, 150 1). Kuiloch 118 Arnot V. Woodburn .... 228 Arpin v. Devens ... .39 Ashcroft V. De Armond . . . 201 Atkinson v. Brooks . 219, 220, 236 Attorney-Gen. v. Continental Ins. Co 20 Attwood V. Kattenbury ... 65 Auerbach v. Pritchett ... 15 PAGE Austin V. Curtis . . . 218, 220, 237 Ayer v. Tilden 252 Aymar v, Sheldon . . . 252, 253 B. Backus V. Shipherd Bailey v. Dozier V. Smith Baker v. Stone . Ballou V. Talbot Banbury v. Lisset Bange v. Flint . Bank of Alexandria 152 109 229 201 31 20 229 Swann 110, 138 Bank of America v. Woodworth 195 Bank of Columbia v. Lawrence 142 Bank of Commerce v. Union Bank 188 Bank of England v. Vagliano 178, 186 Bank of Ireland ». Evans Char- ities 177, 192 Bank of New York v. Van- derhorst 220 Bank q| Old Dominion v. McVeigh 110, 138 Bank of Red Oak v. Orvis 86, 104 Bank of Republic v. Carrington 217 Bank of United States v. Bank of Georgia 200 V. Carneal 119 V. Daniel 6, 108 V. Davis 134 V. Dunn 67 Bank of Utica v. Bender 131, 140, 142 V. Phillips .... 137, 138 Bank of Washington v. Triplett 59 CASES CITED. Barclay v. Bailey 99 Bardsley v. Delp 215 Barlow v. Bishop .... 77, 199 V. Congregational Society . 32 Barnwell r. Mitchell .... 141 Barron v. Cady 239 Bartlett v. "Wells . . . 201 Barton v. Baker . . 104, 155 Bassenhorst i'. Wilby 91, 92, 134, 152 Bassett i'. Avery 228 . -JS 176,178 . 228 . 210 r. Haines Baxendalei). Bennett Baxter v. Little Bay V. Coddington V. Shrader . . Baylej' v. Taber Beale v. Parrish Beals ». Peck Bean v. Arnold . Beard iK Dedolph V. Westerman Belcher v. Smith Belknap c. National Ban Bell V. Alexander . . Benedict v. Cowden . Benoist v. Creditors . Benthall v. Hildreth . Berkshire Bunk r. Jones Berridge v. Fitzgerald Berry v. Robinson . . Bertrand v. Barkman Beuerman v. Van Buren Bickford v. First Nat. Bank Bigelow y. Colton . . Bikerdike v. Bollman . . Bird V. Le Blanc . . Bishop V. Dexter . . Bissenthall v. Williams . Black r. Ward . . Blakely v. Grant Blakey v. Johnson Blanckenhagen v. Blundell Blodgett V. Durgin . . Bond V. Farnham . . . Born V. First Nat. Bank . Bouldin V. Page . . . Boulton V. Walsh . . . Bower V. Hastings . . Bowling V, Harrison . . 195 . 203 . 142 122 . 14.5 20, 02 . 147 70, 107 . 190 . 54 . i:i5 . 50 . 195 152, 154 . 137 . 134 . 21.-. 217 . 57 35, 07 . 49 . 145 . 134 12 . 10 . 107 183, 227 . 14 . 88 . 147 56, 57 . 122 113, 114 . 22.J 124, 127 PAGE Boyd V. Cummings .... 220 V. McCann 228 Bradlaugh v. De Kin . . 250, 251 Bray v. Hadwen . . . 133, 134 Bridges v. Winters .... 182 Brill V. Crick 195 Britton v. Dierker .... 183 Brooks V. Allen . . . 183, 190 i: Blaney 86, 88 (. Elkins 12 Brown v. Butchers' Bank 10, 25, 63 V. Donnell 203 I . Leavitt 220 V. McHngh 26, 02 V. Maffey 49 V. Olmsted 221 V. Keed 187, 195 Bryant v. Wilcox .... 144 Buchanan v. Marshall . . . 152 Buckner v. Fiuley ... . 107 Burchfield v. Moore . 184, 187 Burke v. Allen . . . 201, 202 II. iMcKay .... 102, 103 Bnrkhalter v. Second Nat. Bank 55, 56 Hurley v. Russell 201 Burmester v. Barron .... 141 Burns r. Rowland ... . 219 Burson r. Huntington 170, 178, 227 Butler V. Paine ... .16 Byrne v. Becker 218 Came v. Brigham 202 Cameron v. Chappell . . . 211 Canal Bank i: Bank of Albany 195, 196 Capital Bank r. Armstrong . Iii2 Capron r. Capron . . Carew r. Duckworth . Carpenter v. Farnsworth ti. Reynolds Carr v. Rowland Carrier v. Sears Carroll v. Upton Carter v. Burley V. Union Bank Caruthers v. West . 141 52, 53 . 14 . 146 . 34 . 201 142 109 102 CASES CITED. PAGE 73 Case V. Spaulding . , Catlett V. Catlett . Caulkins v. Whistler Central Bank v. Hammett Chaddock v. Vauness Chadwick v. Jeffers Champion o. Dlmer Chandler v. Drew . Chanoine v. Fowler Chapman v. Keane V. Rose . . . Charles v. Denio V. Marden . . Chatham Bank v. Allison Cheshire v. Taylor . Chester v. Dorr Chicopee Bank v. Chapin V. Philadelphia Bank 82, Childs V, Laflin ... Chipman v. Tucker Chism V. Toomer . Chouteau v. Webster Church V. Barlow . Citizens Bank v. Richmond City Bank v. Cutler . . 102, Clapp V. Hanson V. Rice 35 Claridge v. Dalton 51 Clark V. Eldridge 118 V. Pease .... 223, 224 V. Whiting 69 Clews ». Bank of New York . 188 Cline V. Guthrie ISO Clouston V. Barbiere .... 33 Clute V. Small 182 Cocke V. Bank of Tennessee . 123 Gockrill v. Kirkpatrick . . 15, 16 Coddington v. Davis . 146, 147, 154 Cofifman ». Bank of Kentucky . 254 u. Campbell 21 Coggill V. American Bank . . 196 Cohen v. Teller 200 Cohns V. Bank of Tennessee . 109 Collott «. Haigh 240 Commercial Bank v. Varnum . 108 Comstock V. Hier 215 Conner v. Routh 10 Cony B. Wheelock 65 Cook V. Baldwin 38 . 180 . 243 . 73 . 134 . 180 . 228 . 119 . 120 . 178 . 67 . 225 . 252 . 147 . 225 . 230 83, 177 176 187 139 134 187 , 108 80 Cook V. Lister . Coolidge V. Payson Cooper V. Meyer 1. Waldegrave Corbett v, Clark Corby v. Weddle . Cornell v. Nebeker Cottrell V. Conklin Coulter V. Richmond Course v. Shackleford Coursin v. Ledlie . Cowling V. Altman . Crandell v. First Nat. Bank Crawford v. Branch Bank Crawshay v. Collins Creamer v. Perry . Crist V. Crist . . Crocker v. Getchell Cromer v. Piatt Cromwell ». Sac Crosby v. Gi'ant Cummings v. Boj'd Currie v. Nind . . Currier v. Lockwood Curtis 1). Brown V. Goodenow . ■(/. Leavitt . . V. Mohr . . . D. Dabney v. Stidger . Dale V. Gear . . Dana v. Sawyer Davis V. Brown V, Clarke . . V. McCready . Deblieux v. Bullard Denison v. Tyson . Dennistown v. Stewart Develing v. Ferris . Dewey v. Washburn DeWitt V. Walton . Dewolf V. Murray Dickins v. Beal Dickinson v. Edwards Dietrich v. Bayhi . Dole V. Gold . . Donegan v. Wood . PAGE . 247 44,45 196 255 20 178 195 70 33 134 20 212 184 117 64 148 63 118, 334 118 228, 229 212 215 213 11 39 182 202 221 . 123 67,73 98 67, 80 37 211 133 16 109 147 16 31 117 49, 50 262, 254 17 118 102 48, CASES CITED. PAGE Doolittle 1). Feny ... .67 Douglass V. Wilkeson . . 66 Downer v. Cheseborough . . 73 V. Remer . ... 136 Drake v. Henly .... 80 V. Markle 16 Draper r. Ward . 181, 185, 186, 187 Dresser «. Missouri Const. Co. 2-'.5 ,;. Missouri Uy. Co. . 229 Dumont v. Williamson ... 68 Dunavan v. Flynn . . 40 Dunbar v. Tyler . . .143 Duncan v. Gilbert . . . 224 V. McCuUough ... 88 Dundas v. Bowler . . . 254 Dunlop V. Silver ... 4 Dunn V. Adams ... . 253 Durden v. Smith ... . 143 Duvall v. Farmers' Bank . 145 Dver V. Rosenthal 217 Eagle Bank v. Hathaway Eaton V. McMahon . . Ecfert V. Des Coudres Eckert v. Cameroa Edwards v. Jones . V. Thomas Eigenbrun v. Smith Eilbert i'. Finkbeiner Ellis r. Ohio Ins. Co. Emmons v. Meeker Erwin v. Downs Essex Bank v. Russell Estabrook «. Smith Etheridge v. Ladd . Etting V. Schuylkill Bank Evans r. Underwood Everard v. "Watson Exchange Bank v. Rice . 77, 125 67 . 134 243 . 22!j 139 . 218 . 34 198 . 183 78, 119 . 220 . 64 84 118 28 . 114 44, 45 Fairchild v. Ogdensburgh R, R. Co .52 Fales ». Russell 149 FAOB Farmers' Bank v. Allen . . . 107 V. Butchers' Bank . 45, 46, 201 V. Gimnell .... 142, 143 V. Rathbone 30, 240, 247, 248 Farnswortli v. Allen Farrell v. Lovett . . . Farrington v. Sexton . . Fenouille v. Hamilton Fentum v. Pocock . . Ferris v. Bond . . . First National Bank v. Gay ». Hall u. Leach V. McAllister . . V. National Marine Bank V. Ricker v. Whitman Fisher v. Fisher Fletcher v. Blodgett -y. Chase . . . Foard v. Womack . Folger V. Chase Foltz V. Powrie , . Foster v. Julien . . V. Mackinnon . V. Parker .... Fowler v. Strickland Fralick v. Norton . Frank v. Wessels . . Franklin Sav. Inst. v. Reed Frazer v. Jordan . Freeman v. Boynton V. Brittin . . V. O'Brien . Fry V. Hill . . . Furze v. Sharwood 99 212 . 218 . 215 . 240 . 14 . 18 65 56,67 217 73 199 56 217 195 220 , 51 70 49, 88, 151, 154 37, 176, 180 . 149, 155 229 17 15 195 240 79 145, 146 . . . 91 113, 114, 119 G. Gardner !i. Walsh . . . . 184 Garr ». Louisville Banking Co. 17 Garrard v. Haddan .... 187 Gates w. Beecher . . 104,105 Gawtry v. Doane . . 137, 140 Geary v. Physic . . . 10, 25 George v. Surrey 26 Gerrish v. Glines 195 Gibbs t>. Fremont 254 CASES CITED. PAGE Gibbs V. Linabury . . 178, 180 Gibson v. Connor 217 V. Tobey 221 Gilbert D. Dennis 116 Gilchrist v. Donnell .... 139 Gill V. Cubitt 209 Gillispie V. Cammack ... 51 Gist V. Lybrand .... 88, 151 Gladwell v. Turner , . . 131, 132 Glover v. Robbins 183 Good V. Martin 34 Goodell V. Bates 200 Goodenow v. Curtis .... 182 Goodman ii. Harvey . . i ' . 209 V. Simonds .... 210, 212 Goodiiow V. Warren . . 122, 123 Goshen Turnpike v. Hurtin . . 26 Gough V. Staats 56 Gould V. Robson 236 Goupy V. Harden 91 Gove V. Vining 144 Gowan V. Jackson 122 Gower v. Moore 96, 97, 104, 153 Graham v. Adams 15 Grant v. EUicott . . . 224; 226 V. Hunt 44 V. Wood 23 Gray v. Bell 134 Greenfield Bank v. Stowell . . 187 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 227 Greenough v. Smead . 34, 35, 104 Griffin V. Kemp . . ... 54 ■i;. Weatherby 20 Grimshaw v. Bender .... 6 Grocers' Bank v. Penfield . . 219 Grosvenor v. Stone .... 50 Grugeon ». Smith 113 H. Hagey v. Hill .... 234, 238 Haines v. Dennett 79 Hale V. Burr ... 96, 97, 153, 155 Halifax Union v. Wheelwright 193 Hall ti. Bradbury 104 V. Fuller 193 V. Newcomb . . .33, 70, 166 f. Steel 40 Hamilton v. Hooper . V, Spottiswoode . Hare v. Heaty . . Harker v. Anderson . Harmer v. Steele . . Harness v, Davies . . Harris v. Clark . . . ■D. Memphis Bank Harrison v. Courtauld V. McKim . . . V. Ruscoe . . Hartley v. Case . . . Hascall v. Whittmore Haskell v. Champion . V. Lambert . . Hatcher v. McMorine . Hawkins v. Watkins . Hedger v. Steavenson . Helmer v. Krolich . . Henrietta Bank v. State Bank Herbage v. McKntee Hersey v. Elliot . . Hervey v. Harvey . Heywood v. Perrin . 'u. Pickering Hibernia Bank v. Lacombe Hildreth v. Shepard Hill V. Ely . . . Hoffman v. Smith . Holcomb V. Wyckoff Holland v. Cruft . Holman v. Hobson Holmes v. Kidd «.Trumperl83,187, 192, V. Williams . . Hopkins v. Adams . . Hopkirk v. Page . . Home V. Redfearn . . V. Rouquette . . Horst V. Wagner . . Horton v. Buffinton . Hortsman v. Henshaw Hough V. Loring . . House V. Adams . . Honsum v. Rogers . . Howard v. Ives . . . Hubbard i'. Matthews V. Morely . . . Humphreys v. Gwillow 189, PAGE 184 13 101 91 243 48,49 104 138 240 67 121 113 228 184 21 252 15 113, 114 18,24 . 45 . 34 . 63 . 182 . 195 6, 54 . 252 . 254 67, 73 . 51 . 230 . 218 . 230 . 212 193, 194 . 205 . 149 48, 49 . 11 253, 254 . 185 . 205 195, 196 . 40 . 60 . 221 . 128 . 123 18, 24 183, 187 CASES CITED. PAGB Humphries v. ChastaiQ ... 65 Hunt V. Hall . . . ... 252 V. Maybee . . . ... 102 V. Standart . . . , . 25.3 Husband v. Epling 23 Huse V. Hamblin . . . . . 253 Hyslop V. Jones . . ... 135 Ireland D. Kip 137 Iron Mountain Bank v, Murdock 1IJ2 Irvine v. Lowry 15 Iser V. Cohen 67 Isuard «. Torres 192 J. Jacobs V. Benson 13 Jaffrej- v. Cornish 221 James v. Hackley 221 Jefts V. York 31 Jewell V. Parr 225 V. Wright 254 Johnson v. Cleaves .... 221 V. Frisbie 18 7', Heagan 195 Jones i\ BeCak of Iowa ... 44 V. Broadhurst .... 247 V. Fales 16 V. Gordon 210, 229 V. Heiliger 54 V. Thorn 64 V. Warden 126 Jordaine v. Lashbrooke ... 79 Juniata Bank v. Hale . . . 110, 148 K. Kearsley i'. Cole . . . 234, 235 Keene t". Beard .... 53, 54, 61 Keith V. Goodwin 184 Kelley v. Hemmingway ... 20 Kelly V. Brooklyn 20 Kellogg V. Barton ... .225 V. Steiner 176, 178 PAGE Kendrick v. Lomax .... 236 Kennedy v. Lancaster Bank , 183 Kilgore v. Jordan . . . . 201 Kimball v. Huntington ... 11 King V. Crowell . 84, 86, 128, 150 V. Doolittle 215 V. Hoare 29 V. Holmes 86 Kinsley v. Robinson .... 51 Kinyon v. Stanton 54 Kirtland r. Wanzer . . 108, 109 Klauber v. Biggerstafi . . 12, 15 Knight V. Pugh 224 Konig y. Bayard 42 Koons V, Davis 200 Kountz V. Kennedy .... 185 Kramer v. Sandford . . 147, 148 Krause v. Meyer 185 Lafitte V. Slatter 51 Lamar u. Brown 183 Lambert v. Ghiselin .... 142 Lancaster Bank v. Taylor . 26, 62 Landry v. Stansberry . . 96, 153 Lane v. Bank of West Ten- nessee 143, 149 V. Steward 162 Langenberger v. Kroeger . . 190 Langton v. Lazarus .... 189 Lawrence v. Miller .... 141 Lawson v. Farmers' Bank 130, 131, 134 Lav V. Wissman . 229, 230 Leavitt V. Putnam . 67, 68. 92, 225 Lebel v. Tucker . . 250, 251 LeBreton v. Pierce ... 217 Ledwick v. McKim ... 227 Lee V. Smead . . ... 215 Leftlev V. Mills . .102,109 Leggett V. Raymond ... 156 Lehman v. Jones . 88, 151, 154 ... 146 Light V. Kingsbury . 91 Linderman v. Guldin ... 123 Little t). Phenix Bank . . 15, 54 CASES CITED. XV PAGE Little V. Slackford .... 13 Lochnane v. Emmerson . . . 183 Lockwood V. Crawford . . 118, 134 Logan t'. Smith 221 Loos V, Wilkinson 218 Lowe V. Bliss 18 Lowery v. Scott 141 Lunt V. Adams 100 ■V. Silver 184 Lysaght v. Bryant 121 M. 145 15 45 242 192 134 198 237 182 138 109 110, 148 218 219 ,87 McDonald v. Bailey McDowell V. Keller McEvers v. Mason . McGee v. Prouty . McGrath v. Clark . McKinney v, Crawford McKleroy v. Southern Bank McLemore v, Powell . . McRaven v. Crisler . . McVeigh v. Allen . . . Magoun «. Walker . . Magruder v. Union Bank Main ii. Lynch .... Maitland v. Citizens' Bank Maiden Bank v. Baldwin Manchester Bank v. Fellows 127, 132, 134 Manley v. Geagan .... 39 Manrow v. Durham .... 166 Marden v. Babcock .... 214 Marion v. Clark 228 Marsh v. Burr 137 V. Griffin 183 Marshall v. Mitchell .... 147 Mason v. Franklin .... 59, 85 V. Pritchard 141 Mathewson v. Strafford Bank . 123 Matthews v. Allen . . . 146 147 Matthey v. Gaily 152 Mattison v. Marks .... 18, 24 May V. Kelley 37 V. Quimby 215 Maj'hew v. Boyd 238 Mechanics' Bank v. Mer- chants' Bank 83 Mellish V. Rawdon .... 91 Merchants' Bank d. State Bank 45, 46 Merchants' Ins. Co. v. Abbott . 217 Merchants of the Staple v. Bank of England . . 176, 192 Men'iam v. Cunningham . . 201 Merritt v. Duncan 209 Metropolitan Nat. Bank v. Jones 57 Meyer v. Hibsher 87 Michand v. Lagarde .... 154 Michigan Bank v. Leavenworth 219, 220, 236 Middleton Bank v. Morris . . 91 Miller v. Austin 12 V. Farmers' Bank . . . 140 V. Gilleland 182 V. Thompson 52 Mills V. Bank of United States 110, 115 Minet v. Gibson 196 65,56 122 16 53,56 90 229 219 205 187 99 243 228 200 54 234 136 202 91 126 45, 46 82, 107 . 57 . 18 71, 166 Minot «. Russ .... Miser v. Trovinger . . Mitchell V. Hewitt . . . Mohawk Bank v. Broderick Montelius v. Charles . . Moore v. Baird .... V. Ryder .... Mordecai v. Dawkins . . Morehead v. Parkersburg Bank Morgan v. Davison . . Morley v. Culverwell . . Mornj'er v. Cooper . . Morris v. Bethell . . . Morrison v. McCartney . Morse v. Huntington . . Morton v. Westcott . . Mott V. Hicks .... Muilman v. D'Eguino Munn V. Baldwin . . . Mussey v. Eagle Bank . Musson V. Lake . . . Mutual Nat. Bank v. Rotge Myer v. Hart .... Myrick v, Hasey . . . N. National Bank of N. A. v. Bangs 199 National Com'I Bank v. Miller . 56 CASES CITED. Nave V. Richardson . Nazro v. Fuller . . Nebeker v. Cutsinger . Neff V. Horner . Nelson v. Fotterall Newcomb v. Raynor . Newell V. Holton New York Co. v. Selma Bank Nutter V. Stover. . . Niagara Bank v. ] Manuf. Co. . Nichols V. Norris . . Nicholson v. Gouthit . Nickerson v. Sheldon . Nicolls V. Webb . . Northern Bank v. Porter Nunez v. Dautel Sav. PAGE 107 184 195 187 102 233 80 . 122 215, 220 airman 85 240 104 17 109 203 23 108, Gates «. First National Bank 218, 219 Ocean Bank v. P^ant . . .84 V. Williams . . Okie V, Spencer . . Ontario Bank v. Petrie Orear v. McDonald Oridge v. Sherborne . Oriental Bank v. Blake . 102, 107 . . 236 . . 118 48, 50, 51 . 66, 94 i, 97, 153, 155 Orr V. Maginnis 107 Osgood V. Pearsons .... 14 Otsego Bank v. Warren . 107, 148 Overend v. Oriental Corp. . . 234 Pack V. Thomas Page !). Gilbert . . V, Wight . . Palmer v. Thayer . Pannell v. McMechen Park Bank v. Watson Partridge v, Davis Paton V. Coit V. Winter . Patten v. Gleason Patterson v. Todd 205, . 63 . 118 . 31 . 218 . 234 . 230 71, 160 223 224 188 . 225 73, 92 PAGE Paul V. Joel 114 Peacock v. Purcell . . . 217, 218 Pearson v. Bank of Metropolis . 85 Peaslee v. Robbins 201 People's Bank v. Brooke . . . 107 Percival v. Frampton .... 217 Perry v. Green 147 Peters v. Beverly ... . 221 V. Hobbs 142 Peterson v. Hubbard .... 38 Pettee v. Prout . . . 171 Phelan v. Moss 187 Phillips V. Cox 34 Pierce v. Gate 88, 152 1'. Kittredge 39 V. Struthers 141 ■i>. Whitney 85 Pinnes i). Ely 69 Pitt V. Chappelow .... 200 Pons V. Kelly 51 Poole 11. Tolleson .... 134 Porter v. Kcmball 146 Pownal V. Ferrand .... 66 Pratt V. Conan 219 Prentice «. Zane .... 228 Price V. Edmonds 240 V. Neal 198 Prideaux v. Criddle . 56, 101, 134 Prince v. Oriental Bank . . 89 Pring I'. Clarkson 236 Prj'or V. Bowman 92 Putnam v. Hubbell .... 218 Quinby v. Merritt 15 R. Railroad Co. v. Ashland . 252 V. National Bank . . 217 Randall v. Moon . . 247 Ransom r. Mack . . 118 Ray V. Smith . . . 148 Read v. Adams . . . 253 !'. Marsh . . 44 Reddick v. Jones . . 217 CASES CITED. PAGE Redlioh v. Doll 192 Eeed v. Roarfc 10 Eeid V. Morrison 181 Eequa ». Collins 140 Rev V. Simpson 34 Rliett D. Poe 51 Rice V. Raitt 220 Richie v. McCoy 51 Ricltetts V, Pendleton .... 108 Ridington v. Woods .... 192 Riggan v. Green 201 Rindge v. Kimball 146 Robb V. Bailey 64 Roberts v. Corbin 6 V. Magrath 176 V. Taft 135, 136 V. Wood 176 Robertson v. Kensington . . 70 Robinson v. Ames ... 48, 49, 51 V. Hawlisford 54 (..Reynolds 228 Rodney v. Wilson 67 Eodocanachi v. Buttrick ... 34 Rogers v. Blackwell .... 201 Rosher v. Kiernan 121 Ross V. Espy 67 V. Kurd 146 Rothchild v. Currie .... 254 Rounds V. Smith 67 Rouquette v. Orermann 252, 254, 255 Routh V. Robertson .... 118 Roxborough v. Messick . . 215 Eoyer v. Keystone Bank . . . 215 Rucker v. Hiller . . . . 49, 51 Rudd V. Matthews 200 Russell V. Whipple 11 Ryan v. Chew 220 S. Saco Bank v. Sanborn 136, 137, 140 Sanford v. Mickles 65 Schimmelpennich v. Bayard 42, 44 Scott V. Greer 148 ■V. Ocean Bank 221 Sea V. Glover 19 Seacord v. Miller 148 Sears v. Lantz 69 Seaton v. Scovill 17 Semple v. Turner 34 Seneca Bank v. Neass . . . 109 Sessions v. Johnson .... 29 Seymour v. Leyman .... 35 ■i;. Mickey 34 V. Wilson 220 Shanklin v. Cooper .... 253 Shaw V. Croft 121 V. First Methodist Soc. . . 195 ■a. Knox 70, 71 V. Mix 125 Shed V. Brett 137 Shelburne Falls Bank v. Townsley 127, 136 Shelton v. Carpenter .... 126 1). Gill 18 Sheridan v. Carpenter . . . 146 Shoe and Leather Bank v. Dix 31 Shoenberger v. Lancaster Sav. Inst 123 Short V. Trabue . . . 253, 284 Sigerson v. Mathews . 144, 146 Simpson v. Pacific Ins. Co. . 55, 86 V. Turney . . . 121, 128, 130 Sipe V. Earuian 218 Sittig V. Birkestack .... 227 Skilding v. Warren .... 80 Slocomb V. De Lizardi . . . 123 Small V. Smith 226 Smalley v. Wright 123 Smead v. Indianapolis R. Co. . 202 Smith V. Allen 11 a. Gibbs 102 V. Kendall 18 V. Mace 187 V. Miller .... 56, 149, 155 V. Smith 221 Sohier r. Loring . . . 234, 235 Solarte v. Palmer . . . 113, 114 Southwark Bank v. Gross . . 184 Spear v. Pratt 37, 38 Spence v, Crockett 108 Spencer v. Bank of Salina . . 141 Sperry V. Horr 17, 18 Spies V. Gilmore . . 70, 151, 166 Sprague v. Tyson 141 Stafford ». Rice 79 Stalker v. McDonald .... 215 CASES CITED. PA.OE Staniback v. Bank of Virginia . 107 State Bank v. Fearing ... 77 V. Hurd 85 V. Slaughter 122 1/. Tliompson 205 Stevens v. Beals 63 V. Blanchard 217 Stoddard v. Penniman . . . 183 Stoneman v. Pyle ... .17 Stotts V. Byers 221 Strong V. Wilson 80 Stults V. Silva .... 18, 24 Stump V. Napier 79 Sturgio V. Metropolitan Bank 209 Sturtevant v. Forde .... 225 Sullivan v. Langley .... 22-t Sussex Bank v. Baldwin . 85, 86 Swan V. Crafts 218 V. North British Co. 176, 192, 193 Swartz V. Redfield 92 Sweeny v. Easter . . . . 68 Swetland v. Creich .... 16 Swift V. Tyson .... 215, 216 Swope V. Ross 42, 213 Sylvester v. Downer .... 34 Tappen ». Ely 69 Tardy v. Boyd .... 142, 143 Tarleton v. Shingler .... 188 Tarver v. Nance 49 Tassel v. Lewis 109 Taylor v. Beck 79 V. Blakelock 217 V. Curry 21 v. Dobbin 27 V. Sayder ... 88, 141, 151 Temple v. Seaver ... .65 Thayer v. Buffum 64 V. Grossman 80 V. King 149 Third Nat. Bank v. Ashworth 146, 147 Thompson v. Briggs .... 221 V. Gumming 59 V. Sloan 15 Thornton v. Maynard ... 247 Thorp V. Craig 253 PAGE Tiernan v. Woodruff .... 238 Tindal v. Brown 120 Tobey v. Barber 221 Todd V. Bank of Kentucky . . 184 Towne v. Kice 205 Townsend v. Bush 79 V. Lorain Bank . 118, 145, 146 Treon v. Brown .... 79 Triggs V. Newnham .... 99 Triuibey v, Vignier . . . 250 Troy Bank v. Lauman . . 184 True V. Thomas 53 Tucker Manuf. Go. v. Fairbanks 31, 32 Tunstall r. Walker . . 139 , Turner v. Killian 217 Tuttle V. Bartholomew . . 70, 167 V. Standish 149 Tyler v. Young ... .91 Tyson v. Oliver 141 u. Union Bank v. Hyde 59, 102, 108, 145, 154 V. Roberts 184 V. Stoker 137 V. Willis ... 34, 104, 105 United States v. liodge . . . 236 Upham V. Prince .... 167 Vagliano v. Bank of England 14 Valette v. Mason .... 217 Talk V. Simmons .... 51 Van Brunt v. Vaughn . . . 127 Vance v. Lowther . . . . 183 Van Etta v. Evenson . . . . 227 Van Hoesen v. Van Alst3'ne . 134 Voorhies v. Attee .... 152 w. Wade V. Withington .... 181 Walker v. Bank of New York . 85 V. Ebert 176 CASES CITED. XIX PAaB Walker v. Rogers .... 50, 146 V. Stetson . . 58, 138, 139, 142 Wallace v. McConnell ... 22 Walrasley v. Acton .... 107 Walton V. Shelley .... 78, 79 Wamesit Bank v. Buttrick . . 127 Ward V. Allen 189 Washington Bank v. Krum . . 221 Washington Ins. Co. v. Miller 25 Waterbury «. Sinclair . . 70, 166 Watkius V, Cranch Watte V. Pub. Admr . Way 1). Butterworth . V. Lamb .... ■V. Smith . . . Wayne Bank v. Low Wearer v. Barden . . Welch V. Taylor Manuf. Weldon v. Buck . . West V. Brown . . . Westgate v. Healy Wetherall v. Clagett Wheeler v. Field . . e. Guild. . . . 244,245 Whistler v. Forster .... White V. North tf. Richmond .... 15, 16 V. Smith 25 Whitehead v. Walker ... 228 Whitesides v. Northern Bank . 184 Whitmore v. Nickerson . . . 227 Wieland v. Kobick .... 201 Wilkina v. Jadis 99 Williams v. Bank of United States 140 V. Brashear 50 V. Smith 229 V. Wade 254 V. Walbridge 79 . 147 . 27 . 34 . 228 18, 24 . 254 . 220 Co. 149, 155 . 59 86, 87 . 14 . 109 142, 150 246 62 11 PAQE Willis V. Green 104, 122 Wilson ii. Eifler . ... 218 Windham Bank v. Norton . 95, 143 Witherspoon v. Musselman . . 18 Witte V. Williams ... 243 Wolf «. Burgess . ... 139 Wolfe D. Jewett .... 151 Wood V. Draper . . . 191 ■u. Price 48 V. Steele .... 183, 191 WoodhuU V. Holmes .... 80 Woodland v. Fear 89 Woodruff V. Hill ... 229 0. Plant . . ... 56 Woods V. North 18 Woodworth v. Huntoon . . 228 Woolf oik V, Bank of America . 187 Worcester Bank v. Wells . 44, 45 Worden v. Dodge 19 Works V. Hershey 24 Worrall v. Gheen . . . 187, 192 Wright V. Hart 15 V. Morse 34 V. Shawcross 133 Wvnn V. Alden 118 Yocura V. Smith Young V. Grote . Youngs V. Lee . . . 227 193, 194 . . 220 Z. Zimmerman v. Rote 195 LAW OF BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION. § 1. Custom of Meechants : Common Law. It is common to say that the law of bills of exchange, promissory notes, and cheques is derived from the cus- tom of merchants. Rightly understood, that is true; it is not quite true in a sense in which the statement might naturally be taken by a person not familiar with the sub- ject. Not all of the law of bills and notes — to use, for the sake of convenience, the shorter and familiar designa- tion — is derived from tlie custom of merchants ; not even the greater part of it, in point of bulk, is derived directly from that custom. Indirectly, most of the law of the sub- ject finds there its source; for it has mainly grown out of elements supplied by the custom of merchants. But the development of the subject has taken the ordinary course in English jurisprudence; it has in the main followed lines of judicial reasoning; the courts have declared the law of the subject, in its growth out of the original mate- rial supplied by the custom of merchants, as matter of reasoning, without inquiring of the custom. It is important rightly to apprehend the meaning of the statement referred to; only what may be called the ele- ments of the law of bills and notes are drawn from the 1 2 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. I. very life of the custom of merchants. In other words, only that which is peculiar to the subject, peculiar not as a si^ecial manifestation of fact to which ordinary rules of law might well apply, but peculiar in matter of law, is derived from that custom. What then is peculiar to the subject ? That is, excluding growth and mere manifesta- tions of fact, what is essentially peculiar to it, what are its elements ? Before answering that question it will be well to recall the state of things existing in England during, let us say, the later period of the Hanseatic League. London and the other commercial towns of England were full of foreign merchants engaged there in trade. These for- eigners not only trained the fine hand of England to its cunning in commerce, but what is more to the present purpose, they brought with them the usages of business on the continent whence they had come. The custom of merchants was a foreign importation into England. That is sufficient to explain its unlikeness to the great domestic product, — the common law. What these foreign merchants brought to England in the way of peculiar usage, so far as the present subject is concerned, was negotiability and grace; they brought bills of exchange, and with those instruments, as part and parcel of them, the property of circulation and a short extension of time in ease of the payor. Negotiability is the property by which certain choses in action, that is, undertakings to pay, pass from hand to hand like money. The common law knew nothing of that; or rather the common law repudiated entirely the notion that a promise by A to B could be treated as a promise extending also to C. The utmost which the law allowed was assignment; and that only after long debate and serious misgiving. Assignment merely works the appointment of another as beneficiary of the assignor's Sect. 1.] INTRODUCTION. 3 rights ; the assignee ' takes the shoes ' of the assignor. That would never have served the purpose of circulating paper; that purpose required a denial of the maxim Nemo dat quod non habet. The new taker of a bill of exchange must have a perfect right, if his purchase of it was in due course, a right in no way to be affected by the rights of him from whom he bought it. Something much like negotiability, touching property, the common law learned long ago from equity. Purchase of land or goods for value, and without notice, cuts off equities; that is a cardinal rule of law, and always has been in courts of equity.^ But it has never been appli- cable to undertakings to pay, in the case of common law contracts ; applied to undertakings to pay, as purchase for value, without notice, often is, the principle has reference to bills, notes, and cheques only. The notion of grace was even more repugnant to the common law of England, for there was nothing like it. Contracts were to be performed on the day named; no indulgence was allowed without the consent of the promisee. Indeed grace, as the term itself indicates, was at first indulgence by consent of the promisee, even in the matter of bills and notes; but the practice after a time hardened into requirement, the judges ceasing by degrees to inquire of the custom, and applying it to the contract as law. The merchants had a long struggle before they suc- ceeded in getting their custom recognized by law. Great judges pointed out the antagonism of the custom to most fundamental and cherished conceptions of the law of Eng- land. The urgency of commerce however prevailed, though only step by step. Eirst foreign bills of exchange, as they were and are called, were by a clever fiction in pleading admitted to a place in the common law; a fiction by which I ' Market overt ' may also be noticed. 4 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. I. it was made to seem that the custom after all was noth- ing less than a sister of the common law, bearing under a strange garb the family likeness.' Then the door hav- ing been opened, inland bills were after a season and much debate similarly admitted. The door was now closed, though once and again some judge appears to have opened it stealthily to let in a wandering promissory note. But the fear of promissory notes was so great, the danger that the common law would be ' eaten away ' was so threatening, that the courts on the whole, led by their greatest judge. Lord Holt, successfully resisted the pres- sure from without. Parliament was finally called in aid, and responded. Promissory notes were admitted into the law on an equality with bills of exchange by the Statute of 3 & 4 Anne, c. 9. If the custom of merchants brought something new to the law of England, it received at the same time some- thing new from that law. Tbe common law doctrine of consideration is indigenous to English soil; the custom of merchants knew nothing of it before the custom was admitted into the jurisprudence of England. A common law principle was now added to a foreign product; and while neither the common law nor what must now be called the law merchant has undergone any essential change in the contact of each with the other, certain minor modifications of each, in the mingling of the two, have taken place. This is more manifest in those cases, to be considered later, in which some contract of the common law, such as a contract of suretyship, has been annexed to one of our contracts of the law merchant. But the same is true in regard to the common law doc- trine of consideration. That doctrine was imposed upon an unwilling custom; but it was not imposed in the usual way, for the force of 1 See Rastell's Entries, 338 (A. D. 1595); Dunlop u. Silver, 1 Cranch, 367. Sect. 2.] INTRODUCTION. 5 the custom was granted expression in part. In a suit upon any simple written contract of the common law it is in- cumbent upon the plaintiff to give some express evidence of consideration ; production of the writing is no evidence upon the point, unless the language of it shows considerar tion. In the case of a suit upon a bill, note, or cheque however, while it is still necessary that the plaintiff should prove consideration, he. proves it, prima facie, by producing the paper in evidence. The promise to pay is presumed to have been based upon consideration. So far the old law appears to have made concession to the custom, which treated the paper as the sufficient evidence, presump- tively, of the liability of the promisor. § 2. Chaeacteeistics of Bills, Notes, and Cheques. These then are the characteristics of paper of the law merchant, or bills, notes, and cheques : namely, negotiar bility (with its incidents), grace, and presumptive con- sideration. These are the ordinary characteristics of such paper; negotiability is not necessary; that is, it is not necessary to a bill or note, in order to give the paper grace and to bring it within the favoring rule concerning con- sideration, that the instrument should be negotiable. Nor is grace necessary ; that is, it is not necessary to a bill or note, in order to give it negotiability, that it should be entitled to grace. Cheques too are commonly negotiable, though not entitled to grace. But there is some conflict of authority whether an unnegotiable note — and tlie doubt would in principle apply as well to a similar bill or cheque — carries the presumption of consideration ; though the words ' value received, ' or the like, com- monly used, would be enough, prima facie, to meet the requirement of the law. BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. L § 3. Definitions : Oedeb of Subjects. To conclude this Introduction : A promissory note is a written promise, and a bill of exchange a written order, to pay to a certain person, or to the order of a certain person, or to bearer, a certain sum of money, absolutely'. A cheque is a written order upon a bank or banker to pay on demand (otherwise as in the case of a note or bill). 'Draft' is a term of convenience, signifying either a bill of exchange or a cheque. Bills of exchange and cheques are foreign or inland ; those drawn in one state or country and pay- able in another are foreign ; ^ all others are inland. An analysis of the definition first given will supply the heads for a chapter on Physical Requisites. The following are examples of the three kinds of instrument : — 1. Boston, Jan. 1, 1892. Six months after date I promise to pay to A (or to A or order, or to the order of A, or to bearer) One Thousand Dollars. Value re- ceived. B. 2. (Date.) Thirty days after sight (or after date, or at sight) pay (as above). To C (individual, partnership, bank or other corporation). 3. (Date. ) Pay (as above, ' Value received ' being usually omitted). To the Eagle Bank, Boston. The law however prescribes no particular form of words for any of these instruments ; it is satisfied if the essentials of the instrument are stated, however inartificially or with whatever prolixity. The person who executes, that is, signs, a promissory 1 Bank of United States «. Daniel, 12 Peters, 32. Compare Bills of Exchange Act, 4, (1). But .see Grimshaw v. Bender, 6 Mass. 156. That cheques may be cheques though drawn in one country and pay- able in another, see Heywood v. Pickering, L. R. 9 Q. B. 428 ; Roberts 0. Corbin, 26 Iowa, 315. Sect. 3.] INTRODUCTION. 7 note is called the maker, not drawer; the person who executes a bill of exchange is called the drawer, not maker; the person who executes a cheque is generally called the drawer, sometimes the maker. The names, through carelessness or indifference, are now and then confused; but the contract of the maker of a note differs radically from that of the drawer of a bill, and it is best therefore to give to each its recognized name. The con- tract of one who executes a cheque is anomalous; it is not that of drawer of a bill or of maker of a note ; but on the whole the better usage gives to the person the name of drawer. The person to whom, by name, a note, a bill^ or a cheque is made payable is called the payee; the person upon whom a bill or a cheque is drawn, that is, the person called upon to make payment, is called the drawee, and in case of acceptance by him (the instrument being a bill of exchange), acceptor. When the payee, or other person at the same time or afterwards, puts his name upon the paper, the act is called indorsement, and the party an indorser. The person to whom the paper is then or afterwards passed is called indorsee or holder. The term holder is some- times applied to the payee; the term indorsee is applied to a holder after an indorsement, even though the indorse- ment be not immediately to him. After the chapter on Physical Requisites, the nature of the several contracts of the parties incurring liability will be considered, and in the order following: maker, acceptor, drawer, indorser. Directly afterwards the effect of add- ing certain contracts of the common law to those of the law merchant will be examined. Then turning from the parties liable under their particular contracts to those to whom they are liable, the rights of holders will be con- sidered; more especially of bona fide holders for value, for the rights of payees will already, indirectly, have been 8 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. L disposed of. Thus matters in common to all the several contracts before particularly described and distinguished will come under examination. § 4. Contract. The law merchant adopts the doctrines of the common law in regard to the essentials of contract ; whatever the form of the contract in question, — whether that of maker, acceptor, drawer, or indorser, or other party, — it must be supported by valuable consideration, there must be union of minds, and the parties liable must be competent to con- tract. And that is true not only between immediate par- ties, but between mediate parties as well. Thus, there must be a valuable consideration not merely to support an action by the payee of a promissory note against the maker, — there must somewhere be a valuable consideration to sup- port an action against the maker by the payee's indorsee. So if there be a want of union of minds between the maker and the payee, there will be a want of union of minds, upon the same facts, between the maker and the payee's indor- see; and so if the maker is incompetent to contract with the payee, he is incompetent to contract with the payee's indorsee.^ § 5. ' Law Merchant : ' ' Common Law. ' The custom of merchants then has, with judicial and it may be statutory accretions, become the law merchant ; and the student should bear in mind that ' law merchant ' and 'common law,' in such phrases as 'contract of the law merchant ' and ' contract of the common law, ' are used in this book by way of contrast, the former term referring to the law of bills, notes, and cheques; the latter to the com- 1 See Chapter 13. Sect. 5.] INTROBUCTION. 9 mon law proper. Properly speaking, the law of bills, notes, and cheques is, as we have seen, no part of the common law; or if received speech makes too strongly against that statement, it is at all events a separable addition to the common law, and everywhere to be dis- tinguished from that native English product. CHAPTER 11. PHYSICAL REQUISITES : ANALYSIS OF DEFINI- TION. [The student should refer to the definition given in the Intro- duction, p. 6.] § 1. Written Promise: Written Order. Promissory notes, bills of exchange, and cheques must be in writing; no oral promise or order would be treated on the same footing, though the oral undertaking might be a perfectly good contract, a contract of the common law. The requirement of a writing is not a requirement of stat- ute, but of the law merchant as derived from the custom of merchants. Generally speaking, the whole of the note, bill, or cheque must be in writing ; but a mistake obvious on the face of the instrument could be corrected by a suit brought for the purpose, or perhaps in. an action upon the instrument on breach of the contract.-' The law merchant however has never prescribed any particular writing material, or any particular material for receiving the writing. The instrument maj' be written with pencil as well as with ink, ^ and, it seems, upon any material firm enough of itself to hold the writing. A promissory note in common form, as shown in the example, contains a promise, expressed by that word. That however is unnecessary; but what will satisfy the 1 See Conner v. Routh, 7 How. (Miss.) 1 76. See post, Chapter 13, § 3. 2 See Geary v. Physic, 5 Barn. & C. 234 ; Brown v. Butcher's Bank, 6 Hill, 443; L. C. 121 ; Reed v. Roark, 14 Texas, 329. Sect. 1.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 11 definition, — and the definition is nothing less than a rule of law, — which requires a promise, is not clearly- determined. It is generally laid down that the promise must be express ; hence that the mere fact that a debt is acknowledged is not enough, for that would but raise an implied promise. For example: 'Due C & B $17.14' is not, it seems, a promissory note, for want of an express promise to pay.^ But to say that a promise must be express is not to say that the word 'promise' must be used; a promise is express when either the word 'promise,' or any equivalent | word or expression, is used. What is the equivalent of ' promise ' ? That is the dif- ficult question — difficult so far at least as principle is concerned, for the equivalency is often arbitrary. Thus : Setting any certain time for payment in express terms ap- pears to be accepted as an equivalent; and this even though the words of time are ' on demand. ' For example : ' Due J A $94.91 on demand' is a promissory note; it being deemed an express promise to pay." The use of words of negotiability is also an equivalent. For example : ' Due R, or bearer, $200.26.' This on like ground is a promissory note. 3 The use of the words 'for value received ' is held insufficient. For example: 'Due C & B $17.14, value received,' is not a promissory note; the words 'value received' being deemed not an equivalent of 'promise.'* And so it has been held of the words ' to be accountable ' in an instrument such as this: 'I have received the sum of £20 which I borrowed of you, and I have to be account- able for the said sum with interest.' ^ 1 See Currier v. Lockwoodf, 40 Conn. 349. ^ Smith V. Allen, 5 Day, 337 ; Kimball v. Huntington, 10 Wend. 675. s Rnssell v. "Whipple, 2 Cowen, 536. * Currier v. Lockwood, 40 Conn. 349 ; two judges dissenting. 6 Home V. Redfearn, 4 Bing. N. C. 433. See White v. North, 3 Ex. 689, 690. ' To be accountable ' was deemed to mean that credit would 12 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IL When an equivalent of ' promise ' is used, it matters not how the acknowledgment of debt is made. The foregoing would be examples of what are commonly called ' due bills' (with an actual promise). Another way in which the acknowledgment is sometimes made, oftener in England than in this country, but sometimes here, is by what is called from the letters used an 'lOU.' For example: ' I O U .£20 to be paid on the 22d inst. ' is a promissory note.^ Again: ' S has deposited in the State Bank $1000, payable to himself on return of this certificate ' is a good promissory note, though a certificate of deposit.^ It is no more necessary in the case of a bill of exchange that the word ' order ' be used than that the word ' prom- ise ' be used in a promissory note. Any equivalent word or expression will satisfy the definition; but it seems here that the law does not give such loose rein to interpreta- tion as we have just seen in regard to the word 'promise.' That is, the equivalent word or expression is to be a real equivalent, in the common acceptation. Still it is not necessary that the words, literally taken, should be im- perative ; the language may be that of courtesy and polite- ness in form, as often it is, and j^et be imperative in the eye of the law. For example : ' Please let the bearer have $50. I will arrange it with you this noon' is a good bill of exchange, as containing an 'order' to pay.' Again: 'Mr. B will oblige Mr. A by paying C or order $100' would be a good bill on the same footing. A little less however might be fatal. For example: 'Please let bearer have £7, and place it to my account, and you will much be given in account and the balance paid. But see Miller v. Austin, 13 How. 218. 1 Brooks V. Elkins, 2 Mees. & W. 74. 2 Klauber v. Biggerstaff, 47 Wis. 551. 3 Bissenthall u. Williams, 1 Duv. 329. Sect. 2.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 13 oblige me ' is deemed not a bill of exchange for want of an ' order ' or the equivalent.^ Again : ' We hereby authorize you to pay on our account to the order of G £6000 ' at certain times, in stated instalments, is not a bill of ex- change, for the same reason.^ § 2. The Payee. ' To pay to a certain person, or to the order of a certain person, or to bearer.' The payee must be a person certain, that is, existing, and must be ascertainable at the execu- tion of the instrument unless it is payable to bearer. But though the paper be not payable to bearer, the person need not be ascertained or identified on the instrument; enough that he is so referred to as to be ascertainable by evidence ab extra. For example : ' Pay to the executor of A, deceased,' contains a good designation of the payee of the bill, though the description requires evidence from without to identify the person intended.* Indeed, a mistake in the name, where a name of the payee is given, may be made good by evidence.* The definition is satisfied by the use of any mercantile phrase in place of the name of a payee, so long as no ficti- tious person is designated. For example : ' Pay to bills payable or order' is a good designation of the payee; the meaning being that the instrument is payable to the per- son to whom the 'bills' are 'payable,' that is, ordinarily to the drawer. The rule requiring the payee to be a real existing person is in England statutory, as is the whole law of bills and notes; but the statute probably expresses the rule of the law merchant on the subject. In some states, by statute, 1 Little V. Slackford, Moody & M. 171. Sed quaere. 2 Hamilton v. Spottiswoode, 4 Ex. 200. s Adams v. King, 16 111. 169. * Jacobs V. Benson, 39 Maine, 132. 14 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IL a bill payable to an obviously fictitious person may be treated as payable to bearer, that is, to a real person. Such is the law of England also.^ Perhaps because the law of bills and notes is derived from custom, the rule in regard to the paj'ee is held to mean that the instrument cannot be made payable to either of two different persons. As a matter of fact, it ■would be contrary to the custom of merchants to execute paper in that way. But whatever the reason, the law does not permit such a designation of the payee, though the instrument might still be good as evidence of debt. For example: 'Good to A or B for $181.80, value re- ceived,' is not a promissory note for want of proper desig- nation of the payee, though it may be declared upon and used as evidence of debt (in a suit against A and B jointly).^ No such rule, it may be noticed, applies to the contract of maker. ^ § 3. Money. That these instruments must be payable in money has always been held essential, and the custom of merchants to that effect has received the sanction of statute, — th^ statutes merely expressing the force of the custom. Thus in England, the statute of Anne already referred to, by which promissory notes were adopted into the law, refers in terms to promises to pay ' money ; ' and the same word is used in the similar American statutes. 1 See Vagliano v. Bank of England, 1891, A. C. 107. '■^ Osgood V. Pearsons, 4 Gray, 455, citing Blanckenhagen v. Blundell, 2 B. & Aid. 417. See also Carpenter v. Farnsworth, 106 Mass. 561. But see Westgate v. Healy, 4 E. I. 523. ^ ' We, or either of us;' is not an uncommon form of promise in a note ; it is perfectly good. But compare Ferris v. Bond, 4 Barn. & Aid. 679, which, however, is consistent with the text. Whether a bill or cheque could be drawn by ' A or B ' may be doubted. 'Sect. 3.] PHYSICAL ■ REQUISITES. 15 By ' money ' is meant, in strictness, that which by law is tenderable for debt, that is, assuming that no provi- sion is made for payment in anything else. If the in- strument is not payable in money, or in what the courts judicially know to be equivalent to money, it is not an instrument of the law merchant. For example : ' We promise to pay A or order $1000 in cotton' is not a promissory note.i Again: 'Pay to A or order £1000 in good East India bonds ' is not a bill of exchange (or a cheque). 2 Again: 'I j)romise to pay A or order $140 in carpenter's work' is not a promissory note.* Again: 'Pay A or order $1000 in current funds' or 'in cur- rency ' is by some courts deemed not a bill (or a cheque).* Again : ' We promise to pay to the order of A, twelve months after date, in Buffalo, N. Y., $2500, in Canada money,' being a New York contract, is not, it is held, a promissory note, because it is not payable in the money of this country or in what the court can judicially know to be the equivalent.^ The rule itself is accepted by all courts ; but the courts have not been agreed in applying it, as cases referred to in 1 Auerbach v. Pritchett, 58 Ala. 451. 2 BuUer, N. P. 272 ; Chalmers, Bills, 13 (Benjamin). ' Quinby v. Merritt, 11 Humph. 439. < Wright V. Hart, 44 Penn. St. 454. But see White v. Richmond, 16 Ohio, 5; Klauber v. Biggerstaft, 47 Wis. 551. See Frank v. Wes- sels, 64 N. Y. 155. It has very often been held that instruments pay- able in current bank notes are not. payable in money. See the cases just cited and, among others, Little v. Phenix Bank, 7 Hill, 359, affirm- ing 2 Hill, 425 ; McDowell v. Keller, 4 Cold. 258 ; Irvine v. Lowry, 14 Peters, 293. In Graham v. Adams, 5 Ark. 261, it was held that a note or bond payable ' in good current money of the State ' was payable iu gold and silver. To the same effect, Cockrill r. Kirkpatrick, 9 Mo. 688. Secus of a promise to pay ' iu Arkansas money of the Fayetteville Branch.' Hawkins v. Watkins, 5 Ark. 481. Further, see the cases cited in Thompson v. Sloan, 23 Wend. 71 ; L. C. 1. 5 Thompson v. Sloan, 23 Wend. 71; L. C. 1. 16 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. II. the authority last cited show. Indeed, that authority itself has been criticised, though in a case clearly distinguish- able.^ The difficulty lies in what is to be accepted as judi- cially known to be equivalent to money. It is hardly safe to call anything the equivalent of money on the ground that it passes as such at certain places ; such a rule would admit into the company of promissory notes promises to pay in wool or in tobacco, it may be, in some places, where in the absence of money such things may happen to pass current as payment. Nor is it safe to treat currency, unless it is the currency of the nation, as equivalent to money; for currency is apt to fluctuate, that is, to fall from its face value. The most, it seems, that the law should allow would be a promise to pay in National Bank notes, if for any reason paper should be made so payable. In some States promises to pay in things not money have been treated as standing in part on the footing of paper of the law merchant. The presumption of considera- tion has been applied to them; while negotiability has been denied them.^ But the favor is generally considered as misplaced; the fact that the paper is payable in com- modities being deemed enough to put it upon the footing of an ordinary contract of the common law. § 4. Certainty of Sum. Further, the sum payable must be certain. But the meaning to be given to the rule is in certain respects a 1 Black V. Ward, 27 Mich 191, 194. There has been an inclination to favor the paper where the sum is payable in the local State cur- rency. Mitchell ii. Hewitt, 5 Smedes & M. 361 ; Drake i: Markle, 21 Ind. 433 ; Butler v. Paine, 8 Minn. 324 ; Cockrill v. Kirkpatrick, 9 Mo. 688 ; White v. Richmond, 16 Ohio, H; Swetland v. Creigh, 15 Ohio, 118. 2 Jonea v. Fales, 4 Mass. 245, 254. See also Denison v. Tyson, 1 7 Vt. 549 ; Dewey v. Washburn, 12 Vt. 580. Sect. 4.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 17 matter of doubt. It is clear that the sum cannot he fluctuating so as to be unascertainable at the time of making the instrument, as where it is to rise or fall indefinitely according to the happening of an uncertain event. For example (hypothetical) : ' Pay to A or order, thirty days after sight, flOOO or less according to the market value of 10 shares of Moon Mining stock at that time' would hot be a bill of exchange for want of desig- nation of a sum certain. But perhaps the case would be different where the only uncertainty was between two fixed sums, as in the case of a promise or an order to pay $1000, or S500 if a particular event happened before the time of payment of the larger sum. Here the sum would be ascertainable at the outset; it would be either $1000 or $500; there could be no indefinite fluctuation in such a case.' But some cases appear to be opposed to this view. For example : ' Two years from date, for value received, .re, or either of us, promise to pay to W or bearer $60, with use ; said W agrees that if $50 be paid on the first day of January, 1843, it shall cancel this note ; ' that is deemed not a promissory note.^ Greater or more common difficulty arises with regard to cases where the principal sum payable is certain, but to it something fur- ther is to be added in a subsidiary way, dependent upon some event, or uncertain in amount. In some parts of the country it is not uncommon to add to the principal sum promised another stated sum by way of attorney fee, in case suit should be brought upon the instrument. In many cases it has been held that this additional stipula- tion does not affect the nature of the instrument.' But 1 Compare the case of time of payment ' on or before,' infra, § 5. 2 Fralick v. Norton, 2 Mich. 130. ' Sperry v. Horr, 32 Iowa, 184; Seaton v. Scovill, 18 Kans. 433; Garr u. Louisville Banking Co., 1 1 Bush, 180; Stoneman i). Py le, 35 Ind. 103 ; Nickerson v. Sheldon, 33 III. 372 ; Dietrich v. Bayhi, 23 La. An. 767. 4 2 18 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap, II. in other cases the contrary is held ; ^ and in some cases it is held that the addition may violate the usury laws, or other statutes, or public policy, and for that reason render the instrument void or subject to any special provision of the laws.^ Another instance of the difiSculty occurs where payment is promised at a stated time 'or before,' with deduction of interest for the time if payment is made before the day set. Some of the courts have held that the sum payable is rendered uncertain by the provi- sion for anticipation;" other courts would, it seems, hold the contrary, on the ground that it is enough that the principal sum payable, in such cases, is certain.' The lat- ter appears to be the better rule. Still another instance occurs where the promise to pay is ' with current ex- change.' A similar conflict of authority exists in regard to such cases; but the better rule, and also the weight of authority, treat the provision as not affecting the sub- ject of certainty of amount.' Provisions accelerating the time of payment or non-pay- ment of interest when due have no effect upon the character of the paper; that is, they do not make the sum paj'able uncertain. For example: the defendant is guai-antor and the plaintiff is holder of an instrument promising to pay a certain sum of money, with interest in instalments, and 1 'Woods V. North, 84 Penn. St. 407 ; First National Bauk v. Gay, 63 Mo. .33. 2 Witherspoon u. Mnsselman, 14 Bnsh, 214; Shelton v. Gill, 11 Ohio, 417 ; Myer v. Hart, 40 Mich. .517. 8 Stults V. Silva, 119 Mass. 137 ; Way ». Smith, 111 Mass. 523; Hub- bard V. Mosely, 11 Gray, 170. ■• Compare Helmer n. Krolich, 36 !\rich 371 ; Mattison v. Marks, 31 Mich. 421, doubting Hubbard !'. Mosely, supra. The question in these, as in some of the Massachusetts cases, related to certainty of time, but there would bo the same question of certainty in amount ordinarily. " Smith V. Kendall, 9 Mich 241 ; Johnson v. Frisbie, 1 5 Mich. 286 ; Sperry v. Horr, 32 Iowa, 184. But see Lowe v. Bliss, 24 III. 168. Sect. 5.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 19 being thus far a promissory note, but with an added provision that in case of default in the payment of any instalment of interest when due, the principal sum shall, at the holder's election, at once become due. The instrument is a promissory note, the added provision not affecting it in that respect.' § 5. ' Absolutely ' : Certainty of Time. It is an invariable rule, or a rule with at most but a single exception, that the promise or order must be absolute; any condition or contingency expressed in it would have the effect to reduce the instrument from the high level of the law merchant to the lower level of the common law. The condition or contingency need not appear in terms, — 'upon condition,' 'if,' 'in the event that,' or the like, — in order to defeat the instrument as a contract of the law merchant; the same effect is produced if in substance and reality the promise or order is condi- tional or contingent. Thus, to make the paper payable out of some particular designated fund would have that effect, in ordinary cases, because the fund might not exist or be available at the time of payment. For example : ' One month from date I promise to pay to A or order $1000 out of the net proceeds of ore to be obtained from the mine in the lot of land this day conveyed to me by B' is not a promissory note, being payable upon the contingency of obtaining the required amount of ore out of the mine.^ It makes no difference that the event upon which the promise or order is made happens, or that the particular fund exists and is available when payment is due, so that the promise or order may be binding; it is fatal to the contract as a contract of the law merchant that when the 1 Seat). Glover, 1 Bradw. (111.) 335. 2 Worden v. Dodge, 4 Denio, 159 j L. C. 8. 20 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. II. promise or order was made, payment was dependent upon condition or contingency. For example : 'Due K 81000 when he is twenty-one years of age ' is not a promissory note though K lived to become, shortly afterwards, twenty- one.^ It may be remarked that an order to pay over the whole or any part of a specified fund will ordinarily amount to an assignment of the same,^ and that that of itself would be fatal to the conception of a bill of exchange or a cheque. A bill or a cheque can rise no higher than an undertaking; it signifies a debt, not a transfer of money or other property. It will not affect the instrument as paper of the law merchant that language unnecessary to such paper is used in it, provided the additional language does not make the promise or order conditional or contingent. To add a pro- vision for reimbursement, in the case of an order to pay, would not affect the paper as a bill of exchange, for that would not be directing lyayment to be made out of the particular fund or source ; and whether the fund or source for reimbursement existed or was available would make no difference. For example : ' Pay to the order of A $1000, one month from date, and reimburse yourself out of funds in your hands due me ' is a bill of exchange, regard- less of the reimbursement clause ' or of the existence of any debt due the drawer. Again: 'On the 1st of August next please pay to G or order £600, on account of moneys advanced by me \o S,' is a bill of exchange regardless of the clause following the sum.* So too the 1 Kelley v. Hemmingway, 13 111. 604; L. C. 10. 2 See Attorney-Gen. v. Continental Ins. Co., 71 N. Y. 325. 8 Kelly V. Brooklyn, 4 Hill, 263 ; Coarsin v. Ledlie, 31 Penn. St. 506 ; Corbett v. Clark, 45 Wis. 403. * Griffin v. Weatherby, L. R. 3 Q. B. 753, overruling Banbury v. Lisset, 2 Strange, 1211. Sect. 5] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 21 consideration for the undertaking may be stated, if no condition is created in the promise or order. For ex- ample : ' Pay to A or order $1000 one month from date, for stock' is a bill of exchange.^ It is immaterial that the additional language may express a condition or con- tingency, provided that the condition or contingency is no part of the promise or order to pay. That is to say, to a note, a bill, or a cheque may be added a contract of the common law, as has already been stated. But it may sometimes require careful consideration to determine whether the additional language forras part of the promise or order. Thus, while it is clear that the fact that it is recited in an instrument promising to pay money, that other paper or property is deposited with it as collat- eral, and that the same may be sold if such instrument is not paid at its.maturity, will not prevent that instrument from being a promissory note ; still if it is recited in the instrument that the instrument itself is held as collateral, it will be perceived upon reflection that the contrary is true and that the promise is now made conditional. For example : ' Six months after date I promise to pay to the order of myself $2400, value received, to be held as col- lateral security for the payment of B's note, December 6th, 6 months, for $968.41,' and other notes, is not a promis- sory note; for in legal effect it is a promise to pay if the, notes to which it is collateral are not paid.^ So too while an insurance note is not reduced to a contract of the com- mon law by adding the words 'On policy 33,386," the contrary would be true if the words were ' subject to the policy,' or the like.^ 1 See CofEman v. Campbell, 87 111. 98. 2 Haskell v. Lambert, 16 Gray, 592. 5 Taylor v. Curry, 109 Mass. 36. The policy provided for a set-off of notes due the company. * American Bank v. Blanchard, 7 AUen, 333. 22 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. H. The promise is not conditional by reason of the fact that it designates a particular place of payment ; nor is accept- ance conditional for designating a place of payment. It is not necessary to make demand of payment at that or at any other place in order to fix the liability of the maker or the acceptor; it is the duty of such party to come and pay. For example : ' Three years and two months after date I promise to pay M or order, at the office of the Bank of the United States, at Nashville, $4880.99, value received,' is a promissory note, and not conditional, touching the liability of the maker, upon demand at the place named or anywhere else.^ That proceeds, however, upon the ground that the very fact of non-payment by the maker or the accej>tor on the day of the maturitj' of the paper is a breach of his con- tract, a rule peculiar largely to the law merchant. But if it should be desirable to bring an action upon the day of the maturity of the paper, it would be necessary to make a demand, otherwise there could be no dishonor, — that is, breach of the contract, — on that day, until indeed the close of business hours, and then it would perhaps be too late to sue on that day. There is one exception to the rule requiring demand to be made after maturity, to fix the liability of the maker of a note or the acceptor of a bill, — namely, where the promise or order is'made performable at a certain designated place onlj. Such language would certainly make the paper paj'- able upon a condition; but it is probable that a condition of that kind would not affect it, as a contract of the law merchant. It is obvious, and the fact has already been noticed, that the promise or order is not performable absolutely if the time of payment is not certain to come to pass. For example : ' I promise to pay to A or order $1000 when the 1 Wallace v. McConnell, 13 Peters, 136; L. C. 65. Sect. 5.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 23 estate of B is settled up ' is deemed not a promise to pay absolutely, because the estate of B may never be ' settled up.' ^ Again: 'I promise to pay to A or order $1000 as soon as crops can be sold or tbe money raised from any other source' is not a promise to pay absolutely.''' Again: ' At sight after the arrival and discharge of coal per brig G pay to the order of myself $1500, value received,' is not an order to pay absolutely.' Certainty of time, however, does not mean a fixed and stated day of month and year; or as it is sometimes put, certainty here does not mean definiteness. Nothing is more common than promises to pay ' on demand,' or orders to pay 'at sight,' or at a certain time 'after sight; ' such instru- ments are respectively as good promissory notes or bills of exchange as if payment was to be made upon a day stated. All that the law requires is that the time of payment shall be sure to arrive, as, for instance, in the case of a promise to pay on the death of a person named. Indeed, phj'sical certainty appears not to be required; moral cer- tainty being deemed sufficient, as in the case of a promise by the government to pay a sum when it pays certain other debts which it owes.* Some confusion however exists, as certain of the ex- amples already given and others show, in regard to the meaning of the rule in cases in which the time of payment is left indefinite without giving power to the holder to put an end to the indefiniteness. But by the better view such a state of things will not prevent the paper from being a 1 Husband v. Epling, 81 111. 172. But there would come an end o£ time for making claims against the estate ; and would not the estate be, practically speaking, ' settled up ' ? The time would seem to be only indefinite in such a case, not uncertain to come to pass. 2 Nunez v. Dautel, 19 Wall. 560. 8 Grant n. Wood, 12 Gray, 220. * Andrews v. Pranklin, 1 Strange, 24 ; Evans v. Underwood, 1 Wils. 262. 24 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. H. promissory note (or a bill of exchange if one should ever be drawn in that way). If the time of payment is sure to come to pass sooner or later, that is enough ; when, sooner or later, it does come to pass, the instrument may be sued upon, in case of breach, as a promissory note. Confusion on this point has arisen in recent cases of promises to pay at a time stated ' or before,' at the maker's election.' But the instrument is payable at the time stated at all events ; the time of payment is certain to come to pass; the maker may choose to shorten the matter, — that is all.^ Another difficulty with such cases, arising from the fact that the total sum payable is in one sense uncertain, has already been noticed.^ No time of payment at all need be stated; the paper in that case will in law be payable on demand, and that, as has already been stated, is enough. The common cheque is a familiar example. An undertaking to pay within a reason- able time meets the requirement of the law merchant; for a reasonable time is deemed sure to come ; and an undertaking will often be construed as performable within a reasonable time where the matter of time is left whollj' indefinite in the language used. For example : ' I promise to pay to A or order $1000 when convenient ' is construed a promise to pay within reasonable time, and hence within a time cer- tain.^ Again: 'I promise to pay to A or bearer 875, one year from date, and if there is not enough realized by good management in one year, to have more time to pay,' is a promise to pay within a year, or at the end of a reasonable time thereafter, if enough should not be 1 Stults V. SOva, 119 Mass. 137; W'ayw. Smith, 111 Mass. 523; Hnb- bard v. Mosely, 11 Gray, 170. 2 Helmer u. Krolich, 35 Mich. 371 ; Mattison v. Marlts, 31 Mich. 421. 8 Supra, § 4. * Works V. Hershey, 35 Iowa, 340. Sect. 6.] PHYSICAL REQUISITES. 25 realized out of the business within a year; and the promise is therefore deemed to be performable at a time certain.'- Again, the time of payment may be put at the election of the holder not merely by making the instrument pay- able in one payment on demand, but by making it payable in parts at the pleasure of the holder. For example : ' I promise to pay to A $125 in such manner and proportion, and at such times and place, as A may require ' is pay- able absolutely, being payable in law in instalments on demand.^ Indeed, the time of paj'ment may be put in the alter- native, one of the alternatives being wholly uncertain, if the holder has his election which of the alternatives to take; that is, if the holder has the right to insist upon payment, at the time certain set in the instrument, the law merchant is satisfied. § 6. SlGNATUEB. Any of these instruments may be signed in pencil as well as in ink; * and though it is unusual to sign in any other way than by writing the name, that is not neces- sary, provided only the signature adopted was intended as an execution of the particular contract. Any party may sign with his mark, or he may substitute for his name a cipher, figures, or what he will; but if the name of the party is not signed, the holder has it to show that what the party did write was intended to answer the purpose of a signature.* There must be a signature in some form 1 Capron v. Capron, 44 Vt. 410. 2 Goshen Turnpike u. Hnrtin, 9 Johns. 217. See Washington Ins. Co. V. Miller, 26 Vt. 77 ; White v. Smith, 77 111. 351. ' Geary v. Physic, 5 Barn. & C. 234 ; Brown v. Butchers' Bank, 6 Hill, 443; L. C. 121. * See Brown v. Butchers' Bank, supra, where the figures ' 1, 2, 8,' 26 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap, IL upon the paper itself. It could not be shown that the want of a signature was due to mistake or oversight; though a suit in equity could, it seems, be maintained in a proper case to correct an omission in signing due to mistake.' were held a good indorsement on evidence of the intention ; and the same case, referring to George v. Surrey, Moody & M. 516, as to signature by mark. 1 See Lancaster Bank v. Taylor, 100 Mass. 18 ; Beard u. Dedolph, 29 Wis. 136 ; Brown v. McHugh, 35 Mich. 50, 52. These are cases of omitted indorsement; but the principle is prohably general. Sect. 1.] THE MAKER'S CONTRACT. 27 CHAPTER III. THE MAKER'S CONTRACT. § 1. SiGNATUEE. The contract of the maker of a promissory note differs in one respect from that of any other party to a contract of the law merchant; the writing itself shows, apart from grace, what the contract is. One has but to read the note to see that it is an absolute undertaking to pay. The contract itself may be executed in any way, so far as the signature of the maker is concerned. Ordinarily the maker signs the note at, the right lower corner; but that is not necessary. His signature written anywhere on the paper will bind him as maker if that was the inten- tion. It may even be written in the body of the promise, as where the note reads, 'I, A B, promise to pay,' etc. provided that it was intended that the name as written there should answer the purpose of a signature.-' There is this difference, however: Where the signature is placed at the end of the note, the intention is fixed; the signing in that way is an execution of the note as matter of law, in the absence of fraud practised upon the maker in regard to the instrument itself. But if the signature be out of the usual place, it is then a question of fact whether the supposed signature was intended as an execu- tion of the instrument; the burden being upon the holder to show that it was so intended.^ The simplest kind of ' Taylor v. Dobbin, 1 Strange, 399. 2 Compare In re Booth, 127 N. Y. 109; Watts <•■. Pnb. Admr., 4 Wend. 168; Catlett u. Catlett, 55 Mo. 330; Armstrong v. Armstrong, 29 Ala. 538. These are cases of wills. 28 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. HI. contract is the one now assumed to be in question, where the promise is made by one person only. That is the typi- cal case, the case from which to start, — the case from which all others are more or less variants. § 2. Joint and Several Signature. The note may be signed by more than one person; and then, according to the intention manifested, it will be the several note of each, or the joint note of all, or it will be eitlier the one or the other as the holder may choose to treat it. The question which of these it is, will be a question to be ascertained from the writing itself. The language of the note may in terms state the intention; as where it reads, 'We jointly promise,' or 'We jointly and sever- ally,' or 'We or either of us,' or 'I, A B, as principal, and I, C D, as surety, jointly and severally promise ; ' or the language may not in terms declare the intention. In the latter case the intention is a matter for construction, on the language used, the rule whereof appears to be this : If there is nothing to indicate a different intention, the promise of the makers is to be deemed joint. For example (hypothetical) : ' We promise to pay to A or order SIOOO, six months from date,' followed by the signatures of the makers, would be a joint promissory note, as there is noth- ing in the language to indicate that the makers intended to bind themselves severally. Where the promise is joint, there is this addition to the typical case of a promise by one person onlj-, that the promise is now the indivisible undertaking of two or more. Apart from statute there can be but one right of action for the breach of the contract in such a case, and hence when that right of action is pursued to its end, obvi- ously nothing more can be done. There are not as many rights of action as there are parties; and if suit should Sect. 2.] THE MAKER'S CONTRACT. 29 be brought against one without objection, and judgment should be obtained against him, then though the judg- ment should prove fruitless, no action could be brought against the others.^ Where the promise is several, there are as many rights of action — on which of course as many- judgments may be obtained — as there are makers; though as there is but one debt, one satisfaction satisfies all rights of action and all judgments. Where the promise is joint and several, the holder has an election; he may treat the makers as liable in either way.^ One further point touching joint promises may be noticed. The promise may be made by partners or not. If made by partners, any of the partnership may act for the firm ; and accordingly, a refusal to pay, on the day of maturity, made by any one of the partners, would be a breach of contract by all, so that suit could be brought, on the same day, upon the note (of course it would be against all the pa.Uiers). But if the joint promisors were not partners, and no agency existed between them, there could be no breach of the contract before the close of the day of maturity, except by demand upon and refusal by all. Another modification of the typical case occurs where one of the promisors undertakes as surety. If the fact of suretyship is shown upon the note, the holder must govern himself accordingly. The surety is still a maker, — that is, he promises to pay; but he promises sub modo, — he promises subject to certain restrictions imposed by the 1 King V. Hoare, 13 Mees. & W. 494 ; Sessions v. Johnson, 95 U. S. 347; Bigelow, Estoppel, 104-109, 5th ed. 2 ' If two bind themselves by contract /omtfy and severally, they may both be joined as defendants in one action ; or either or each of them may be sned in a separate action. For when the contract is in this form, the obligation created by it may be treated as either joint or several, at the election of the party who is entitled to recover for the breach of it.' Gould, Pleading, § 69. •SO BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IIL suretyship upon the holder of the note. The holder must not have dealings affecting the contract, such as agreements to extend the time of payment, behind the surety's back.^ Otherwise, however, the surety stands in the same situation as the principal maker. If the fact of the suretyship is a private matter, understood only between the principal and the surety himself, it has no bearing upon the rights of the holder; towards him there might as well have been no special understanding. But should he have notice of the understanding at the time of taking the note, or should he afterwards receive or acquire notice, then, by the better view, he would have to govern his conduct as if the fact were shown upon the paper itself.'' § 3. Signing as Agent. How ought a man to sign a promissory note who intends to exempt himself from liability? This question arises constantly in cases of alleged (or actual) agency. A, who in point of fact is treasurer or otherwise agent of B, has occasion to execute a promissory note solely on behalf of B; how is he to do it? If he wishes to exempt himself, he should do so in terms or bj^ plain if not necessary implication; otherwise his signatui-e — that is, signing his own name to the note — will bind him as maker, whether the principal is bound or not. The agent does not exempt himself from liability within the rule just stated — ' in terms or by plain if not necessary implication' — by adding words which are merely descriptive of the position which the agent holds. 1 On tliis subject, further infra. 2 The case referred to in the text is suretyship in the ordinary sense, not in the sense which would make an accommodative acceptor, for example, a surety. As to cases of that sort, see Farmers' Bank v. Rathbone, 26 Vt. 19; L. C. 622. Sect. 3.] THE MAKER'S CONTRACT. 31 It does not affect a man's liability in a written (or a verbal) contract to describe himself; that at most serves but to identify him. Of this nature the law considers all such words as 'agent,' 'trustee,' 'treasurer,' or the like, following a man's name. That may be harsh, for in many cases the intention may be overturned ; but it is settled construction. For example : ' Two months after date pay to the order of T $4469.76, value received, and charge the same to the account of D. F. & Co., agts. Piscataqua F. & M. Ins. Co.,' binds D. F. & Co., the added words being deemed mere description of the position held by them; it does not indicate that the instrument was executed in their office or character of agents. ' Again: 'One year from date we promise to pay to A or order $1000, value received. A B, CD, trustees of First Parish,' binds A B and C D, for the same reason. '^ The general rule is plain, and it must be applied, — the language must be interpreted by itself alone. The application of the law to all but simple cases like those of the examples is, however, often troublesome, and conse- quently sometimes inconsistent. If in the first of the examples the signing had been 'D. F. & Co., agts. for Piscataqua F. & M. Ins. Co.,' it seems that D. F. & Co. would not have been liable. The instrument would, it seems, have shown • in terms ' that they were acting in their office and character of agents.* But if it had read 'D. F. & Co., agts. of,' &c., the language would probably 1 Tncker Manuf. Co. v. Fairbanks, 98 Mass. 101 . It does not affect the case that the instrument was a bill of exchange, of which the ' agents ' were drawers. 2 See Id. ; Shoe and Leather Bank v. Dix, 12.3 Mass. 148. ' Id., referring to Ballon v. Talbot, 16 Mass. 461, as an anthoritative decision, where a note was signed ' J T, agent for D P,' and J T was held not liable. Jefts v. York, 4 Cash. 372 ; Page v. Wight, 14 Allen, 182. But see DeWitt v. Walton, 5 Seld. 57 1, where the signature ' D H, agent for the Chnrchinan ' was held to bind D H. 32 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. Ill Lave been treated as merely descriptive of the position held, and hence not as exempting the signers.' On the other hand, while a signing by ' A B for C D, ' or ' for C D, A B ' is the note of C D, if authorized, though the name of C D is not mentioned in the body of the note, still if the note is signed by the name of the agent only, it is laid down that it is his note though the body of the instrument make it a promise ' for ' or 'on behalf of the jjrincipal.^ It is sometimes said that to exempt the ' agent ' from liability, in a case in which he might have acted in his character of ageut, he ought to name his principal and further express in words the intention of binding the principal alone, — that is, he should show that the act is the act of the principal. But though it may be necessary to do that, in order to make the promise a promise of the principal, it is held unnecessary to do so in order to exempt the agent. If he has done that in express terms, that will be sufficient to exempt him. For example ; 'We as trustees, but not individually, promise to paj', ' &c., followed by the signatures of the makers (with the word ' trustees ' added), the signers having authority to make the note as trustees, w^ould not bind the signers personally.^ It does not impose liability upon the 'agent ' that words which alone would be mere description are added to the signature, if elsewhere the promise is put as the act of the principal (or as we have just seen, if the agent expressly exempts himself). Por example : ' I, as treasurer of the Congregational Society, or my successors in office, promise to pay,' &c., signed 'S R, Treasurer,' is not the note of S R.* 1 Tucker Manuf. Co. u. Fairbanks, 98 Mass. 101. 2 Barlow v. Congregational Society, 8 Allen, 460, 463. 5 Tucker Manuf. Co. c. Fairbanks, 98 Mass. 101. * Barlow v. Congregational Society, 8 Allen, 460. Sect. 4.] THE MAKER'S CONTRACT. 33 § 4. Anomalous Signature op Stkangee. The last variant from the typical case — the last to be noticed — is an anomalous kind of undertaking, and one that has much exercised the courts. The case is this: After a promissory note has been executed in the usual way, a third person, who may or may not have been a stranger to the consideration between the maker and the payee, puts his name upon the back of the paper (or any- where else, so that it is not with that of the maker), as a further assurance in favor of the payee. Now this act, though often spoken of as a kind of indorsement or as anomalous indorsement, is not properly speaking an indorsement; while the paper is in the hands of the payee it cannot be indorsed by another, according to the meaning of indorsement in the law merchant; the payee of paper payable to order must be the first indorser. It is true that the courts of some States treat the party as an indorser, as far as they can; such courts will not admit that he can be treated in any way as on the footing of a maker of the note, and probably that conforms with what was the actual intention in most cases; but still those courts treat the party not as an indorser proper, but as an indorser sub modo.^ Certain other courts meet the difficulties of the anomalous contract well, by treating it as a contract but imperfectly expressed, or rather as expressed but in part; refusing to regard it as a written contract within the meaning of the rule which excludes parol evidence to vary the terms of the writing. And accordingly, the contract being regarded as an open one, they receive evidence to show what, in point of fact, was 1 Coulter y. Richmond, 59 N. Y. 478; Hall v. Newcomb, 7 Hill, 41 6; Cloaston v. Barbiere, 4 Sueed, 336. 3 34 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. III. the understanding of the parties in the execution of the particular engagement.^ Another course, more commonly followed than either of the foregoing ones, proceeds to treat the contract in the ■way of an arbitrary presumption; the party being regarded as in the situation of a maker of the note.^ If he signed the paper when it was executed, he is a co-maker and joint maker with the real maker ; if he signed at some later time, he is still a maker, though not a joint maker, — a maker by way of guarantor or surety.^ In the first of the two cases his liabilitj'^ is supported by the same con- sideration which supports that of the real maker; in the second, it must be supported by a new consideration of its own. Probably for some purposes the party would be treated as a surety even in the first case, where he is held to be joint maker; for it is to be remembered that a surety may be a joint maker with his principal. The courts which adopt this course admit evidence to show the time when the anomalous contract was signed, giving effect to the undertaking accordingly; but that is the extent to which they allow the contract to be affected by evidence.'' All this, however, supposes that the anomalous signing was for the further security of the payee ; '^ if that was 1 Sylvester v. Downer, 20 Vt. 355. See Eilbert v. Finkbeiner, 68 Penn. St. 243 ; Carr v. Rowland, 14 Texas, 275 ; Good v. Jlartin, 95 U. S. 90 ; Key v. Simpson, 22 How. 341. 2 Union Bank v. Willis, 8 Met. 504 ; Rodocanachi c. Buttrick, 125 Mass. 134 ; Phillips y. Cox, 61 Ind. 345 ; Herbage v. McEntee, 40 Mich. 337 ; Semple v. Turner, 65 Mo. 696. The rule has been modified by statute in Massachusetts. See Rodocanachi v. Buttrick, supra. 8 Rodocanachi a. Buttrick, supra; Way w. Bntterwortli, 108 Mass. 509; Greenough v. Smead, 3 Ohio St. 415; Seymour i-. Mickey, 15 Ohio St. 515. * Wright V. Morse, 9 Gray, 337. 5 There is much real, aud still more seeming conflict of authority in regard to cases of anomalous signature ; but most of the cases, of Sect. 4.] THE MAIiEE'S CONTRACT. 35 not the case, if the signing was not intended to make the party liable to the payee, but to add security, with indorsement by the payee, to a purchaser of the paper, then the signing is not deemed anomalous at all, — it is indorsement proper, by all the authorities, if the payee also has indorsed.^ which there is a multitude, will fall under one of the three classes of the text. 1 Bigelow V. Colton, 13 Gray, 309 ; Clapp o. Eice, Id. 403 ; Greenough v, Smead, 3 Ohio St. 415 ; Seymour o. Leyman, 10 Ohio St. 283. 36 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IV. CHAPTER IV. THE ACCEPTOR'S CONTRACT. § 1. Acceptance Pkoper: Modes axd Effect. The drawee as such of a bill of exchange (or of a cheque) is under no liability whatever to the holder; to the holder he has not bound himself in contract, and he cannot be liable to the holder in tort upon refusal to honor the paper because as drawee he owes no duty to him; until acceptance he owes no duty to any one unless it be to the drawer. Acceptance is the act by which the drawee of a bill of exchange, whether foreign or inland, signifies his under- taking, according to the law merchant, to pay the bill. Possibly a cheque might be accepted; but it is probable that a professed acceptance of a cheque would amount in law to a certification of it, which is a very different thing from acceptance. By acceptance, the drawee contracts much as the maker of a promissory note contracts; lie binds himself to the holder absolutely to pay, according to the tenor of the bill. iS^o one else than the drawee (except perhaps as surety or guarantor with the drawee) can assume the position and liability of acceptor. For example : A draws a bill on B, payable to the order of C B writes his name across the face of the bill, or elsewhere upon it. B is an acceptor, bound absolutely to pay the bill. Again: A draws a bill on B, payable to the order of C. D writes the word Sect. 1.] THE ACCEPTOR'S CONTRACT. 37 ' accepted ' across the face of the bill, and signs his name thereto. D is not an acceptor of the bill.' The law merchant permits acceptance to be signified orally or in writing. In vsome States the law merchant has been modified on this point by statute; thus, the statutes of certain States require that acceptance shall be in writing and signed by the drawee or by his lawful agent. Such statutes, however, are complied with by the signature alone of the party ; that is at once a writing and a signature. '^ According to the law merchant — that is, apart from stat- ute — written acceptance may be made in any way and any- where, if upon the bill, so long as there is an intention to accept. There are in use, however, certain brief modes of acceptance by which, because they conform to recognized custom, the law understands the intention directly, as much so as if the drawee were to write out in full and sign his undertaking to pay the bill at maturity. In these cases the intention to accept is fixed by the particular act; no different intention can be shown, unless, indeed, by fraud and mistake, or perhaps by mistake without fraud, the alleged acceptor was led to signing one instru- ment when he supposed he was signing another.' The customary modes of acceptance thus recognized by law are the following: Writing the word 'accepted,' or writ- ing the name of the drawee, or any substitute for his name, upon the face of the bill; either of these alone. 1 Davis V. Clarke, 6 Q. B. 16; May v. Kelly, 27 Ala. 497. There could be no protest and notice, such as would bind the drawer, on D's refusal to pay, for the drawer never requested him to pay. 2 Spear v. Pratt, 2 Hill, 582 ; L. C. 32. 8 Compare Poster v. Mackinnon, L. R. 4 C. P. 704 ; L. C. .554 ; indorsement procured by fraud as to the instrument. Such, cases must be distinguished from fraudulent representations in regard to the consideration. 38 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IV. written by the drawee or by his agent, has a fixed meaning in law, to wit, acceptance.^ There are other modes which, because they have not the force of recognized custom, but still apparently signify acceptance, are deemed presumptively to be a manifesta- tion of intention to accept ; that is, they are deemed prima facie acceptance. The commonest of these are the follow- ing: Writing upon the bill 'presented,' or 'seen,' or the day of the month ; these or any other words written by the drawee, which are consistent with the idea of acceptance, are held to amount to acceptance unless they are shown to have been written with a different intention.^ Whether oral acceptance of a bill of exchange is equiv- alent, by the law merchant, to written acceptance for all purposes is not clear; but assuming that it may be, the case should clearly show a present acceptance as distin- guished from an undertaking to accept at some other time, such as a promise to accept the bill when it is produced for the purpose. The oral acceptance of a bill of exchange is not a promise to answer for the debt or default of another, to wit, the drawer, and hence is not rendered invalid by the Statute of Frauds. The drawee's acceptance of a bill is a promise to pay a debt of his own ; for the promise is supported by a consideration moving from the drawee to the holder, and that as well in cases in which there has been no barter of commodities or the like, as in cases in which there has been such a transaction. The case is this : Before accept- 1 See Spear v. Pratt, 2 Hill, 582 ; L. C. 32. It may be that in some States the contract would be treated as not a written one, and that the courts would accordingly treat snch acts as only prima facie acceptance. Compare what is said on Indorsement, in note to § 1, Chapter VI. ^ See Spear v. Pratt, supra. It has been held that a signature of the drawee following the words, ' Paid on this order forty dollars ' amounts to an acceptance of the whole. Peterson r. Hubbard, 28 Mich. 197. But see Cook v. Baldwin, 120 Mass. 317 ; Bassett v. Haines, 9 Cal. 261. Sect. 2.] THE ACCEPTOR'S CONTRACT. 39 ance the holder had a contingent right of action, presently available, against the drawer, dependent upon refusal of the drawee to accept and the taking of certain steps. That right is taken away by the act of the drawee in accepting the bill ; and so there is a case of detriment to the promisee.^ Perhaps the result would be different if, instead of a bill of exchange, the instrument were some- thing else, — as, for instance, an order to pay money upon some stated condition; in such a case acceptance might not affect any existing rights.^ § 2. Quasi- Acceptance : Modes and ErrECT. Thus far of acceptance proper, according to the tenor of the bill. Other acts are often called acceptance with some qualifying term; thus we have acceptance 'by giving credit to the bill,' 'conditional' acceptance, acceptance ' supra protest, ' acceptance ' in case of need, ' and ' vir- tual ' acceptance. These are at best but cases of quasi- acceptance; none of them has the effect of acceptance proper. They will now be severally explained. Acceptance ' by giving credit to the bill ' is unusual, and in the nature of things operates only between the drawee and the particular holder who presented the bill for acceptance. This kind of acceptance arises by infer- ence from the drawee's keeping the bill presented to him 1 See Pierce v. Kittredge, 115 Mass. 374, 376. On the consideration compare also Arpin v. Owens, 140 Mass. 144, a case of acceptance after the holder had taken the bill ; but the reasoning is indirect and artificial, where a plain and satisfactory reason was at hand. 2 See Manley v. Geagan, 105 Mass. 445. But was not the instru- ment in that case, though called for distinction an ' order,' a bill of exchange 'i Further, as to the Statute of Frauds in such cases, see Curtis V. Brown, 5 Cush. 488, showing a conflict of authority between the courts of Massachusetts and of New York, where the consideration moves between the drawer and the (oral) acceptor. 40 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IV. for his acceptance for a very considerable length of time, obviously beyond what is proper for deciding what to do, or by any other act on his part, having the effect to induce the holder reasonably to suppose that the bill has been honored, or, as it is put, to ' give a credit to the bill, ' and so to induce the holder to refrain from taking the steps necessary to fix the liability of the drawer and the indorsers, if the bill has been indorsed.' Liability in such a case is absolute; but this kind of acceptance necessarily puts a stop to the circulation of the bill, since the bill remains in the hands of the drawee till sued upon; hence the acceptance operates only between the immediate parties, as was just said. The drawee may keep the bill a reasonable time, as for the matter of a day, in deciding whether to accept or not. 'Conditional' acceptance explains itself in part; it is a case in which the drawee of a bill annexes some written condition to his acceptance, and he is liable only upon the performance or happening of the condition. The holder may, if he will, receive such an acceptance, without destroying the peculiar quality of the instrument as a con- tract of the law merchant. That is to say, the instrument will still be a bill of exchange having, if suitably drawn, negotiability and days of grace. The difference will be noticed between expressing a condition in the bill itself as signed by the drawer, and adding a condition in the acceptance. The addition of the condition has, however, its own con- sequences, not appearing upon the face of tlie now modified 'bill. The drawer of the bill, and any indorser or other party whose name may appear upon it, undertook that the drawee should accept the bill as drawn, not some modificar tion of it. The modification in the condition is, in other 1 Hough u. Loring, 24 Pick. 254; Dunavanw. Flynn, 118 Mass. 537 ; Halli;, Steel, 68 111. 231. Sect. 2.J THE ACCEPTOE'S CONTRACT. 41 words, a new term, to which the assent of the drawer and any other parties to the paper must be obtained, or their undertaking necessarily fails. The holder then receives a conditional acceptance, or any other acceptance which varies the tenor of the bill as executed by the drawer, on pain of discharging all non-assenting parties. All parties subsequent to the conditional acceptance, however, contract subject to such acceptance. If the holder wished to retain the benefit of the undertaking of the prior parties, be should have treated the refusal of the drawee to accept the bill as drawn as a dishonor of it. But having received the conditional acceptance, the holder must show that the condition has been performed or has happened. Acceptance 'supra protest' is not common in this country, though it is sometimes met with. This kind of acceptance differs radically from acceptance proper, and from any of the quasi-acceptances yet described, for it is not only the act, in ordinary cases, of another than the drawee, but it imposes a liability much like that of an indorser. This sort of acceptance arises where, upon dis- honor by the drawee, followed by a protest, — whence the term ' supra protest, ' — a third person ordinarily, who may or may not be a party to the bill, accepts it for tlie honor of the drawer or of any other partj^ or parties, or of all the parties. This acceptance is often called accept- ance 'for honor.' The contract of the acceptor supra protest, or for honor, is an undertaking to pay if, upon a further presentment of the bill to the drawee for payment, at maturity, it is again dishonored and duly protested, and due notice of the dishonor is given to such acceptor; otherwise not. For example (hypothetical) : A draws a bill on B, payable to C or order. B refuses to accept the bill on presentment, whereupon C has it protested. D then accepts the bill ' for the honor ' of A. At its maturity C presents the bill 42 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IV. to B for payment, who again dishonors it. C takes no further steps. D is not liable. Ordinarily, as has been intimated above, some one else than the drawee so accepts; but the drawee may himself accept supra protest, if he was not bound to accept in the ordinary way. He may in that way himself become holder of the bill, and hence entitled to maintain suit upon it. For example: A draws a bill of exchange upon B, paj'able to the order of C. C presents the bill for acceptance to B, who, not being under any legal obligation to accept, refuses, and then accepts the bill, after protest, for the honor of the drawer, and purchases it from C for value. B now has the rights of a holder, and at the maturity of the bill, on taking proper steps, can hold A.^ The next of these quasi-acceptances is acceptance ' in case of need. ' That occurs where the drawer, to prevent a possible miscarriage by the refusal of the drawee, him- self directs the holder, by writing on the bill, to apply ' in case of need ' to some third person named thereby. This, like accej)tance supra protest, is not common in America; but it is occasionally met with, mainlj^, it is to be supposed, on bills drawn abroad. Acceptance ' in case of need, ' like acceptance ' supra protest,' is given after protest of the bill, though it is pos- sible that protest may not be necessary under the English law. In practice the holder, after having had the bill protested, takes it to the person named, and receives his acceptance or refusal. If he accepts, he assumes a condi- tional liability substantially like that of an acceptor supra protest. A slight change in the example last put, to suit the facts, will make it an example of the present subject. The last of these quasi-acceptances to be considered is ' vir- 1 Compare Swope v. Ross, 40 Penn. St. 186 ; L. C. 618. Further, on acceptance supra protest, see Schimmelpenuicli v. Bayard, 1 Peters, 264 ; Konig v. Bayard, Id. 250. Sect. 2.] THE ACCEPTOR'S CONTRACT. 43 tual ' acceptance. 'Virtual ' acceptance is a term applied to promises to accept, as distinguished from present acceptance proper. The effect of the engagement is radi- cally different from acceptance, and from any of the cases of quasi-acceptance yet described. Indeed, if the word ' virtual ' were to be taken in its natural sense, to call a promise to accept a bill of exchange a ' virtual ' acceptance would be very misleading. The act is neither acceptance nor of the nature of acceptance ; the term ' acceptance, ' with the qualifying wcJrd, is applied to it only because it is an undertaking of the drawee of the bill, which may be absolute. But a promise to accept — that is, an undertaking to do sometime in the future what the drawer requires by an immediate act — is an affair of the common law only; ^ if it comes to a contract, it is a contract of the common law as distinguished from a contract of the law merchant. In principle it is subject to all the limitations of the common law; it does not import consideration; it has not the prop- erty of negotiability or of days of grace. No doubt the nature of this ' virtual ' acceptance has been somewhat obscured at times, partly by the very term ' virtual acceptance,' partly because the act relates to a con- tract of the law merchant. But it is clear upon the better authorities, as well as upon principle, that it has not the properties of a contract of that law. For example: A in Boston draws a bill of exchange on B in New York, pay- able to the order of C, and informs B by letter that he has drawn the bill. B replies by letter to A, saying, ' Your draft will be duly accepted.' D discounts and becomes holder of the bill, on C's indorsement. D cannot main- tain an action against B, except as an assignee, in the 1 The difference should be observed between a promise to accept thereafter, and a promise to pay ; the latter would be an acceptance proper. 44 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. TV. name of A, because the contract of B, if any was created, was not negotiable.* For the same reason C could not maintain an action against B. But the contract of the virtual acceptor, if a contract has been made, is absolute, if the terms of the promise are absolute; it is of course what its terms make it. It may- be conditional, and often is, as well as absolute, and that without affecting the bill. It is in fact and in law a sepa- rate, independent engagement; the bill of exchange may circulate freely, and be presented for payment at maturity, without reference to its existence. In the absence of statute, a promise to accept a bill of exchange may by the current of authority be made before or after tlie drawing of the bill ; '^ and in favor of an exist- ing bill, if not in favor of a non-existing bill, the promise may be either in writing or oral.* But the promise should clearly identify the bill, or clearly cover it by general description or general language; * and it is available only in favor of one who has taken the bill in reliance upon the promise to accept.^ It will be right to infer from the last statement that the promise to accept is not necessarily binding because it is supported by a valuable consideration, for the holder 1 Worcester Bank v. Wells, 8 Met. 107; Exchange Bank u. Rice, 107 Mass. 37 ; s. u. 98 Mass. 288. See Henrietta Bank v. State Bank, 80 Texas, 648, 651 ; Grant v. Hunt, 1 C. B. 44. '^ Coolidge V. Payson, 2 Wheat. 66 ; L. C. 3.3 ; Schimraelpennich v. Bayard, 1 Peters, 264 ; Exchange Bank v. Eice, 98 Mass. 288 ; Bige- low's L. C. Bills & Notes, 50-53, ^ See Bigelow's L. C. Bills & Notes, 53. Statute has changed the rule in some States, requiring the promise to he in writing. * Coolidge V. Payson, supra. ^ Cases supra. The doctrine of a few cases (Jones i'. Bank of Iowa, 34 111. 313 ; Bead i'. Marsh, 5 Mon. 8), that a promise to accept an exist- inij bill may he sued upon as a virtual acceptance, whether the holder took the bill on the credit of the promise or not, is unsound. Exchange Bank v. Rice, 98 Mass. 288. Sect. 3.] THE ACCEPTOE'S CONTRACT. 45 may not have connected himself with the promise. For example: For valuable consideration the drawee of a bill promises the payee to accept it, if presented on a certain day. The payee now indorses the bill to the plaintiff, who takes it without knowledge of the promise. Afterwards, being informed of the promise, the plaintiff presents the bill to the drawee, on the day named in the promise, for acceptance, which is refused. Payment is also refused at maturity of the bill. The drawee is not liable to the plaintiff.^ § 3. Ceetification of Cheque. Finally, the certification of a cheque should be noticed in this connection, if for no other purpose than to compare it with and distinguish it from acceptance. The act of cer- tifying a cheque consists in the drawee's writing the word ' good ' upon it. This binds the drawee absolutely, as acceptance binds the drawee of a bill ; still it is not the same thing in effect, for, when procured by the holder, it discharges the drawer.^ ZSTor are the consequences of refusal the same ; indeed, certification is not required by the cheque, and refusal has no legal consequences. It is held that the teller of a bank has no inherent power to certify cheques drawn upon his bank, that being a power to pledge the credit of the bank.' Probably the contrary would be true of the cashier, president, or vice- president of the bank.^ However that may be, it is usual 1 Coolidge V. Payson, 2 Wheat. 66 ; L. C. 33 ; McEvers v. Mason, 10 Johns. 207 ; Exchange Bank v. Rice, 98 Mass. 288 ; s. c. 107 Mass. 37 ; Worcester Bank v. Wells, 8 Met. 107. 2 See Chapter V., § 3. 3 Muasey v. Eagle Bank, 9 Met. 306. But see Farmers' Bank v. Butchers' Bank, 16 N. Y. 125. * Merchants' Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604. 46 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IV. in cities to confer upon some officer of the bank, generally the cashier, power to certify the cheques of customers of the bank in so far as they have funds on deposit. And of such cases it is held that certification binds the bank, in favor of an innocent holder for value, though in point of fact the drawer had at the time no funds in the bank. It matters not whether the certification in such a case was due to mistake of the bank officer or not.^ The certification means, not that the drawer has funds at the time of the certification, and will continue to have them when pay- ment is demanded, but that the bank will pay the sum to the holder on demand.'' 1 Farmers' Bank v. Butchers' Bank, and Merchants' Bank v. State Bank, supra. 2 Mussey v. Eagle Bank, 9 Met. 306. Sect. 2.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 47 CHAPTER V. THE DRAWEE'S CONTEACT. § 1. Drawee, Maker, Indorsee. The contract of the drawer of a bill of exchange must be set in bold contrast with that of the maker of a prom- issory note; in no way are the two in themselves alike. Physically unlike the contract of the maker, the contract of the drawer, whether of a bill or of a cheque, does not appear upon the face of the writing; radically unlike the contract of the maker, the contract of the drawer of a bill is conditional and secondary. Aside from its merely physical properties, the contract of the drawer of a bill of exchange is in the main like that of an indorser. The drawer stands in the position of first indorser, in order of contract; thus the order of parties to an accepted bill is this: (1) acceptor; (2) drawer, vir- tually as first indorser; (3) payee, virtually as second indorser, though literally first, or such indorser, if any, as follows negotiation; and then, (4) any subsequent indor- sers in order. If the bill is not accepted, the order of parties begins with the drawer, still virtually as first indorser, and then proceeds as in the case of an accepted bill. This part of the drawer's contract is treated in the chapter on the Indorser's Contract, post. Chapter VI. § 2. Eight to Deaw: Eeasonablb GEOtmD. Besides these differences between the contract of drawer and that of indorser, there are several substantial legal 48 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. differences arising from the very nature of things. A man who draws a bill of exchange is naturally and legally supposed to have something to draw upon in the hands of the drawee, or at all events he is supposed to have a rea^ sonable expectation that the draft will be accepted and paid by the drawee ; that is, the drawer is supposed to stand in close relation to the drawee, and to have good ground accordingly for drawing. An indorser, however, is not supposed to know, and, in fact, generally does not know, anything about the state of things between the drawer and the drawee; and though his indorsement is, by a useful fiction, treated as equivalent in many respects to drawing a bill, and when special, as where the indorse- ment itself is to 'order,' is also in form like a bill in brief, still it is not a drawing by one having or supposed to have funds with the drawee, or knowledge of the action to be taken by him ; that is, the indorser as such is not supposed to stand in any special relation to the drawee. A rule of law has resulted from this difference of situa- tion, that the drawing of a bill of exchange (or a cheque) may in itself be a fraud; and a fraudulent drawing should and does put the drawer in a different position from that of an honest drawer, and different therefore from that of an indorser, — different not merely as regards his liability to some other branch of law, but different as regards his lia- bility under the law merchant. The drawer in such a case becomes, upon dishonor of the paper, if not by the very act of drawing, substantially the maker of a promissory note. For example: ' A draws a bill of exchange on B, payable to the order of C, having no reasonable ground to believe that the bill will be honored by B ; and it is not honored by him. A is liable to C without notice of the dishonor,' i 1 Hopkirk v. Page, 2 Brock. 20 ; L. C. 96 ; Robinson v. Ames, 20 Johns. 146; Orear v. McDonald, 9 Gill, 350; Wood i.'. Price, 46 111. 435 ; Harness v. Davies Sav. Assoc, 46 Mo. 356 ; Dickins v. Beal, 10 Sect. 2.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 49 But one is not lightly to be deemed guilty of fraud; and it does not necessarily make one guilty of fraud to draw without having provided and left with the drawee funds with which to pay one's draft, for one may still have rea- sonable ground to expect that the draft will be honored. Reasonable ground for drawing is the test.^ The exact state of accounts between the drawer and the drawee may not be known by the drawer at the time of drawing; the accounts may be fluctuating from time to time, and balanced only at considerable intervals; and the drawer may rea- sonably suppose that the balance is in his favor to the amount of the draft; or though he may know that the bal- ance is against him, he may have had assurance from the drawee that the paper will be honored; or he may have felt reasonably justified in drawing from practice between him- self and the drawee in such cases. Drawing is not a fraud under circumstances of the kind.'' The li older, however, makes a case, it seems, of presump- tive fraud against the drawer, by showing that he had no funds in the hands of the drawee when the bill or cheque was presented; it is then for the drawer to show, if he can, that, notwithstanding the want of funds, he had reasonable ground to believe that the paper would be honored, and hence that the usual steps for fixing the liabilitj'' of a drawer should have been taken.' Peters, 577 ; Brown v. Maffey, 15 East, 216 ; Rucker v. Hiller, 16 Ea-st, 43. It seems that the drawer would be liable without any demand upon the drawee ; for why demand payment of a bill fraudulently drawn ? ' See the cases just cited, to which many others might be added. A few early cases, following the discredited decision in Bikerdike v. Boll- man, 1 T. R. 405, are contra. See Foard v. "Womack, 2 Ala. 368 ; Tarver u. Nance, 5 Ala. 712 ; and certain New York cases, in which, however, the point was not raised. The true rule in New York conforms with the text. Robinson v. Ames, 20 Johns. 146. 2 See Dickens v. Beal, 10 Peters, 572 ; Hopkirk v. Page, 2 Brock. 20 ; L. C. 96. s Harness v. Davies Sav. Assoc, 46 Mo. 357 ; Story, Bills, § 312. 4 50 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. The ' reasonable ground ' of the rule may relate either to the time of the drawing of the instrument, or to the time of presentment. Hence, the drawer maj' fall without the protection of the rule even where he had funds appli- cable to the draft at first, or on the way, to meet it, for he may withdraw or intercept them, and then have no rea- sonable ground to expect that the paper will be honored. In regard to what amounts to reasonable ground, it is laid down that there must be something more than that which would excite an idle hope or a bare expectation, — something more than a remote probability. There must be a prospect such as would create a full, sober expectation or strong probability that the paper will be honored; such a state of things as would induce a merchant of common prudence and fair regard for his commercial credit to draw the draft.' The fact that the drawee is indebted to the drawer would create, presumptivelj', a case of the kind, though in point of fact the drawer have no funds in the drawee's hands. ^ The case would probably be different if the existence of the debt were in dispute. For example : A draws a bill of exchange on B, for an amount which A expects to recover against B in a contested suit by A against B. A has drawn without funds or reasonable ground to draw.^ The drawer may have reasonable ground to draw in certain cases, before any debt exists, by having an indis- putable expectation of one, as where, having made a consignment to another, he draws before the consignment has reached the consignee.^ Nor does it affect the case ^ See cases in note I, p. 48. " Walker v. Rogers, 40 III. 278. 3 Benoist v. Creditors, 18 La. 522 ; Williams u.Brashear, 19 La. 370. The second of these cases shows that the te.-it of absence of funds is not conclusive ; only the absence of reasonable ground is conclusive. * Dickins v. Beal, 10 Peters, 572; Orear v. McDonald, 9 Gill, 350 ; Grosvenor v. Stone, 8 Pick. 79. Sect. 2.] THE DRAWER'S COKTRACT. 51 that the consignment, by depreciation of value, may have become insufficient to meet the bill, for that was not to be foreseen ; i if it was foreseen by the drawer, or was under- stood by him to be inevitable, the case would probably be different. Again, it makes no difference, and for the same reason, that the consignment may never have reached the consignee.^ So again the drawer has reasonable ground, where a debtor of his requests him to draw on a certain per- son, who is represented by the debtor to be indebted to him, especially where the drawee accepts (afterwards refusing to pay).' But the drawer of a bill who has no funds with the drawee, except that he has supplied him with goods on credit, which credit does not expire till long after the bill becomes due, has no reasonable ground to draw.^ The fact that the bill may have been accepted by the drawee has, by the weight of authority, no decisive bearing upon the question of the right of the drawer to draw.^ Acceptance may perhaps require the holder to await the maturity of the bill, and then present it again for payment, though that is by no me^ns clear ; but whether that be the case or not, acceptance does not certainly show that the drawer had reasonable ground ; at most it but indicates a presumptive right to draw, and hence only presumptively entitles the drawer to insist upon the usual steps for fixing his liability.' 1 Robinson v. Ames, 20 Johns. 146. See Rncker v. Hiller, 16 East, 43. 2 Byles, Bills, 301, 13th Eng, ed. ' Byles, ut supra, citing Lafitte v. Slatter, 6 Bing. 623. * Id., citing Claridge v. Dalton, 4 Maule & S. 226. 5 See Rhett a. Poe, 2 How. 4.^7; Valk v. Simmons, 4 Mason, 113; Allen V. King, 4 McLean, 128; Kinsley v. Robinson, 21 Pick. 327; Gillespie v. Cammack, 3 La. An. 248 ; Foard v. Womack, 2 Ala. 368, 371 ; Hoffman v. Smith, 1 Caines, 157, 160. But see Pons v. Kelly, 2 Hayw. 45, 47 ; Richie v. McCoy, 13 Smedes & M. 541. See also Orear u. McDonald, 9 Gill, 350, 358. 8 See 2 Daniel, Neg. Inst. § 1082. 52 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. Another special feature of a drawer's contract is that where the drawer draws upon himself he is not entitled to notice if the paper is dishonored; for, drawing upon him- self, he was in honor bound to accept. He may accord- ingly be treated as the maker of a promissory note.^ In that view it seems to be unnecessary to make any demand of acceptance or payment of him. The same is true where a corporation or a partnership draws upon itself, or where one draws upon a partnership of which one is a member ; and so also, it seems, of the case of drawing paper by one partnership upon another, where the defendant drawer is a member of both. § 3. Deawee of Cheque : Ceetification op Cheque. Wliat has been said in the last section applies mainly to bills of exchange, though it is proper to notice that the drawer of a cheque may, for some special reason not relating to funds, have had no reasonable ground to draw, and so be liable much like the maker of a note.^ But the contract of drawer of a cheque is in itself peculiar, as was observed in the Introduction. The peculiarity of the contract in question is due, of course, to the special nature of a cheque. Cheques have sometimes been called bills, in cases in which it was not necessary to observe any distinction between the two kinds of paper ; but it is never safe to assume that things which are alike are the same, and it is certain that cheques are not, even in substance, bills of exchange. A bill of exchange is supposed to have been drawn, as has already been seen, either upon funds in the hands of the drawee, or upon reasonable ground to believe that the ^ Fairchild v. Ogdensburgh R. R. Co., 15 N. Y. 337 ; MiUer v. Thom- son, 3 Man. & G. 576. 2 See Carew v. Duckworth, L. E. 4 Ex. 313. Sect. 3.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 53 drawee will honor it ; a cheque is always supposed to have been drawn upon funds. The drawer of a cheque draws upon his own banker, who, where the transaction is right- ful on the part of the drawer, holds money of the drawer subject to his order as manifested by cheques. A bill of exchange is oftener drawn upon some merchant or trader. The cheque is drawn with a view to prompt payment rather than to use as money, — though merely to put a cheque into circulation is not in itself improper, so as to discharge the parties ; a bill of exchange only performs its ordinary function when it is put into circulation ; the one is drawn to obtain money, the other, often to give credit and to take the place of money as far as desired. The consequence which the law merchant annexes to this difference is that the drawer of a dishonored cheque, not drawn upon sufBcient ' funds applicable to it, is in the position substantially of the maker of a promissory note ; at all events, he is liable to the holder without notice of dishonor.^ Indeed, the drawer of a cheque remains liable, it seems, without notice of dishonor, though he had reason- able ground to draw, provided he has not suffered pre- judice by the failure to give him notice, or to make an earlier demand than was made.' The drawer of a bill, as we have seen, would be discharged in such a case. The case of the drawer of a cheque thus far may be put in this way: Prima facie, the drawer is entitled to notice of dishonor ; hence, the plaintiff must offer some legal excuse for the omission when he has failed to give such notice. Still, if he can show that the drawer has not, in point of fact, suffered prejudice by the omission, the 1 Carew v. Duckworth, L. R. 4 Ex. 313. 2 Andrew v. Blackly, 1 1 Ohio St. 89 ; Carew v. Duckworth, supra. 8 Pack V. Thomas, 13 Smedes & M. 11 ; Mohawk Bank v. Broderick, 10 Wend. 304, affirmed, 13 Wend. 133 ; True v. Thomas, 16 Maine, 36. See Keene v. Beard, 8 C. B. n. s. 372 ; L. C. 156. 54 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. plaintiff can maintain his action against him. The drawer is, in a word, treated as the princij)al debtor sub modo ; he is not discharged either by failure to make presentment within the time required in the case of a bill of exchange payable (like a cheque) on demand, or by want of notice of dishonor upon presentment and refusal to pay, unless the drawer has suffered some loss or prejudice thereby, and then only to the extent of his loss.^ Eeasonable ground to draw will not help the drawer of a cheque in such a case. Por example (hypothetical) : A draws a cheque on his banker B, payable to C or order. C holds the cheque for a week; within which time, on any day, he might reasonably have presented it to B for payment. When the cheque was drawn, B was solvent and paying his customers' cheques, and continued to do so for several days afterwards. Before the cheque is presented B stops payment, and the cheque is dishonored, and A is not notified. Subsequently B makes an arrangement with his creditors, and ultimately pays them, including A, in full. A is liable on the cheque regardless of the delay in pre- senting it, and the want of notice of dishonor. Again : In the same case, C omits for ten days to present the cheque, though he might have presented it on any day before. Meantime B fails ; but before his failure A withdraws all his funds from B. A is not discharged by C's delay. '^ Again : In the same case B compromises with his creditors, including A, at fifty cents on the dollar. A is liable on the cheque for half the sum named in it. Again : In the same case A leaves all his funds with B, and loses the whole. A now is discharged by reason of C's delaj-.^ 1 Heywood v. Pickering, L. E. 9 Q. B. 428 ; Robinson v. Haivksford, 9 Q. B. 52 ; Little v. Phenix Bank, 2 Hill, 425, 428 ; Bell v. Alexander, 21 Gratt. 1 ; Morrison u. McCartney, .30 Mo. 183; Griffin v. Kemp, 46 Ind. 172. See Keene v. Beard, 8 C. B. n. s. 372; L. C. 156. ^ Kinyon v. Stanton, 44 Wis. 479. 8 Id.; Jones v. Heiliger, 36 Wis. 149. In all of these cases the Sect. 3.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 55 On the other hand, the holder of a cheque is protected (with an exception to be mentioned in the next paragraph) where he has exercised the diligence which would satisfy the law in the like case of a bill of exchange ; in such a case no showing of loss or prejudice due to failure to exercise greater diligence would be heard. For example : The holder of a cheque which he receives on Saturday morning presents it on Monday afternoon in banking hours, and the cheque is dishonored, — the bank having stopped payment Monday at noon. The holder might have presented the paper on Saturday, or on Monday before noon, when it would have been paid. The diligence required in the case of a bill of exchange has been exercised, and the drawer is not discharged.^ But if prejudice result by reason of the holder's failing to exercise the diligence which would be required if the cheque had been a bill of exchange, the drawer will be discharged to the extent of such prejudice. Whether the delay is in demand of payment or in the giving of notice of dishonor, or in both, makes no difference. This, however, supposes that the delay in making demand of payment is not due to keeping the cheque out in circu- lation. The difference between a cheque and a bill in that respect has already been noticed; a bill (not payable on demand?) may be kept out in circulation for a long period of time without affecting the liability of any of the parties, though the drawee fail, meantime, to the prejudice of the drawer; whereas, a cheque should with reasonable prompt- drawer of a bill would be discharged. It should be remembered that neither a cheque nor a bill of exchange operates as an assignment of the fund or (until acceptance, in the case of a bill) makes the drawer a debtor to the holder. In Illinois, however, drawing a cheque operates as an assignment of the amount called for. Munn v. Burch, 25 111. 35. 1 See Story, Notes, § 493 ; Bills, §§ 470, 471 ; Burkhalter u. Second Nat. Bank, 42 N. Y. 538 ; Simpson v. Pacific Ins. Co., 44 Cal. 139. 56 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. iiess be presented for payment, which means, if the holder and drawee reside in the same place, on the day, or day after, it is taken,^ or, if they reside in different places, that it should be sent forward to be presented for payment on the day, or day after, it is taken, excluding in either case non-secular days, — unless a sufficient reason for not doing so is shown ; that, on pain of discharging the drawer in the event of prejudice to him by the default.^ That is what is meant, it seems, by the statement sometimes made, that the holder of a cheque is bound to greater diligence than the holder of a bill.^ Another substantial difference between the contract of drawer and indorser is created by certification, as it is called, of a cheque. That act consists in the drawee's writing the word ' good,' or perhaps some equivalent word, on the cheque. The act differs essentially in legal effect from the acceptance of a bill of exchange. , Accept- ing a bill in no way affects the liability of the drawer, except in so far as it prevents immediate recourse (on refusal) against the drawer, — that is, the drawer of a bill remains a party to it after acceptance, as before, and liable upon it in case of dishonor by the acceptor. Certifying a cheque, on the other hand, if done at the instance and for the benefit of the holder, has the effect to discharge the drawer entirely.'' » Smith V. Miller, 43 N. Y. 171 ; s. c. .52 N. Y. .'545 ; Barkhalter v. Second Nat. Bank, 42 N. Y. 538 ; Simpson v. Pacific Ins. Co., 44 Cal. 139; Alexander v. Burchfield, 7 Man. & G. 1061. ^ Prideaux v. Criddle, L. R. 4 Q. B. 455. See Woodruff v. Plant, 41 Conn. 344. 8 Mohawk Bank v. Broderick, 10 Wend. 304, 307, affirmed, 13 Wend. 133; Gough v. Staats, 13 Wend. 549, 551, 552. « Minot a. Russ, 156 Mass. 458; First Nat Bank r. Whitman, 94 U. S. 343, 345 ; First Nat. Bank v. Leach, 52 N. Y. 350 ; Born c. First Nat. Bank, 123 Ind. 78; National Com'l Bank <,. Miller, 77 Ala. 168. Sect. 4.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 57 That rule has heen supposed to proceed upon the ground that the act of certification amounts to a payment of the cheque between the drawer and the drawee, his banker. The drawee charges the sum to the account of the drawer as he would upon a cash payment, and becomes himself absolute debtor, like the maker of a promissory note, to the liolder. The money deposited to the credit of the drawer is diminished by so much as the certified cheque calls for ; the sum represented by the cheque is no longer the drawer's in any way,^ Assuming that to be the true ground upon which the rule is based, it would seem to make no difference whether the cheque were certified at the instance of the payee (or later holder) or of the drawer ; and the practice in regard to charging the sum against the drawer, as money of his now appropriated by the drawee to paying the cheque, is the same in either case. But the latest authorities put the discharge of the drawer on the ground that the holder has brought about the drawer's discharge by making the bank his debtor. 'By his own act he makes the bank his debtor, and releases the drawer of the cheque.' ^ Hence, when the drawer procures the certification, so as to pass the cheque the more readily, he remains liable ; and so most of the courts which have considered the question hold.' The drawer thus becomes practically a guarantor of the bank's solvency. § 4. Presentment foe Acceptance. For most purposes there is no occasion for separating the contract of drawer from that of indorser in regard to ' First Nat. Bank v. Leach, 52 N. Y. 350 ; Metropolitan Nat. Bank V Jones, 12 L. R. N. 402. 2 Born V. First Nat. Bank, 123 Ind. 78 ; Minot v. Russ, 156 Mass. 458. 8 See Minot v. Russ, supra ; Bickford v. First Nat. Bank, 42 111. 238 ; Rounds v. Smith, Id. 245 ; Andrews o. German Nat. Bank, 9 Heisk. 211 ; Mutual Nat. Bank v. Rotg^, 28 La. An. 933. 58 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. V. presentment for acceptance ; what is true of the one case is true of the other, and hence the subject will be reserved, in the main, for consideration with the other subjects belonging in common to drawing and indorsement, and treated under the latter head as the larger one. There is one phase, however, of the law relating to pre- sentment for acceptance which is peculiar to the drawer's contract; unless, indeed, there happen to be an indorsement upon the paper when it is so presented, in which case the law would apply to the indorsement as well. A bill of exchange payable at a stated time after date need not be presented for acceptance.^ However, according to the more general understanding of the law merchant, the drawer's contract, in the case of a bill of exchange, looks, in all cases in which the bill is not payable on demand, to an acceptance as well as to payment by the drawee. That is, the drawer is understood to engage in favor of the payee, or subsequent holder, that the drawee will give him, at any time, the special security of accept- ance; which of course, in the case of paper payable after date, or a stated time after sight, may be long before the maturity of the bill, and thus be a matter of great importance. That undertaking of the drawer may be broken by the refusal of the drawee to accept the bill; there being then, upon due notice (which the law requires), a breach of con- tract on the part of the drawer, he is in principle, and by the current of authority, liable on the bill at once, regard- less of the fact that payment of the bill, by the drawee, may not be required by the order for a long time there- after. Por example : A draws a bill of exchange on B, in favor of C, dated Jan. 1, 1893, payable three months after date. On Jan. 2, 1893, C presents the bill to B for acceptance, and acceptance is refused; the paper is duly 1 Walker v. Stetson, 19 Ohio St. 400; L. C. 314. Sect. 4.] THE DRAWER'S CONTRACT. 59 protested, and A is duly notified. A is liable on the bill at once; C need not wait until the time stated in the bill before suing. ^ The real meaning then of the drawer's contract in such cases, in the eye of the law merchant, is that the holder shall have the drawee's acceptance, which being given, he shall then have payment by the drawee at the stated time ; but that, if the drawee refuse acceptance, the sum shall be due at once from the drawer; though it must be remem- bered that it is part of the drawer's contract, in ordinary cases, that there shall be due protest and notice of dis- honor, whether on non-acceptance or non-payment after acceptance. Indeed, though presentment for acceptance may be unnecessary, protest and notice are required on pain of discharging the drawer, and not merely for the purpose of fixing his liability. All this, it must be understood, is applicable to paper payable at, or at a stated time after, sight, and not merely to paper payable at, or at a stated time after, date, for pre- sentment for acceptance in the former case is necessary. And, as has already been intimated, if there happen to be an indorsement upon the paper, the indorser also may be made liable, and sued at once; for his contract, as well as that of the drawer, is broken. In Pennsylvania, however, a special view of the law mer- chant upon the foregoing subject obtains. It is there held that where presentment for acceptance is made in a case in which the step is unnecessary, as it is where the paper is payable at a stated time after date, presentment for accept- ance, if refused, is to be regarded as nugatory, — that is, no rights can arise against the drawer. The holder must wait until the stated time for payment arrives, and then 1 3 Kent, 95 ; Bank of Washington v. Triplett, 1 Peters, 25 ; Union Bank v. Hyde, 6 Wheat. 572 ; Weldon . Bank of New York, 13 Barb. 636. But compare Mason v. Franklin, 3 Johns. 202. ' Pierce v. Whitney, 29 Maine, 188 ; Anderson v. Drake, 14 Johns. 114 (dictum) ; Story, Notes, § 49, and note. * Pearson u. Bank of Metropolis, 1 Peters, 89; State v. Hurd, 12 Mass. 171 ; Sussex Bank v, Baldwin, 2 Harrison (N. J.) 487. 86 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VII. making presentmcut.' Tlie place of business is (probably) preferred in law to the place of residence, because at the party's place of business rather than at his residence he expects to meet his engagements, especially to attend to calls for money. The consequence is that presentment at the residence of a maker or acceptor having a known place of business would, in principle, in the absence of sufficient reason, be insufficient in case of refusal. We say ' in principle,' for the authorities have not often had much occasion to speak plainly to the point, and many of them accordingly have been content with saying generally that presentment should be made at the place of business or of residence.^ There is no doubt that presentment at the place of business is good; the only doubt is whether presentment there is required. But whatever the rule on that point, ' place of business ' must be taken in a real, substantial sense. It is not enough that some place has been used temporarily for the transaction of some particular piece of business, such as merely settling up old books or accounts; it must be the regular, known place for the transaction of the ordinary, general business of the part}', including the payment of hills. The counting-room of a merchant would be a proper place for presentment ; a mercantile club- room ordinarily would not be. The general room of a workshop, or any part of a workshop having no office, would be no place for making presentment; the place would indeed be a place of business, but not a place of business at which the owner, in ordinary cases, would be apt to pay his bills. 1 King V. Holmes, 1 1 Penn. St. 456 ; West v. Brown, 6 Ohio St. 542. See Bank of Red Oak v. Orvis, 42 Iowa, 691. 2 See Sussex Bank v. Baldwin, 2 Harrison (N. J.) 487 ; Brooks !'. Blauey, 62 Maine, 456 ; King v. Crowell, 61 Maine, 244 ; Maiden Bank V. Baldwin, 13 Gray, 154. Sect. 2.] THE INDOESEK'S CONTRACT. 87 Indeed, an office at which one pays one's bills, among other things, is enough to make presentment there good, if not to require presentment there. For example: The maker of a promissory note has a room, occupied also by other persons for business purposes, in which he is accus- tomed to receive business calls, and at which he directs such calls to be made. Presentment of the note is made there, and not at the maker's residence. The presentment is good.^ If, however, the maker or acceptor has no such known place of business, the holder must make demand at his residence, if, again, he has a known residence, or one which can be found by reasonable diligence. If there is neither place of business nor of residence so to be found, the holder has nothing to do in the way of presentment except to be in the town in which the paper is pay- able, at maturity, ready with the paper to receive payment.^ But the maker or acceptor may have removed; and the holder has not performed his duty in the matter of pre- sentment by merely seeking out the last known place of business or residence of the party, and failing to find there the person sought. That is not presentment, nor is any case of excuse made by such facts. For example : The defendant is indorser of an accepted foreign bill of exchange, which has been protested for dishonor. The protest sets out a ' presentment ' made ' at the late place of business ' of the acceptor, ' t,o the person there in charge,' who answered demand of payment by saying, ' the acceptor is not here now, nor have we any funds ' with which to pay. That does not disclose facts sufficient 1 West V. Brown, 6 Ohio St. 542. 2 Meyer v. Hibsher, 47 N. Y. 265 ; Maiden Bank v. Baldwin, 13, Gray, 154. 88 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VII, to constitute presentment and demand; reasonable dili- gence requires further inquiry.' Indeed, it is the duty of the holder to follow the maker or acceptor upon his removal, if he has not removed beyond the State; or rather the holder should exercise reasonable diligence in attempting to follow him. If by such diligence he can find the maker or acceptor, he must do so, and make presentment in the usual way. If the maker or acceptor has removed beyond the State, since the paper was made or accepted, the holder performs his duty in the matter of place of presentment, by calling for pay- ment at the party's last place of business or of residence according to the particular case.^ Whether that is neces- sary is disputed; but by the better view it is.* In some States, indeed, it is held that diligence must be exercised to obtain payment even where the maker or acceptor has absconded.* But of such matters under the head of excuses. Of course, if the maker or acceptor lived in another State when the paper was made or accepted, the paper must be sent forward for presentment there.^ The place of date of the paper is prima facie evidence of the place for presentment, if no other is indicated upon it; but it is only prima facie evidence.^ The date, whether of place or time, is no part of the contract, and the actual fact may be shown. Even where paper is paj'able 'at the 1 Brooks V. Blaney, 62 Maine, 456 ; Freeman c. Boynton, 7 Mass. 483. 2 Taylor v. Snyder, 3 Denio, 145; L. C. 227. s Wheeler v. Field, 6 Met. 290. Contra, Gist v. Lybrand, 3 Ohio, 308 ; Foster v. Jnlien, 24 N. Y. 28, Mason, J,, dis. * Pierce v. Cate, 12 Cush. 190. But see contra, Lehman r. Jones, 1 Watts & S. 126; L. C. 357; Duncan v. McCullongh, 4 Serg. & R. 480. ^ Tayloi; v, Snyder, supra. « Childs t;. Laflin, 55 111. 156 ; Blodgett v. Durgin, 32 Vt. 361 ; Taylor V. Snyder, 3 Denio, 145 ; L. C. 227. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 89 office ' of the maker or acceptor, the place of date does not necessarily fix the place for presentment ; wherever the party's 'office ' is, there presentment should be made.' In the case of a bank having branches, cheques are pay- able at the particular branch at which the drawer keeps his account; hence presentment should be made there in all cases in which the holder has notice or is informed of the proper place. ^ He would no doubt be told where to go if he presented the paper at the wrong place, and hence could not treat the refusal as a dishonor. If not in any way informed, he may have made a good presentment, though he made it at the wrong place. § 3. Time of Pkesentment. Coming to the question of the time of presentment, we encounter a distinction between presentment for accept- ance and presentment for payment, vdiich must first be disposed of. Presentment for acceptance is necessary, as has hereto- fore been observed, only in the case of bills payable at or at a time after sight. But bills payable at a time stated after date may be presenied for acceptance, as the drawer is generally considered to contract that the holder shall have the security, if he will, of acceptance. With regard to bills payable at a stated time after date, the holder may make presentment, if at all, at any time he will before maturity of the bill. It is doubtful whether there could be a presentment for acceptance, in any case, after maturity; presentment after maturity would natu- rally be for payment. But that is not material, for all indorsers would be discharged by failure to present the '. Childs V. Laflin, supra. 2 Prince v. Oriental Bank, L. R. 3 App. Cas. 325, 332 ; Woodland v. Fear, 7 El. & B. 519. 90 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VII. paper for jjayment at maturity, except such as had waived the requirement, and such as may have indorsed — an unusual thing — after maturitj'. With regard to bills payable at or at a stated time after sight, the case is different. The law merchant requires presentment of such paper within a reasonable time; but that rule is interpreted to permit the circulation of such paper indefinitely before presentment, so that the Statute of Limitations does not run out. That is to say, the con- tract of the drawer and indorsers of such a bill is that the holder may present the bill at any time within the period of the Statute of Limitations, provided that the paper is kept in circulation meantime; when finally presentment for acceptance is made, the taking of the other steps required in case of dishonor will accordingly- fix liability. For example: A sight bill is sent from Chicago to a dis- tant territory on the day of its date. After some detention in the mails it reached its destination, when the holder puts it into circulation at the first opportunity, and it is then kept in circulation as well as the thinly settled con- dition of the territory permitted. Without unnecessary delay it is presented to the drawee thirty-five days after its date. The presentment is good. ^ Again: The defend- ant in London indorses to the plaintiff a bill of exchange drawn in London on A at Calcutta, payable to order sixtj^ days after sight. The bill is dated March 5. On April 30 following the bill is indorsed by the plaintiff in Eng- land to A of Calcutta; on May 22 next the bill is sent to India, and received there early in October; shortly after- wards it is presented for acceptance, and acceptance is refused; due protest and due notice of dishonor follow. It is for the jury to say whether the bill was presented to the drawee in reasonable time; the fact that the paper was 1 Montelius v. Charles, 76 HI. 303. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 91 kept out in cu'culation for so long time not being in itself unreasonable.! The bill should, however, be kept in circulation, as far as circumstances reasonably permit, or it should be pre- sented for acceptance; it should not be locked up. To lock it up, which means to hold it when it might reason- ably be passed on in circulation or sent forward for presentment, would discharge the drawer and indorsers.'' What is a reasonable holding, and hence not a locking-up, must depend upon circumstances, as the examples above given show. In cases lying on the border, the question of reasonableness must ordinarily be left to the jury; in clear cases tlie court will rule on the facts. The court would rule that, to keep a bill an entire day could not be unreasonable; it has been ruled that to hold an inland bill payable after sight in London until the fourth day after receiving it, within twenty miles of London, is not unreasonable.' The rule, indeed, is not a hard and fast one. It may be entirely changed by custom; if there be a clear and deter- minate usage of trade at the place of payment, which regulates the time of presentment, that usage is con- sidered as entering into the contract of the drawer and indorsers, and presentment must be made' accordingly.* It has been said that to indorse paper after maturity is equivalent to drawing a bill at sight, so far as time is con- cerned.' But that is clearly a mistake. It cannot be necessary to present such paper for acceptance, as would 1 Muilman v. D'Eguiuo, 2 H. Black. 565 ; L. C. 207. 2 Id.; Goupy v. Harden, 7 Taunt. 159; Mellish v. Eawdon, 9 Bing. 416 ; Middleton Bank v. Morris, 28 Barb. 616. 3 Fry w. Hill, 7 Taunt. 397. See Harker v. Anderson, 21 Wend. 372. * Story, Bills, § 231 ; Mellish v. Rawdon, 9 Bing. 416. 6 Light V. Kingsbury, 50 Mo. 331 ; Tyler v. Young, 30 Penn. St. 144. See Bassenhorst v. Wilby, 45 Ohio St. 333, 337. 92 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIL be necessary by the general law merchant of sight bills; the paper too might be a promissory note or a cheque. The true view of the case is that indorsement after maturity amounts to an order to pay on demand,'^ — a subject now to be considered. Next of presentment for payment, in the same matter of time; and first, of grace. The cardinal rule in ordinary cases is that presentment for payment must be made at maturity, — that is, on the day when by law payment is due. If the paper is payable on demand, and in England (by statute), and in one or two of our States, if it is pay- able at sight, the paper is not entitled to grace; it is due presently, and presentment may be made on the day of delivery, or on any other day, excepting non-secular days. In other words, the paper is at its maturity all the time. Its maturity is passed by the law merchant after the expiration of a reasonable time, a matter regulated by statute in some States, at least in regard to promissory notes. The rule applies to such paper, as well as to other kinds, that presentment after maturity is too late to fix the liability of an indorser; unless the paper is indorsed after maturity', as it may be, when it becomes due again after a reasonable time, and must be presented accordingly.^ In the very 'Uncommon case of paper in which grace is excluded by the terms of the paper, — the paper not being paj'able on demand, — payment is due, in other words, the paper matures, as if it were an instrument of the common law instead of the law merchant. Thus, if the day of payment, reckoned literally, would fall on Sunday or any other non-secular day, it is due on the following day, and presentment for payment should be made on that day, not before, not after. If two non-secular days should come 1 Pryor v. Bowman, 38 Iowa, 92 ; Leavitt v. Putnam, 1 Sandf. 199 ; Patterson v. Todd, 18 Penn. St. 426 ; Swartz v. Eedfield, 13 Kans. 550. 2 Bassenhorst v. Wilby, 45 Ohio St. 333. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 93 together, the first being the one on which paj'ment other- wise would be due, the paper does not reach maturity until after both those days have passed. This leaves us with the case of paper entitled to grace. In such cases the paper reaches its maturity three days after the time at which by its terms literally taken it would be due; and presentment should be made on the last day of grace, not before, not after. If what would be the third day of grace should be Sunday or any other non- secular day, the paper matures on the second day, or on the first day of grace if the day before is also a non-secular day. Here, indeed, is said to be a survival of tlie original idea of days of grace ; these were at first, according to cur- rent statement, mere favor extended by the holder, and hence, as they could not then be required, the time cannot now be increased. However lame the reasoning, supposing it to rest oti fact, the law is clear and positive; grace is cut off by the law merchant, not increased, by non-secular days at payment time. For example: The defendant is indorser of a promissory note made on the first day of June and payable one month after date. Payment is demanded on the 6th of July and refused, and notice at once given to the defendant. The defendant is not liable; present- ment should have been made on July 3, unless that day also was a non-secular day, in which case it should have been made on July 2. If the instrument (entitled to grace) is on its face pay- able in instalments, each instalment is entitled to grace; there can be no breach of the contract, and hence no proper presentment, touching an instalment, except on the -last day of grace, treating the instalment in question as if it were a separate and distinct undertaking. For example : The defendant is indorser of a promissory note dated Nov. 19, 1888, and payable by equal instalments on 94 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VII. the 19th of Novemher in each succeeding year for seven years. The instalment due in 1892 is the subject of the present suit; presentment for payment of which was made and refused Novemher 22 of that year, and was followed at once by notice of dishonor. The presentment is good.' A like rule would apply if it were provided, as often is the case, that if any instalment were not paid when due, the whole sum should be immediately due. The holder would have his election in such a case to sue for the instal- ment alone or for the whole sum, each now requiring pre- sentment, so far as indorsers are concerned, on the same day, the last day of grace. The rule in regard to time of presentment supposes, however, that there is no legal obstacle to presentment at maturity. Should there be such obstacle, the rule yields, and the law in most cases, if not in all,^ suspends the requirement of performance of the duty until the removal of the obstacle; then, or rather within reasonable time ■thereafter, presentment must be made. What is a 'legal obstacle,' within the meaning of this rule ? It must be something not attributable to the holder, even in the way of mistake. Thus the holder could not, by way of justifying presentment after the day of matur- it}', show that he had made a miscalculation of the time when the paper became due, or that he had confused two instruments maturing at different times, and had taken the wrong one for the one in suit, or that in sending the paper forward to the place of payment he had made a mistake in the address which caused the delay. Mistake by the holder would be fatal. On the other hand, 'inevitable accident,' to use a com- mon terra, would be a legal obstacle. Accident, as thus 1 Oridge v Sherborne, 11 Mees. & W. 374; L. C. 78. 2 The effect of tlie death of the maker or acceptor is disputed. See infra, p. 96. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSKU'S CONTRACT. 95 brought in contrast with mistake, is some unexpected event happening without the agency direct or indirect of the person to whom it happens. The mistake of another may therefore be an 'accident' to the holder; so it will be if the mistake was in no proper sense due to the holder, — it is then 'inevitable accident,' and present- ment may be made after the mistake has been corrected. For example: The defendants are indorsers of a bill of exchange drawn in Norwich, Connecticut, on A in Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, and accepted payable at a certain bank there. Shortly before the maturity of the bill the holder sends it to a banking-house in New York City for collection. Between New York and Philadelphia there are two mails daily, — one leaving New York at 9 A. m., the other at 4.30 p. m., each due at Philadelphia five hours after starting. On the morning before the daj' of maturity the cashier of the collecting bank encloses the bill, with others, in a letter addressed to the bank at which it is payable, and mails the letter in .season for the afternoon mail of that day. The letter is duly put into the mail-bags, which leave New York at the time just mentioned; but by mis- take of emploj'ees in the New York post-office the mail-bags containing letters for Philadelphia are directed to Washington. They are carried on accordingly to Washing- ton, where the mistake is discovered; and the bags are now sent back to Philadelphia, reaching that city on the day after the maturity of the bill. That day is Sunday. On Monday morning the letter containing the bill in question is delivered to the bank to which it is addressed, and at which it is payable, and payment is presently refused. Protest and notice follow directly. The pre- sentment is good, inevitable accident having prevented the making of it sooner.^ The existence at maturity of war between the countries 1 Windham Bank v. Norton, 22 Conn. 213; L. C. 344. 96 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIL or States in which the holder and the payor respectively reside would be another legal obstacle; and withholding presentment or attempts to make presentment until the end of the war would not affect the liability of indorsers, even though the period of limitation (for natural cases) might have expired. But within a reasonable time after the end of the war presentment should be made on pain of discharging indorsers. What time would be reasonable would in a case of doubt be for the jury; on facts leaving no ground for doubt in the matter, the court would rule. And the courts would probablj^ be found endeavoring to narrow the region of doubt wherever they could. A similar case would be the existence of an epidemic at the place of payment, resulting in quarantine; and it would not matter whether the quarantine was general, embracing a whole district, or a whole city, or limited only to some quarter of the cit3' in which the paper was payable, or though it was only of the house where it was payable. The fact that the maker or acceptor was dead when the paper matured might of course create a legal obstacle to presentment. In the first place, there may as yet be no executor or administrator, of whom alone payment could be required. Clearly no presentment ftould be made in such a state of things, and one of two things must be true : either the indorser's contract must hold good mean- time, awaiting the qualification of a personal representa- tive, or presentment must be excused, and the indorser's liability fixed, by taking the other steps. In some States the latter alternative appears to express the law; ^ probably the former would be more generally accepted as the better expression of it.^ 1 Hale !>. Burr, 12 Mass. 86; Oriental Bank i'. Blake, 22 Pick. 206 ; Landry v- Stansberry, 10 La. 484. 2 Gower v. Moore, 25 Maine, 16. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 97 In the next place, though there may be a qualified execu- tor or administrator at the maturity of the paper, still the period of his exemption from suit (that is, from duty to pay demands against the estate) may not yet have expired. In such a case, as in the one just stated, either the indorser's contract must hold good until the period expires, when presentment must be made, or presentment must be excused, and the other steps taken. The latter alternative is adopted in some States, the former in others. For example : The defendant is indorser of a promissory note, the maker of which is dead when it matures. An administrator has been appointed and has qualified. He is exempted by law from suit for one year from the time of qualification. The note matures a month after his quali- fication. ISTo presentment by the law of Massachusetts and of other States is necessary; ' presentment by the law of Maine and probably of other States is necessary.^ But it is not enough that presentment is made on the day of maturity or other proper day ; it must be made at a reasonable time of that day, though it is probable that the plaintiff makes out his case presumptively in this respect by showing that presentment was made on the right day. In regard to tiipe of day a distinction like that hereto- fore noticed between paper payable at bank and paper not payable at bank prevails. If the paper is payable at bank, or at any mercantile house having fixed hours of business, presentment should be made within such hours ; to make it before or afterwards would be of no avail in the steps to fix an indorser's liability, unless indeed the bank or house 1 Hale V. Bnrr, and other cases in note 1, p. 96. Query if notice is not necessary under this rule t See the statement of facts in Hale v. Burr ; and see Oriental Bank v. Blake, 22 Pick. 206, holding that notice to an administrator of an indorser is necessary. ^ Gower v. Moore, 25 Maine, 16. 7 98 BILLS, NOTES, AJSTD CHEQUES. [Chap. VII. of business had some one at hand to answer calls of the kind.^ It is common for banks to have some one of its force remain for a time after the close of banking hours for such purpose ; presentment accordingly would be good.^ The case is different if the maker, drawer, or acceptor have no place of business with early hours of closing; but the extremes of the time prescribed by law for presentment in such cases are hard to fix. It is common to say of cases of the kind that presentment may be made at any time of day between morning and night. But when does ' morning ' begin and when does ' night ' end within the meaning of the statement? It would be unreasonable to say that presentment might be made at any time between the beginning of day and midnight, and the law does ^ot say so. Payment should be called for only when, so far as time of day is concerned, it can conveniently be made. Hence it should not be called for during the hours of rest; that is, the hours ordinarily given to sleep, as, for instance, near midnight. For example : The defendant is indorser of a promissory note paj'able at no place designated. In the night of the day of maturity, between eleven and twelve o'clock, the holder calls up the maker, who has gone to bed, and presents the note for payment, which is refused, and notice of dishonor given. The presentment is not good.' The fact that the maker or acceptor may have retired to rest will not make the presentment improper, for he may have retired in the daytime, or in the edge of the evening, because of illness, fatigue, or anything else. The only question on this point is whether the presentment was made at a reasonable time of day ; that question, in cases in which there is serious ground for doubt, will and 1 See Dana v. Sawyer, 22 Maine, 244 ; L. C. 22.5. 2 Id. 8 Id. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 99 should ordinarily be left to the jury. Still, the courts are inclined to push back the borders of doubt as far as they can, and so bring the case within the domain of certainty. For example : The defendant is indorser of a promissory note, payable at no designated place, and due in August. The maker lives in the country, ten miles from Boston. The note is received at maturity by a notary public, after the close of banking hours, from a bank in Boston which holds it for collection, the bank not knowing where the maker lived. After considerable inquiry the maker's place of residence is ascertained, and the notary, informed of the place, goes as soon as he can to the house, arriving there about nine o'clock in the evening. The lights of the house are out, and the inmates have gone to bed for the night. The notary calls the maker up, and presents the note for payment, and payment is refused. The present- ment is good; taking into consideration the distance of the maker from the holder, the inquiry made to ascertain the maker's place of residence, and the season of the year, the time of presenting the note was reasonable.' Again: Presentment is made between eight or nine o'clock at the house of a grocer. The house is shut, and no one is there to give answer. The presentment Tnay be good.^ Similar narrowing of the borders of doubt has been 1 Farnsworth v. Allen, 4 Gray, 453. ' The question whether a pre- sentment is within reasonable time cannot be made to depend on the private and peeuliar habits of the maker of a note, not known to the holder ; but it must be determined by a consideration of the circum- stances which, in ordinary cases, would render it reasonable or other- wise.' Id., Bigelow, J, '^ See Triggs v. Newnham, 10 Moore, 249 ; s. c. 1 Car. & P. 631 ; Wilkins v. Jadis, 2 Barn. & Ad. 188 ; Morgan v. Davison, 1 Stark. 114 ; Barclay v. Bailey, 2 Campb. 527. The rulings on presentment appear to have been positive in these cases ; but it would be unsafe to say in general that presentment in such a case would be good. There might be ' early closing ' in the trade, and no good reason shown for not making presentment at the place of business during business hours. 100 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIL made in regard to presentment in the early morning. Thus presentment upon a maker at his place of residence in a city at eight o'clock in the morning has been declared too early ;^ while presentment so made in the country, at a farmer's house, would ordinarily, it seems, be reasonable. However, rulings upon such questions are not of the same value as general rules of law, because such rulings depend so much upon the particular facts. Facts of small import in themselves often become important in cases of the kind, important enough to set aside the application of the ruling in question. The ruling is particular, not general; the examples above given cannot be taken to apply to any but very similar cases. Their chief value probably lies in their showing a disposition of the courts to extend the domain of law, and hence of certainty, as far as possible. § 4. Peesentment, by Whom. Presentment should be made by the holder, or by his lawful agent. According to the better rule, no one else can make presentment such as, being refused, can be treated as a step towards fixing an indorser's liabilitj'. Confusion has arisen from the fact that in certain cases a stranger in possession of the paper may make present- ment for the purpose of receiving payment ; which is onlj' saying that payment made to such person may operate as a discharge and satisfaction of liability. That will be the case whenever the payment is made in good faith, without notice that the holder is not owner of the paper, and the paper surrendered to the party making payment. The instrument is now extinguished, and with it of course the liability of all parties to it. But to say that payment may be made to a person not I Lunt V. Adams, 17 Maine, 230. Sect. 4.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 101 entitled to receive payment is not to say that presentment by such person is good for the purpose of fixing the liabil- ity of an indorser. For that purpose presentment must be made by one who, in making it, is acting under the contract of the defendant, and who further, in the case of a promissory note or an accepted bill of exchange, can compel and not merely receive payment. The indorse- ment (or the drawing of bill or cheque) is an order to pay to the true holder; obviously, then, none but the true holder, — that is, the owner, or his agent, — can make a presentment that shall fulfil the terms of the indorser's contract. If presentment be good when made, as some- times it is, by an indorser, it is good because the indorser is (not indorser, but) the authorized agent of the holder. Upon the death of the holder, presentment should be made by his successor in title, who, as we have seen, is his executor or administrator. It should not be made by any legatee, for such person, though entitled, it may be,'' to the money when paid, could not require payment; the maker or acceptor could refuse to pay to any one but the legal representative of the late holder. It matters not through whose hands the paper passes in making presentment, if the act be that of the owner ; the intermediate persons are only his instruments. For example: A bill of exchange is sent through the post- ofiice to the acceptor in a letter demanding payment, and is received on the day of maturity. This is a good pre- sentment ; ^ though it would be otherwise of a mere demand of payment of paper not sent forward or lodged in the bank making demand. ^ Perhaps he may not be entitled to receive it or any part of it, though it was given to him by will of the owner, for the owner may have been involved in debt, and his estate must first pay the creditors. 2 Prideaux v. Griddle, L. R. 4 Q. B. 455; Hare v. Heaty, 10 C. B. N. S. 65. 102 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIL In the case of a dishonored foreign bill of exchange there will be a double presentment; and there may be and often is in the case of an inland bill or of a promissory note. The first presentment is made by the holder of the paper or by his agent, in the ordinary way ; then the paper must, if a foreign bill, -may, if an inland bill or a note, be put into the hands of a notary public (or of some other public officer or respectable, disinterested person if no notary can be found to serve), and presentment made by him. But the action of the notary so far will be just the same, as regards time and place, as if he were holder. In this country it is generally laid down that the notarj^ must act in person, in the absence of statute; he cannot make presentment by a clerk or deputy.^ Indeed, it is held that the defect in making presentment by a clerk would not be cured by the notary himself making the pro- test.^ Perhaps, however, custom in large cities may be deemed to sanction the act of a deputy; that is the case in England. It is not improbable that the rule requiring personal action by the notary was due to a mere slip by an English judge. ^ In the case of inland bills and promis- sory notes, the act of a notary is not required at all, though it is generally permitted by statute.^ In some States statute authorizes presentment of a foreign bill by a notary's deputy, and in some States by 1 Ocean Bank v. Williams, 102 Mass. 141 ; Donegan v. Wood, 49 Ala. 242 ; Hunt u. Maybee, 3 Seld. 266 ; Carter «. Union Bank, 7 Humph. 548 ; Smith v. Gibbs, 2 Smedes & M. 479. But see Nelson v. Fotterall, 7 Leigh, 179. 2 Smith t). Gibbs, supra. 3 BuUer, J., in Leftley v. Mills, 4 T. E. 170. See 1 Parsons, Notes and Bills, 641, note. ■* Unless the employment of a notary is permitted by statute, notarial fees cannot be collected in such cases. Burke v. McKay, 2 How. 66 ; L, C. 253 ; Union Bank v. Hyde, 9 Wheat. 572 ; City Bank v. Cutter, 3 Pick. 414. Sect. 5.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 103 a justice of the peace. And where, in any case, no notary resides or will act in the place of payment, any public officer may act, or if no such person is at hand or will serve, then any respectable, disinterested merchant or other private citizen.^ Perhaps witnesses should be pres- ent in such a case.^ § 5. Peesentmekt, to Whom. Presentment may of course be made either to the maker or acceptor or to his lawful agent ; and it seems that if the payor is living at tlie maturity of the paper, pre- sentment must be made to him. Perhaps if he had become insane and placed under guardianship, present- ment should be made to his guardian. Imprisonment for crime, if it affected the case at all, would probably operate as an excuse. In case of such person's death presentment should be made, if it be required (concerning which see the remarks in the preceding section), to his executor or administrator, if one has qualified and his place of business or of resi- dence can by reasonable diligence be found. ° If no one has qualified as executor or administrator, or if the executor or administrator cannot be found, demand perhaps should be made upon the kindred who occupy the residence of the maker or acceptor or have possession of his property; but such a state of things would more likely be held to dispense with need of presentment. The mere fact that the maker or acceptor has become bankrupt will not affect the rule in regard to presentment, for a man does not cease to own or control his property J See Burke v. McKay, 2 How. 66 ; L. C. 253. 2 1 Parsons, Notes aud Bills, 633 ; Chitty, Bills, 333, 9th Eng. ed. ; Bayley, Bills, t. 7, § 2. 3 Gower v. Moore, 25 Maine, 16. 104 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VII. tiirnply because he is not able to pay his debts. Much less does he cease to have friends who may help him, especially where he has been guiltless in his misfortune. But if an assignee of his estate has been apjiointed, by the voluntary act of the maker or acceptor, or by the law, it is not clear that presentment should not be made upon the assignee, for the estate may have proved solvent; though it appears to be held that presentment must still be made upon the bankrupt.^ Where a promissory note is made by one who signs his name as ' agent,' without disclosing a principal, the note, as we have seen, is the ' agent's ' own undertaking as if he were principal. Presentment accordingly should be made upon him, or at all events it may properly be made upon him, though the ' agency ' be real ; indeed, demand may in such a case be made upon him though he may have ceased to be agent at the time of the maturity of the note.^ If the name of the principal were given, and the undertaking made his undertaking, demand could, it seems, be made upon either, — upon the agent, because of his agenc_y in the matter, assuming that he remained such till maturity; and upon the principal, because the promise in reality was his promise. It would not be necessary to make presentment to both, even though the promise were the joint promise of the two, because of the agency. Where paper is made or accepted by two or more persons jointlj', demand must by the better rule be made upon both or all, unless they are partners, or unless some other agency existed between them in respect of payment.' If they are 1 See Nicholson v. Gouthit, 2 H. Black. 609 ; 3 Eev. Rep. 527 ; Barton V. Baker, 1 Serg. & R. 3.34 (notice of dishonor). 2 Hall V. Bradbury, 40 Conn. 32. ^ Arnold «. Dresser. 8 Allen, 435 ; Union Bank i. Willis, supra; Bank of Red Oak v. Orvis, 40 Iowa, 332 ; Willis r. Green, 5 Hill, 232 ; Gates V. Beecher, 60 N. Y. 51 8, denying Harris o. Clark, 10 Ohio, 5. See also Greenough v. Smead, 3 Ohio St. 415. Sect. 5.] THE INDORSER'S CONTRACT. 105 partners, or one of them is agent for the rest, presentment will be sufficient if made upon any one of the partners or upon the agent.^ Upon the death of one of the joint makers or acceptors, presentment to the survivors will, it seems, be sufficient; clearly that would be the case where they were partners. If the makers or acceptors are severally bound, present- ment made to any one of them will be sufficient, for the promise is the individual promise of each, as much as if the others had not promised. And this is true as well of a ' joint and several ' undertaking as of a several one merely; for the meaning of the engagement is that the parties promise in two distinct, not inseparable, ways: they promise jointly and they promise separately; that is, they are bound in either way.^ 1 Gates V. Beecher, supra. 2 It was a mere slip of the court in Union Bank v. Willis, 8 Met. 504 ; L. C. 24, at the end, to say that the contract in that case was joint and several ; the decision reached required the court to hold the contract joint only. 106 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII, CHAPTER VIII. INDORSEE'S CONTRACT CONTINUED : PROCEED- INGS UPON DISHONOR. § 1. Protest. By the law merchant, the first step necessary after the dishonor of a yo?'eip'?i bill of exchange — a step which is common and by statute permissible, but not necessary, in the case of inland bills and promissory notes — is protest. This is a highly characteristic act, made, and ordinarily to be made only, by a public officer called a notary public. A notary public is an officer of international character, or at" all events having international (and interstate) func- tions, and recognized the world over. And it is because the bill of exchange is a foreign international instrument that the services of a notary are required, if obtainable.^ Protest is manifested by a formal certificate, in writing under seal, of a notary, or of some one taking the place of a notary, by which he attests the dishonor of the dishon- ored paper. The step is wholly distinct and separate from presentment or any of the other steps necessary to fix an indorser's liability, though it is dependent for its validity upon due presentment. Neither the law merchant nor statute has prescribed any form of words to be used in the certificate of protest ; but the law merchant does require that certain facts should appear in it, in order to make it valid. These facts are the several ones going to show dishonor; to wit, due 1 When the services of a notary may be performed by another, see ante, pp. 102, 103. Sect. 1.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTEACT. 107 presentment, demand, and refusal, or an equivalent, or a sufficient excuse for omission.^ This requires that the cer- tificate should state time and place of presentment,* and the person or persons to whom presentment was made. Thus, in regard to persons, if the bill has been accepted by more than one the certificate should state that present- ment was made to all, or should state why it was not, as, for example, that the acceptors, being A and B, were partners, and that presentment was made to A.' It will not suffice for the certificate to recite that * due present- ment ' was made; that would be but inference, where, because the bill is a foreign international instrument, facts should appear. The rule of the law merchant is thus exacting because by that law the certificate of protest of a foreign bill, if the certificate is in existence and obtainable, is the only evidence of the dishonor of the bill. The drawer, who presumptive!}' lives abroad, is entitled (and by consequence the indorsers also, since their engagement runs pari passu with his) to know authoritatively that the dishonor has been real and such as to justify the steps by which his (and their liability) is fixed and made absolute. The nota- rial certificate is an international document, and stands or falls by itself; its deficiencies, if there be any, cannot be made good by evidence from without, however clear the facts may be, and whether the protest be for non-acceptance or non-payment.' On the other hand, being such a docu- ment, it is more readily received in the courts than other 1 See Staniback v. Bank of Virginia, 1 1 Gratt. 260 ; People's Bank V. Brooke, 31 Md. 7 ; Farmers' Bank v. Allen, 18 Md. 475 ; Walmsley V. Acton, 44 Barb. 312 ; Musson v. Lake, 4 How. 262; L. C. 177. ^ Otsego Bank v. Warren, 18 Barb. 290; Nave v. Eichardson, 36 Mo. 130. 8 Ocean Bank v. Williams, 102 Mass. 141 ; Bnckner v. Finley, 2 Peters, 586 ; Orr v. Maginnis, 7 East, 359. 108 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. written instruments. The genuineness of the notary's sig- nature need not be proved; his seal proves that. But evi- dence would be admitted, no doubt, that the seal was not genuine, and so that the whole certificate was fraudulent. Nor indeed are the statements made in the certificate conclusive evidence, i though they ought to be taken as strong evidence, and not so easily overturned as ordinary evidence. And the certificate is, like other written evi- dence of a transaction, within the general rule concerning the 'best' evidence; if the certificate exists, and can be produced, it must be produced to prove the dishonor; if it does not exist or cannot be produced, other evidence of dis- honor is admissible, though proof must be furnished that the bill was in fact protested, or a sufficient excuse shown if it was not. The object of the certificate being merely to furnish evidence of sufficient dishonor, its statements of other facts, if such there be, cannot be received. The States of the American Union, it should be remem- bered, are foreign to each other for the purposes of the law under consideration.* Thus far of foreign bills. Of the protest of inland bills and promissory notes the law merchant knows nothing; and hence, so far as the protest of such paper is proper, it must stand on statute or the common law. The common law has never been held to authorize it; ° statute in many States does authorize it, and hence it must stand entirely upon the statute.* But statute has not put the pro- 1 Spence v. Crockett, 5 Baxt. 576 ; Ricketts u. Pendleton, 14 Md. 320. ' Bank of United States u. Daniel, 12 Peters, 32, 54; Commercial Bank v. Varnum, 49 N. Y. 269. » City Bank v. Cutter, 3 Pick. 414 ; Union Bank v. Hyde, 6 Wheat. 572 ; Nicholls v. Webb, 8 Wheat. 326 ; Kirtland v. Wanzer, 2 Duer, 278. * Hence, apart from statute the protest of an inland bill or a promis- sory note is no evidence of the facts stated, unless the notary has Sect. 1.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 109 test of paper of the kind on the footing of the protest of foreign bills; it only authorizes or permits the protest. The protest of an inland bill or of a promissory note is not then an act of the high character of the protest of a foreign bill. The certificate is not to be rejected because it does not contain all that would be necessary to show due protest under the law merchant; it is evidence of dishonor as far as it goes, — its deficiencies may be supplied by external evidence.^ Probably it might be laid aside alto- gether, and the facts relating to dishonor proved as if there had been no protest. At best it ought not to be received to prove anything except the dishonor, unless statute give it greater force, though that fact is perhaps sometimes overlooked in practice. The act of the notary or other in making the present- ment must, as has already been stated, take place on the day of maturity of the paper. The formal certificate of protest, whether of a foreign bill or of other paper, need not, however, be made, and commonly is not made, at the time ; it may be made at any subsequent time down to the time of suit.^ But if the full certificate is not made out at the time of the dishonor, what is called a ' noting ' should then, or at all events before the following day, be made ; otherwise it seems that a certificate afterwards written out will be invalid.* Noting consists in the making of minutes in brief of the facts to be stated in the certificate. The noting is not the protest; but if the notarj' should deceased. NichoUs v. Webb, and Kirtland v. Wanzer, supra ; Carter V. Burley, 9 N. H. 5.58. But see Colms v. Bank of Tennessee, 4 Baxt. 422. 1 Wetherall v. Clagett, 28 Md. 465 ; Seneca Bank v. Neass, 5 Denio, 329 ; Magoun v. Walker, 49 Maine, 419. ■^ Bailey v. Dozier, 6 How. 23 ; Dennistown v. Stewart, 17 How. 606, 607. s Tassel v. Lewis, Ld. Eaym. 743. See Leftley v. MiUs, 4 T. R. 170, 174. 110 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. Vm. die before writing out tlie certificate tlie noting may take its place if it is, or, on explanation by one who under- stands it becomes, intelligible. So if the certificate should be lost or destroyed without the holder's consent. § 2. Notice of Dishonor : Foem. The next and last step to be taken after protest, and where protest is not necessary and is not made, the next and last step after dishonor, is notice of the dishonor. Like presentment, that step is required of all paper in fixing the liability of an indorser, — that step or an equiv- alent, unless there be an excuse.' Knowledge of dishonor is not enough; the law requires the giving of notice, so as to apprise the indorser whether the holder looks to him for payment.^ The law merchant has not prescribed any set of words to be used in the notice; here, as in other cases, it is satis- fied if its requirements are met in substance. The act to be performed is indeed less formal and more simple, and the law merchant is much less exacting, than in the matter of protest; just how much is required to make notice of dishonor good is a question upon which the authorities in certain particulars are in conflict. That which is agreed may be first stated. The law merchant requires that the indorser shouj 1 be apprised of the paper dishonored; but it is not exacting in the matter; if the indorser is correctly informed what instrument is dishonored, it matters not that there may be a mistake in the description or reference. For example : ' In regard to fixing the liability of the drawer of a cheque, see ante, pp. .52 et seq. 2 Banlc of Old Dominion v McVeigh, 29 Gratt. 546 ; s. c. 26 Gratt. 785, 852 ; Juniata Bank !i. Hale, 16 Serg. & R. 157 ; L. C. 359 ; Magruder <^. Union Bank, 3 Peters, 87 ; s. c. 7 Peters, 287. Sect. 2.] THE mDORSER'S CONTRACT. Ill Tlie defendant is indorser of a promissory note, which on due presentment has been dishonored. The note is dated '20th July, 1819,' and payable at the Bank of the United States, Chilicothe, Ohio. A written notice of dishonor is sent to the defendant, in which the note is described at length and stated to be ' dated 20th day of September, 1819; ' the holder's name is not stated; in other respects the description is correct, and the notice proper. There is no other note, of which the defendant is indorser, payable at the bank named. The notice is good ; the mistake of date not being, under the circumstances, misleading, and the omission of the holder's name being immaterial. ' * Again : The defendant is indorser of a dis- honored promissory note for f 1400. The notice of dishonor in describing the note erroneously states the sum payable to be $1467, but otherwise the description is correct, and there is no other note signed bj' the person named in the notice, and indorsed by the defendant. The notice is good.^ The law merchant does, however, require that the notice shall apprise the indorser, with reasonable cer- tainty, of the paper in question; a mistake which might well be misleading will be fatal, at least, if in fact it did mislead the indorser. Perhaps if he knew what paper was meant, the notice would be good, for although knowl- edge of dishonor is not notice, notice may perhaps be supplemented and helped by knowledge; the rule that knowledge in such a case is not what the law merchant intends by ' notice ' being applicable perhaps only to cases in which no notice at all is given. But now we have reached a difficulty. Does the law merchant — there is no other law touching the question in this country — require that the notice itself shall, expressly or by certain implication, inform the indorser 1 Mills V. Bank of United States, 1 1 Wheat. 431 ; L. C. 256. ^ Bank of Alexandria u. Swann, 9 Peters, 33. 112 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. of dishonor, and of dishonor at maturity; or is it enough that the paper was in point of fact dishonored at maturity, and that notice was given or sent at the proper time ? Or again, putting it specifically, so as to raise the concrete question upon which the American courts have divided, is it enough for the holder to inform the indorser that the paper indorsed has not been paid, assuming that due pre- sentment and protest, where protest is necessary, have been made ? This question has usually, if not always, arisen upon written notice, but it might arise upon oral notice. In a case of oral notice, however, it would be more easy to show that the indorser understood the notice perfectly, if such was the fact, though the language actually used in giving the information might have been scanty, so much so as to be insufficient in a written notice. For in a case of oral notice the parties are face to face, and the statement of the holder to the indorser will be apt to lead to conversation or to conduct making it clear that the notice was well understood and sufficient. Such cases then may be dismissed and give place to the difficulties arising from the language of written notice, where the parties are not face to face, and where in consequence the language of the holder is all the covirt has to consider. The course of the English authorities on this point has had so much influence upon our own courts that it is desir- able to call special attention to it ; that will give us the real explanation of the conflicts of American authoritj'. To mention cases that have arisen in the English courts only within the present century, the following especially deserve attention: Notice to an indorser in the first of these cases in order of time ran : 'I am desired to apply to you for the payment of £150, due to myself on a draft drawn by Mr. Case, which I hope you will on receipt Sect. 2.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTEACT. 113 discharge, to prevent the necessity of law proceedings, which otherwise will immediately take place.' That was held not good notice, on the ground that it was no more than a demand of payment, whereas notice of dishonor was deemed necessary.^ In a later and very famous case, in the Exchequer Chamber, the predecessor of the present English Court of Appeal, the notice ran : ' A bill of £683 drawn by ' A, upon B, ' and bearing your indorsement, has been put into our hands by the assignees of ' C, ' with directions to take measures for the recovery thereof, unless immediately paid to ' the signers of the notice. The notice was held insufficient; ^ it being considered neces- sary that the notice ' in express terms or by necessary implication' should assert the dishonor of the paper. Afterwards, in another case, notice that ' the bill is this day returned with charges ' was held sufficient by the Queen's Bench; 'returned with charges' implying dis- honor.' A few days later the following before the Common Pleas was held insufficient : ' The promissory note . . . became due yesterday, and is returned to me unpaid;' it did not disclose dishonor.* ' Your note . . . became due yesterday, and is returned unpaid . . . with ' Hartley v. Case, 4 Barn. & C. 339. The notice in this case would probably be held bad even under the rule of the more recent English cases referred to infra. See especially Furze v. Sharwood, 2 Q. B. 388, where the decision is declared ' perfectly correct.' 2 Solarte v. P.almer, 7 Bing. 530 ; s. c. 1 Bing. N. C. 194. In this case, which has been much discussed, decided as it was in the Exchequer Chamber, the Lord Chief Justice laid down the following rnle : ' The notice of dishonor should at least inform the party to whom it is addressed, either in express terms or by necessary implicatiou, that the bill has been dishonored, and that the hblder looks to him for payment of tlie amount.' 2 Grugeon v. Smith, 6 Ad. & E. 499. See Hedger v. Steaveuson, 2 Mees. & W. 799 ; Furze v. Sharwood, 2 Q. B. 388. 4 Boultou V. Walsh, 3 Bing. N. C. 688. 8 114 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIL Is. 6d. for noting ' in another and still later case was held sufficient.-' Having regard to the different forms of notice them- selves, the decisions in these cases are consistent with each other ; and down to and including the last one referred to, they agree in the proposition that the notice should in itself be a notice of dishonor. But the court in the last case took exception to the doctrine of the more celebrated one, that it ought to appear in the notice ' in express terms or by necessary implication,' that the paper was dishonored; considering it ' enough if it appear by 7'ea- sonahle intendment, and would be inferred hy any man of business, that the bill has been presented to the acceptor, and not paid by him.'^ And later judicial opinion in England appears to conform to that proposition.' That makes the notice a very simple thing; its legal purpose being satisfied if it serve to warn the indorser of the dis- honor, so that he may take steps to secure himself, if possible, against prior parties. That the notice was justified by due presentment, etc., is, therefore, a matter to be determined on the evidence at the trial, if suit should be brought, and not an essential feature of the notice itself. Still, the notice must notify of dishonor either in terms or by ' reasonable intendment. ' The result is this, that instead of the rigid requirement laid down in the Exchequer Chamber of 'necessary implica- 1 Hedger v. Steaveuson, 2 Mees. & W. 799. ^ Boultoii !'. Walsh, supra, was overruled in Robson v. Curlewis, Car. & M. 378 ; s. 0. 2 Q. B. 421. But just before that decision came Furze V. Sharwood, 2 Q. B. 388, in which the court appear to hare leaned towards the stricter rule in Solarte v. Palmer, saying, however, inter alia of the rule in Boulton v. Walsh, ' Perhaps it goes no farther than to require that the court must see that, by some words or other, notice of dishonor has been given.' 3 Armstrong v. Christiani, 5 C. B. 687 ; Everard v. Watson, 1 El. & B. 801 ; Paul v. Joel, 4 Hurl. & N. 355. Sect. 2.] THE DSfDOESER'S CONTRACT. 115 tion ' of dishonor in the notice, where the fact is not expressly asserted, ' reasonable intendment ' of the fact is held sufHcient by the later authorities. In other words, the difference is the difference between absolute certainty of meaning and fair natural meaning. Codification of the English law of bills and notes, which has been effected since these decisions were made, has put the matter thus : Notice of dishonor, the statute declares, ' may be given in any terms which sufficiently identify the bill, and intimate that the bill has been dishonored by non-acceptance or non-payment. ' ^ The word ' intimate ' suggests the words * reasonable intendment ' of the later decisions of the courts, so that those decisions appear to have prevailed. Turning now to the American cases, but going back no further than to the first quarter of the present century, we find the Supreme Court of the United States apparently relaxing the requirement even more than have the later English authorities. The cQurt expressly says that it is not necessary that notice of dishonor should state that pay- ment was demanded at maturity; that it is so far sufficient if bare non-payment is stated; and that whether present- ment was duly made is ' matter of evidence to be established at the trial.' ^ That is, there need be no assertion or inti- mation of dishonor id. the notice except what is implied in sending notice of non-payment. But as that doctrine has been somewhat canvassed, it is important to see what in fact the notice stated. The instrument was a promissory note payable at a bank in Chili- cothe, Ohio. The notice, after describing the instrument, declares that it 'has been protested for non-payment, and ' Bills of Ex. Act, 49, (.5). See also Benjamin's Chalmers, Bills, Art. 199. The word 'bill' in the statute is intended to include notes and cheques. 2 Mills V. Bank of United States, 11 Wheat. 431 ; L. C. 2.56. 116 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. the holders thereof look to you. ' And the court remarks that the practice in commercial cities is ' not to state in the notice the mode or place of demand, but the mere naked non-payment.' In certain other authorities the decision has been interpreted by these facts, and narrowed accord- ingl}', so as to make it authority for some such proposition only as the following: Notice of non-payment of paper payable at a bank in a commercial city, construed with regard to the practice in such jjlaces, means notice of dis- honor at maturity. The distinction is thus drawn, which has already been noticed, between paper payable at bank and paper payable generally, and then the case is based more or less upon the alleged practice in large towns ; so that, in the absence of such facts notice of non-payment would be insufficient, though prior steps had been duly taken. And accordingly it has been laid down that the dishonor of the paper should appear in the notice expressly or ' by necessar}^ implication or reasonable intendment.' For example: The defendant is indorser of a promissory noJ;e, payable at no place stated, which is dishonored at maturity. Notice directly is sent to the defendant in the following language : ' I have a note signed by C E B and indorsed by you for $700, which is due this da}' and unpaid; payment is demanded of j'ou.' The notice is deemed bad; the statement that it was unpaid not amounting 'by necessary implication or reasonable intendment ' to an intimation that demand had been made or that the note had been in any way dishonored.-' The decision in this authority appears to come to the same result as that reached in the later English authori- ties, upon which indeed it is chiefly based. The matter is summed up by the statement of the chief justice that ' mere notice of non-payment, which does not express or imply notice of dishonor, is not such notice as will render the 1 Gilbert v. Donnis, 3 Met. 495 ; L. C. 261. Sect. 2.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 117 indorser liable.' The sufficiency of the notice then is not a mere ' matter of evidence to be established at the trial.' Notice of dishonor is ' implied ' or conveyed by ' reason- able intendment,' according to the same authority, by mere statement of non-payment, ' where the paper is in terms, or by usage or special agreement, payable at a bank.' Such statement ' is equivalent to an averment that it is dis- honored.' In other cases the statement of non-payment alone is not such an equivalent, nor does it imply or con- vey by reasonable intendment the dishonor of the paper, but the addition of a single word may make the equiva- lent ; adding the word ' protested ' would plainly imply dishonor.^ The explanation of the difference between the case of paper payable at bank and that of paper not payable at bank, in regard to the validity of a notice of ' non-pay- ment ' at maturity, lies in a fact heretofore stated. Where paper is payable at bank, presentment in the ordinary way — by exhibiting the paper — is not required; the maker or acceptor must have provided funds there with which to pay, and if he has not done so it only remains to say that the note has not been paid, to show or to indicate the dishonor. For it may be presumed that the books of the bank have been examined, if necessary, to see whether funds applicable are in the bank. More recently, however, it has been held in another State, that notice of dishonor is not necessary, and that notice of non-payment is enough in any case, whether the paper is payable at bank or not, so long as proper steps in fact have already been taken. For example : The defendant is indor- ser of a promissory note which does not designate any place of payment. The note is dishonored at maturity, and notice is sent at once by the holder to the defendant, 1 1 Parsons, Notes & Bills, 471, citing Crawford v. Branch Bank, 7 Ala. 205; DeWolf v. Murray, 2 Sandf. 166, and other cases. 118 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIL stating that tlie former holds a ' note indorsed by 3'ou and not paid at this date,' and demands payment. That is deemed good notice.^ That doctrine proceeds upon the ground that the purpose of notice of dishonor is simply to warn the indorser that lie must be prepared to pay. If the indorser has doubts whether the warning is good, let him inquire; and doubts he may hare as well where the steps are detailed in the notice as where thej^ are not; he is neither better nor worse off bj' bare warning of non-payment, so far as the real facts in regard to the steps are concerned. But the weight of authority appears to be against such a view of the matter, and it must on the whole be said that the notice should in itself, or in the circumstances attending it, be a notice of dishonor.^ Authorit^r has sometimes gone still further, and reqiiired the notice to show or intimate not only the dishonor of the paper, but dishonor of it at maturity. For example : The defendant is indorser of a promissory note, payable at no stated place, which is dishonored at maturity. The holder directly notifies the defendant in writing, stating that the note has been ' this day presented for paj^ment ' without avail, there being nothing to show that ' this day ' was the day of maturity. The notice is deemed not good.^ But that may be doubted. 1 Cromer v. Piatt, 37 Mich. 132, Graves, J. dis. 2 See Clark u. Eldridge, 13 Met. 96 ; Townsend v. Lorain Bank, 2 Ohio St. 34.5, 355 ; Ransom v. Mack, 2 Hill, 587 ; Dole v. Gold, 5 Barb. 490; Arnold v. Kinloch, 50 Barb. 44; Armstrong v. Thruston, 11 Md. 148, 157; Lockwood i,. Crawford, 18 Conn. 361 ; Page v. Gilbert, 60 Maine, 485. ' Wynn v. Alden, 4 Deuio, 165. See also Townsend v. Lorain Bank, 2 Ohio St. 345 ; Etting v. Schuylkill Bank, 2 Barr, 355 ; Eouth v. Robertson, U Smedes & M. 382. But see Crocker v. Getchell, 23 Maine, 392 ; Ontario B-ank v. Petrie, 3 Wend. 456, overruled in Ran- som V. Mack, 2 Hill, 587, 595. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 119 Further, the notice must, generally speaking, apprise the indorser that the holder looks to him for payment. All the authorities agree in that statement as a general proposition ; ^ but there has been some question of the meaning of the rule. Does the rule mean that there should be an averment in the notice that the holder looks to the indorser for payment? But implication may be as plain as assertion, and beyond doubt that is so in every case where the holder sends notice of dishonor; the send- ing or giving of the notice has no meaning in such a case unless it means that the holder looks to the party notified for payment. And so the courts do not require any such statement, though it is common to make one; nor per- haps is such statement necessary in notice by one indorser, though not the holder, to another. It is enough certainly that the notice proceeds from the holder or from his agent or from a notary employed by either.^ § 3. Notice, by Whom. !N"otice should be given (1) by the holder or by his law- ful agent, or (2) by an indorser bound to pay. It cannot be given, so as to have legal effect, by any other person: except, of course, on the death of the Iiolder, by his jjersonal representative. A stranger then, acting without due authority, cannot 1 See § 3, infra. 2 Bank of United States v. Carneal, 2 Peters, 543 ; Chanoine v. Fowler, 3 Wend. 173 ; L. C. 271 ; Furze v. Sharwood, 2 Q. B. 388. In the latter case, Lord IJenman said : ' Where notice has been given by another party [i. b. an indorser] than the holder, there may be good sense in requiring that it sh&ll be accompanied by a direct demand of payment or a statement that it will be required of the party addressed ; but in no case has the absence of such information Been held to vitiate a notice in other respects complete, and which has come directly from the holder.' 120 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. give valid notice of dishonor; and the reason makes the rule sensible and just, — an unautho.vized stranger cannot apprise the indorser of what lie is entitled to know, to wit, that the holder (or other party) will look to him for pay- ment.^ Por the same reason it was at one time held that an indorser could not give valid notice, in his own behalf; he could not inform the party notified that the holder would look to him for payment, unless he was authorized by the holder to act for him : and in that case it would not be the indorser's notice. But the contrary rule now pre- vails. For example: The defendant is drawer of a bill of exchange, of which the plaintiff is an indorser, having indorsed it in favor of W who had discounted and so pur- chased the bill. On discounting the bill W left it with the plaintiff's clerk, with instructions to him to obtain payment or give notice of dishonor. The clerk does give such notice to the defendant at the proper time, but he gives it, not in the name of W but in the name of the plaintiff.'^ The notice is good.' But though an indorser may give notice for his own benefit, to avail him in case he should afterwards be com- pelled to pay or should pay without suit — for an indorser loses none of his rights by paying voluntarily after his lia- bility has been fixed; — can the indorser give notice which may avail the holder or any intermediate party ? Doubt has existed on this point also, because an indorser as such is not an agent for the holder or for the next or anj' later indorser. ^ Cases in Note 2, p. 119. 2 The case therefore stands just as if the plaintiff indorser himself gave the notice. 8 Chapman v. Keane, 3 Ad. & E. 193, overruling Tiudal u. Brown, 1 T. R. 167 ; s. c. 2 T. R. 186, in which it had been held that notice should come from the holder or his agent, so as to apprise the partv notified that he would be looked to for payment. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 121 Clearly the mere fact that an indorser has given notice to a prior indorser in due time will not of itself avail the holder. But if the notifying indorser has authority from the holder or other to give the notice, his act will be the act of the holder; or if,, not having authority from the holder or other, his own liability as indorser has been duly fixed, notice given by him, it is now understood, will avail the holder or intermediate indorser by what is well termed inurement.^ It is necessary, however, that the liability of the notifying indorser should have been duly fixed (unless by reason of waiver it was already absolute) ; otherwise the indorser, being under no liability, is a mere stranger. For example : The defendant is indorser of a bill of exchange, subsequently indorsed by A to the plaintiff. The bill is dishonored at maturity, and A immediately gives notice to the defendant. The plaintiff has not given notice at all, and has not authorized A to give notice for him. The defendant is not liable; the notice by A not inuring to the plaintiff's benefit because A's liability has not been fixed. ^ One or two early cases, as reported, appear to give sanc- tion to a doctrine that the acceptor of a bill, and, by parity of reasoning, the maker of a note, may give notice avail- able for the holder.* But that is probabl}- to be explained on the ground that the acceptor or maker was the author- 1 ' The plaintiff insists that the notice given by the bank shall inure to his benefit. If the notice had been in time and valid, it would bj' law- have inured to his benefit,' etc. Reese, J., in Simpson v. Tnrney, 5 Humph. 419; L. C. 291. The student should observe that inurement is not agency. 2 See Lysaght v. Bryant, 9 C. B. 46, the converse case, the notifying indorser having been duly notified by the holder and plaintiff. ' It seems from the cases that the holder of a bill may avail himself of a notice given in due time by a prior indorser, provided he himself i.s in a condition to sue the party by whom the notice was given.' Id., Cress- well, J. See also Harrison v. Ruscoe, 15 Mees. & W. 231. 3 Eosher o. Kieran, 4 Camp. 87 ; Shaw v. Croft, Chitty, BiUs, 494. 122 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIL ized agent of the holder in the matter; otherwise the doc- trine is unsound.^ Tliere must be an agency, if the notice is not given by an indorser, at the time of giving the notice, and in tlie act of giving it.^ § i. Notice, to Whom. Notice may be sent to the indorser or to his lawful agent. If two or more have indorsed the paper jointly, notice must be sent to each of them, if by due diligence that can be done ; ^ unless there should be an agency between them, in which case notice to the one who is agent will be suffi- cient to bind all. Otherwise notice to part of the number would not bind even them, since they are liable only with the rest. If the joint indorsers are partners, notice to one will suffice.* In the event of the death of an indorser, notice should be given to his personal representative if there be such; if there be several, notice to one of them is notice to all.* But even though there should be no personal representa- tive of the deceased indorser, it is still the duty of the holder to exercise reasonable diligence towards informing those interested in his estate of the dishonor of the paper.^ It has accordingly been held that if notice is sent to the last place of residence or of business of the indorser, that is enough, prima facie, to fix the liability of his estate, since it maj' reasonably be assumed that the notice will reach those who are chiefly interested.' So, too, notice 1 Bayley, Bills, 25i, .5th ed. ; Thompson, Bills, 359, Wilson's ed. 2 See New York Co. i. Selma Sav. Bank, 51 Ala. 305. 3 State Bank v. ."^laughter, 7 Blackf. 133; Beals v. Peck, 12 Barb. 245; Willis v. Green, 5 Hill, 232; Miser v. Troviuger, 7 Ohio St. 281. * Gowan V. Jackson, 20 Johns. 176; Bouldia u. Page, 24 Mo. 594. 6 Beals V. Peck, 12 Barb. 245. ^ Goodnow V. Warren, 122 Mass. 79. ' Id. Sect. 5.] THE INDOESEK'S CONTRACT. 12& may be sent to one named as executor in the will of an indorser, though the person named has not qualified; for the fact that the indorser has named him as his executor is enough to indicate that he will take an interest in the estate, even though he should decline the office, and inform those directly concerned.* But it would not satisfy the law to send notice to a person afterwards appointed administrator, not being a person to whom the estate would pass.^ Notice to the personal representative should, it seems, be sent addressed to him by name, if his name can be ascer- tained by reasonable diligence, and not 'to the executor' or ' administrator ' or ' personal representatives ' of the indorser; though notice so addressed will in any case be good if received in due time.' On the death of a partner, in the case of partnership indorsement, notice should be given to the survivor,* and also perhaps to the personal representative of the deceased.^ § 5. Notice, How. The law merchant requires that the indorser shall be notified of the dishonor with reasonable expeditiousness; and hence it cannot be, and is not indifferent to, methods of giving notice. That is to say, the presumably more direct and expeditious method must be adopted, unless it can be shown that the notice reached the indorser, notwithstand- ing the method used, as soon as it would have done had 1 Shoenberger v. Lancaster Sav. Inst., 28 Penn. St. 459. 2 Goodnow V. Warren, 122 Mass. 79 ; Mathewson v. Strafford Bank, 4.5 N. H. 104. 8 Smalley v. Wright, 40 N. J. 471 ; Linderman v. Guldin, 34 Penn. St. 54. * Slocorab V. De Lizardi, 21 La. An. 355. 5 Cocke V. Bank of Tennessee, 6 Hump. 51. But see Dabney w. Stidger, 4 Smedes & M. 749. See Hubbard v. Matthews, 54 N. Y. 43. 124 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIL tlie method preferred by law been used. And the law merchant has defined, with some degree of nicety, if not of over-nicety, the methods preferred. Before postal communications had become as frequent and as perfect as they now are, the courts had declared that where the party to be notified resided or did business in the same town in which the notifying party resided or did business, the method to be preferred was by ' personal ' act, which means notifying the defendant to his face or leaving written notice for him at his place of business or of resi- dence. The mail was supposed not to be so expeditious; and hence notice sent through the post-office, in such a case, was deemed insufiicient unless it was in fact received, and received no later than the latest day on which it would liave been good if orally given. And so, generally speak- ing, the law stands at this day. For example ; The defend- ant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note, the note being in the hands of a bank for collection at the place of residence of the defendant. Upon the note there is a memorandum, written by the defendant, in these words: 'Third indorser,' the defendant, 'lives at V.,' the place just referred to. The collecting bank, in due time, by a notary public, puts a letter in the post-office at V., containing notice of the dishonor of the paper. There is no evidence that the letter is received, nor is there any evidence of usage at V. to mail notices of dishonor in such cases. The defendant is not liable, the memorandum on the note not being an authorization of notice by the mail.' To that rule, which in more recent times has often been regretted, three exceptions at least have come to be made, one being perhaps contemporaneous with it: to wit, (1) If the parties live or do business in a place in which letters are regularly and daily delivered by carriers of the govern- 1 Bowling V. Harrison, 6 How. 248 ; L. C. 285. Sect. 5.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 125 ment, or perhaps by private carriers, tlie notice may be sent through the mail. (2) An indorser who, residing in a different town from that of the holder, has himself received due notice through the mail, may notify a prior indorser by the mail, though that indorser resides in the same town in which he, the notifying indorser, resides, and though the practice of delivering letters does not prevail there. (3) Where the parties live in different villages or perhaps districts of one town, the mail may be used for sending notice. Por example (hypothetical) : The defend- ant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a dishonored promissory note, both parties living in Chicago. Notice of the dishonor may be given by mail. Again : The defendant is indorser of a bill of exchange payable in Philadelphia to A or order, who lives in Providence; A indorses the bill to a bank in Providence; that bank indorses it over to another bank in New York, which latter bank indorses it for collection to a bank in Phila- delj)hia. The bill is dishonored, and the collecting bank causes notices to be made out for all the parties, and sends them seasonably to the bank in New York; that bank sends notice seasonably to the bank in Providence, inclosing a notice for the defendant ; and the bank in Providence now places this last-named notice in the post-office properly addressed. The defendant's liability under the circum- stances is duly fixed.^ Again: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note which has been dishonored. The parties both reside in the town of S., but the defendant resides in another part of the town from the plaintiff, in a distinct village, C, where he usually receives his mail. The plaintiff mails notice of dishonor to the defendant seasonably, addressed to him at C. The defendant's liability is duly lixed.^ 1 Eagle Bank v. Hathaway, 5 Met. 212. 2 Shaylor v. Mi.x, 4 Allen, 351. The defendant, however, received the notice. • 126 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. WLen, indeed, notice through the mail is proper, the mere mailing the notice, if seasonable, is enough to fix the liabilitjf of the indorser; the law merchant does not expect the holder to see that the post-office delivers it or that the indorser has received it in any other way. For example : The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note, the former living in Boston, the latter in Philadelphia. The note is payable in Phila- delphia, is dishonored, and protested by a notary. The notary thereupon mails in Philadelphia a letter containing the notice to the defendant in Boston. It does not appear that the defendant has ever received the letter. The defend- ant's liability is duly fixed. ^ Indeed, authority, proceeding more or less upon custom in cities, has gone still further and treated notice by mail, when proper at all, as good against all parties to whom notices may be inclosed in a single letter addressed to a later indorser. So to do is deemed exercising due dili- gence, and hence whether the letter or the notices are ever received is immaterial. For example: The defendant is third indorser and the plaintiffs are holders of a promissory note. Before maturity of the note the' plaintiffs send it for collection to their agent, a bank in Boston, which bank indorses it and sends it to its own agent, a bank in New York. At maturity payment is demanded and refused, and the note dul3' protested. Notices of dishonor are thereupon addressed by the notary to each of the indorsers and sent in a letter to the bank in Boston, duly addressed and mailed in the post-office in New York. This letter, with inclosures, is lost and never received by the bank or by the defendant. The liability of the defendant is deemed to have been duly fixed, due diligence having been exercised according to the usage and practice of merchants ^ Munn r. BalJwin, 6 Muss. 316. See also Sheltonu. Carpenter, 60 Ala. 201 ; Jones v. Wardell, 6 Watts & S. 399. Sect. 5.] THE INDORSER'S CONTRACT. 127 and bankers, and it being immaterial that the last indorser held the note for collection only.* An agent, in giving notice, is treated as if he were prin- cipal; hence whether notice to be given by such person should be by ' personal ' act or by mail is to be determined by his situation towards the indorser, not by the situation of the principal towards the indorser.^ A private messenger may be employed in any case to carry the notice, even in those cases in which the mail is the preferred means. But where the employment of a messenger is not presumptively the method to be adopted (as it would be in a village in which both parties resided, there being no delivery there by carriers, and as it would not be where they reside in different towns), the notice by messenger will be good only in case it is delivered to the indorser personally, or at his place of business or of residence, not later than the latest day on which it would reach its destination in due course of the mail. Notice may be sent to the several indorsers in succes- sion. For example: A promissory note is indorsedby five persons successively. The holder may notify the fifth indorser; the fifth indorser may then notify the fourth; the fourth may then notify the third ; and so on back to the first. Each notice so given, if seasonable, will fix liability.' Notice by what is aptly termed inurement has already been referred to in the section relating to the persons who may give or send notice. The subject belongs equally 1 Wamesit Bank v. Buttrick, 11 Gray, 387. Bnt see Van Brunt i;. Vaughn, 47 Iowa, 145, where the notice is treated as good provided the party to whom the notices are directed himself sends them on. ^ Manchester Bank v. Fellows, 28 N. H. 302 ; Bowling v, Harrison, 6 How. 248 ; L. C. 285. 3 Shelburne Falls Bank v. Townsley, 107 Mass. 444 ; s. c. 102 Mass. 177. When each notice is seasonable, see infra, § 6. 128 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. to the present section, and it may accordingly be stated here that one of the methods of notice is by inurement; and that may be explained by the following example: The defendant is first of three indorsers of a promissory note of which the plaintiff is holder. The note being dishonored at maturity, the holder gives due notice to the third indorser, and the third indorser gives due notice to defendant (or to the second indorser, who duly notifies the defendant). The plaintiff is entitled to recover, the inter- mediate notice (or notices) given inuring to his benefit.' ' § 6. Notice, When. Notice of dishonor may be given by the holder either on the day of the dishonor, being the day of maturity," or on the first following secular day; and it must be given on one of those two days unless a sufficient reason is shown for omitting to do so, or the indorser will be discharged. There is, however, no case in which, by the law merchant, notice must be given on the day of dishonor, however easily it might have been done, and whatever the con- sequences of not doing so. For example: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note payable in Alexandria, Virginia, which matures August 25. On that day it is dishonored. On the next day notice is sent to the defendant by mail in Washington, where he resides. The notice is seasonable; the law merchant requiring, not the utmost, but onlj' ordinarj-, reasonable diligence.^ It should be remarked that, although what the law merchant requires in the matter of fixing the liability of 1 See Simpson v Turne)', 5 Humph. 419 ; L. C. 291, where, however, the intermediate iii>fire was too late. 2 King V. Crowell, 61 Maine, 244 ; Howard v. Ives, 1 Hill, 263. 8 Bank of Alexandria v. Swann, 9 Peters, 33 ; L. C. 293. Sect. 6.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 129 the indorser, whether in respect of presentment, protest, or notice, is only in terms ' reasonable diligence ; ' still what constitutes reasonable diligence is often defined, presumptively and only presumptively, within narrow limits. And the point under consideration is an example. Reasonable diligence only is required; but that is inter- preted by the law to mean, that presumptively notice should be given on one of the two days mentioned in the rule. If the day following maturity and dishonor should be a non-secular day, or if, where the mail may be used there is no departure of the mail on the next day after maturity, the holder may wait in the one case until the first secular day, in the other, until the next departure of the mail after the day of maturity, however long that may be. It matters not that there was a regular depar- ture of the mail on the day of maturity and dishonor. It will be observed that, while the occurrence of non-secular days cuts off grace, such occurrence adds to the time for giving notice. The length of time allowed to the holder for giving notice is not varied at all by the circumstance that there may be several indorsements upon the paper, and that he may wish to notify some other indorser than the last one. The holder may himself notify any indorser he will, noti- fying or not notifying others ; but he has no more time for giving notice to the first or an intermediate indorser than to the last. It does not matter that as much or more time would be taken if notices were sent successively back from the last to the defendant indorser. For example (hypothetical) : The defendant is first indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note upon which there are five successive indorsements. Two days after the maturity and dishonor of the note, the plaintiff notifies the defendant, though the day after maturity was a secular' 9 130 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. day, with departure of mail during business hours. The notice is not seasonable.' There is, however, some doubt concerning the meaning of the rule that the holder has until the day after matu- rity, or other day according to circumstances. The rule clearly does not mean that notice must be posted, where the mail may be used, on that day at all events. Not to speak of excuses, of which later, the only mail on the day in question may depart at an unseasonable hour in the morning for business; in such a case the law treats that day as if it were a non-secular day, so far as the sending of notice is concerned.^ But supposing that there is a depar- ture of the mail after business hours have opened, on the day after dishonor, must the holder deposit his notice in the post-office in time for that mail ? It has been said that the holder has an entire day after the dishonor for giving notice; and that has sometimes been interpreted to mean that the holder has until the end of that day, so that the notice need not leave until the departure of the mail a day later. For example : A prom- issory note is due January 2. Demand is made, and payment refused on that day. Notice of dishonor is deposited in the post-office for the defendant at 10 o'clock at night, January 3; there have been departures of the mail since business hours of the morning to the place of the defendant's residence, but the last mail has already departed, and the notice cannot go before January -l. The mailing of the notice is deemed seasonable.^ That doctrine, though having the support of a great 1 See Simpson v. Turney, 5 Humph. 419 ; L. C. 291. 2 See Lawson v. Farmers' Bank, 1 Ohio St. 206; L. C. 295, 302; 3 Kent, 106, note. ' Notice put into the post-office on the next day at any time of the day, so as to be ready to go by the first mail that goes thereafter, is due notice, though it may not be mailed in season to go by the mail of the day next after the day of the default.' Sect. 6.] THE INDORSER'S CONTRACT. 131 judge, lias been seriously questioned, and indeed denied by judicial authority to be a correct statement of tbe law merchant ; the rule, so far as there is a rule so expressed, that the holder has an ' entire day ' for giving notice, being considered only a general, and not an exact statement of the law. The true rule is accordingly deemed to be that the holder ought to avail himself at latest of some departure of the mail after the opening of business hours, if there be such mail, on the day following the dishonor. For exam- ple : The defendant, residing in Salem, Ohio, is indorser of a bill of exchange held by the plaintiffs, residing in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The bill is dishonored and protested July 27. Ther« is one, and only one, daily departure of the mail from Pittsburgh to Salem : to wit, at 9.10 o'clock A. M., which is after reasonable business hours of the day. Notice to the defendant is deposited in the mail on July 28, but too late for the mail of that day. The notice is deemed not seasonable; due diligence has not been exercised.* The rule declared in the case given in this example has this in its favor, that it was laid down upon mature con- sideration and upon a review of the authorities. A question which before had been but slightly considered has now been answered by deliberate judicial authority; and the rule is accordingly to be taken, it seems, as the better declaration of the law merchant. Reasonable diligence, narrowly defined in certain cases, but not in others, is after all, as we have seen, the require- ment in all cases. ^ Accordingly the point of beginning, in reckoning the time for giving notice, is not the day after maturity, but the day after that on which the holder, after exercising reasonable diligence, is in a position to 1 Lawson v. Farmers' Bank, supra. 2 Bank of Utica v. Bender, 21 Wend. 643 ; L. C. 329 ; Gladwell v. Turner, L. R. 5 Ex. 59. 132 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII give notice.^ For example : The defendant is drawer and the plaintiff holder of a bill of exchange dishonored at maturity. On the morning after the dishonor of the hill, the holder, not knowing where the defendant lives, applies to one of the indorsers at his house for information, but not finding him at home, calls again at 5.30 in the after- noon, and now obtaining from him the defendant's address, posts notice the same evening after six o'clock. The defendant's liability is fixed, though he does not receive the notice on the day on which it was posted as he would have done had the notice been posted before six o'clock.^ It would have made no difference in the example had it appeared that the whole of the day and evening had been consumed, and all of the next day or week, in reasonable endeavor to find the address of the defendant; time reason- ably consumed in finding the defendant or his address is to be deducted from the account.' Nor, as has already been seen, would it have made any difference had the notice never been received, the mail being a proper vehicle for conveying it. Thus far of the tim§ of notice when given by the holder. The time allowed an indorser is, generally speaking, the same as would be allowed if he were holder. He may give notice on the day on which he received notice; he must give notice either on that day, or on the first suc- ceeding secular day on which there is a departure of the mail to the indorser's place of residence where the mail may be used, unless the first succeeding secular daj- is the day after maturity, and the only mail goes out before seasonable business in the morning, in which case the indorser, like the holder, has till the next mail. And, 1 Gladwell v. Turner, supra. 2 Id, 3 Fugitt a. Nixon, 44 Mo. 295 ; Manchester Bank v. Fellows, 28 N, H. 302. Sect. 6.] THE INDORSER'S CONTRACT. 133 like the holder, he has no more time for giving notice to a remote than to the last indorser. There is one case in which, it seems, an indorser may- have more time for giving notice than a holder. Notice of dishonor might be received by an indorser on Sunday or some other non-secular day; but in such a case the indorser would not be bound to regard it until the first secular day following, so that the receiving of the notice could be reckoned, at the indorser's election, as from such secular day. Accordingly, the indorser would have that day and the next, even to the next secular day, if the morrow after the day from which the reckoning is begun should be non-secular, and until a departure of the mail, as already explained. For example (hypothetical) : The defendant is first, and the plaintiff second, indorser of a promissory note. Due notice of dishonor has been sent to the plaintiff. The notice is received on Sunday, July 3. The following day being a holiday, the plaintiff treats the 5th of July as if it were the day on which he received the notice, and mails notice to the defendant on the 6th of July (or if there is no departure of the mail to the destination of the notice on the 6th, or if the only departure is before reasonable business of that day, then so as to go by the first mail afterwards). The notice is (probably) seasonable.' Notice may, however, be sent, whether by the holder or by an indorser, on Sunday or other non-secular day, since notice is merely warning. So it is said.^ An agent for collection is treated as holder for the pur- pose of giving notice of dishonor, and his principal, if he indorsed the paper, is accordingly treated as an ordinary indorser; that is, the case is regarded as if it were not a case of agency. In other words, the real holder and 1 See Wright v. Shawcross, 2 Barn. & Aid. 501, note ; Bray v. Hadwen, 5 Maule & S. 68 ; Deblieux v. BuUard, 1 Bob. (La.) 66. 2 Deblieux v. Bullard, supra. 134 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. owner, if an indorser, stands upon the footing of an indorser in regard to the question of time in giving notice of dishonor. Thus the agent has the same time for notifying his principal wliich any other holder would have; and the principal has the same time he would have if the agent had been owner of the paper. ^ Paper may have been indorsed after maturity, and seri- ous question has arisen concerning time of notice in such a case. It has sometimes been considered that the rules per- taining to indorsement of paper before maturity should not apply, in their strictness, if at all, to such a case; and accordingly notice of dishonor as late as two months after the dishonor, on the special demand now required,^ has been deemed within reasonable time.^ It has even been stated that notice is altogether dispensed with in such a case.* But the better view appears to be that the rules of ordinary indorsement apply. Indorsers of paper payable on its face on demand are entitled to notice in all respects as in other cases; and why the rule should be otherwise of paper indorsed after maturity', which now is in law payable on demand, it would be difficult to explain.^ 1 Lawson v. Farmers' Bank, 1 Ohio St. 206 ; L. C. 295, 307 ; Bank of United States v. Davis, 2 Hill, 452 ; Church v. Barlow, 9 Pick. 547 ; Crocker v. Getchell, 23 Maine, 392 ; Manchester Bank v. Fellows, 28 N. H. 302 ; Bray i'. Hadweu, 5 Maule & S. 68 ; Prideaux v. Criddle, L. E. 4 Q. B. 455 2 The paper having been indorsed after maturity, a new contract in regard to presentment arises, to wit, that the undertaking of the maker or acceptor is to pay on demand. See ante, p. 92. 8 Van Hoesen v. Van Alstyne, 3 Wend. 75. See also McKinney v. Crawford, 8 Serg. & R. 351 ; Gray v. Bell, 3 Rich. 71; Chadwick v. Jeflers, 1 Rich. 397. ■• Gray u. Bell, supra, O'Neall. J. * See Bassenhorst c. Wilby, 45 Ohio St. 333 ; Lockwood i-. Craw- ford, 18 Conn. 361 ; Bishop v. Dexter, 2 Conn. 419 ; Berry i'. Robin- son, 9 Johns. 121 ; Course i'. Shackleford, 2 Nott & M. 283 ; Poole u. ToUeson, 1 McCord, 199; Ecfert v. Des Coudres, 1 Mill, 69. Sect. 7.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 135 § 7. Notice, Where. The question where notice is to be given or sent has been indirectly answered already, in part; for we have seen that where the holder and the indorser reside in the same town the notice should be given to the indorser personally or left at his place of business or of residence, and that when they live in diiSerent places it should be sent to the indorser's address as far as ascertainable by reasonable diligence. That goes far towards answering the whole question now raised. Notice may, however, be given to the indorser personally anywhere, wherever the holder or notifying indorser may happen to find him, so far as place is concerned; it may be given to him in his house or counting room, in the cars, or on the street, so long as it is good in other respects.^ And that because the notice is mere warning, and not intended or expected to be followed then and there by payment, as is presentment for payment. It may be that the indorser has post-office addresses in different towns, or it may be that there are several post- offices within the same town at each of which the indorser is accustomed to receive his mail. In such a case a letter containing the notice may be addressed to the indorser at any one of such post-offices, or to the town without naming any particular post-office ; and the proper deposit of the letter in the mail, whether at the post-office or in boxes placed for receiving mail, will itself be notice. Such act would be exercising reasonable diligence, and what may become of the letter will be immaterial.^ Where, however, there are several post-offices in the town of the indorser, notice by letter addressed to the indorser at the town generally is sufficient, unless the indorser 1 See Hyslop v. Jones, 3 McLean, 96. 2 See Roberts v. Taft, 120 Mass. 169. 136 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIl has been accustomed to receive his letters at one of the offices in particular, and to have his letters addressed to him there. In other words, the holder makes out a pre- sumptive case, so far, by proving that notice was sent to the indorser in a letter by mail addressed to the town generally. But that presumptive case may be met by the indorser by showing that he usually received his letters at one office only, and that the fact might have been learned by reasonable inquiry. Without such evidence it might still be true that the indorser received his mail at any of the post-offices.' If, however, the letter was in fact received in due time, it would make no difference that there may have been a mistake in the address.''' The post-office address of the defendant is still a matter of first importance; that rather than the precise locality of his residence. And hence where the indorser's address is known to the notifying party, and the latter sends notice addressed to his place of residence, that being in another town, he must see to it, it seems, that the indorser receives the notice and receives it in due time. Clearly where an indorser receives his mail usually in the town of his resi- dence, but sometimes in another town, notice should be sent to the post-office of his town. For example : The defend- ant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a dishonored promissory note; the two living in different towns. The defendant sometimes receives his letters at the post-office of the town in which the plaintiff resides, but usually at the post-office of his own town. The plaintiff drops a letter in his own post-office addressed to the defendant, which is not received in due time. The defendant is discharged.^ Perhaps the rule would be different if the plaintiff did not know that the defendant lived in another town from 1 Roberts v. Taft, supra ; Morton v. Westcott, 8 Cash. 425 ; Saco Bank v. Sanborn, 63 Maine, 340; Downer v. Eemer, 21 Wend. 10. 2 Roberts v. Taft, supra. 8 Sbelburne Falls Bank v. Townsley, 107 Mass. 444. Sect. 7.] THE INDOESEK'S CONTRACT. 13l| the one at which the plaintiff knew that he received letters. At all events notice at the plaintiff's post-office would be good if the plaintiff, in mailing it there, acted upon infor- mation properly sought and obtained. It is possible that the indorser may live in a very sparsely settled part of the country, and that there may be no post- office in the town in which he lives. In such a case the holder does all that is required by sending notice directed to the indorser at the nearest town having a post-office, so far as can be ascertained by reasonable inquiry.^ In a case of removal by the indorser, of which the holder has no notice otherwise, the indorser should inform him if he wants notice sent to his new place of residence. In the absence of notice of the change, notice of the dishonor may be sent to the indorser's former place of residence; at all events if the notifying party, not satisfied with his pre- vious information, makes inquiry where he would be likelj' to receive correct information, and then acts accordingly.^ Whether one who has some considerable time before had sufficient information of the residence of the indorser may afterwards safely act upon that information, and send notice accordingly, without inquiry at the time of sending, may in some cases raise a doubt; but it appears to be the gene- ral rule that when nothing has occurred to suggest to the notifying party a change of residence by the indorser, no inquiry further is necessary." Of cases in which the parties have lived near each other, as for instance, in some small town, the holder knowing where the indorser has lived, it may be presumed from 1 Shed V. Brett, 1 Pick, 401, 4U ; Ireland v. Kip, 11 Johns. 232 ; Union Bank v. Stoker, 1 La. An. 269 ; Marsh v. Burr, Meigs, 68 ; S. C. 9 Yerg. 253. 2 Saco Bank v. Sanborn, 63 Maine, 340. 3 Id. ; Bank of Utica v. Phillips, 3 Wend. 408 ; Gawtry i,. Doane, 51 N. Y. 84 ; Berridge v. Fitzgerald, L. K. 4 Q. B. 639. 138 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIIL tlieir nearness, together with any frequency of communi- cation and notoriety of removal, that the holder was aware of the indorser's change of domicile.^ Temporary absence from home does not amount to removal, so as to require or even permit sending notice to the temporar3f place of abode; though notice received there in due time will be good. For example: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a prom- issory note, both parties residing in New Jersey. Business, however, takes the defendant to Cleveland, Ohio, most of the season of the year, when the note matures, and keeps him there much of the time. About November 1 be goes from Cleveland to Chicago on busi- ness likely to take some considerable time, and informs the plaintiff that he is going there. He remains in Chicago until Xovember 22, on which day notice of dis- honor is mailed to him at that place. The notice is not received, the defendant having left for Cleveland before the notice arrived. On his return to Cleveland, he is informed by the plaintiff of what has happened. The defendant is discharged; a temporary place of abode presumptively not being a place to which notice of dis- honor should be sent.'' It seems, however, that, where an indorser has a regular abode for a considerable time in the year, a notifying ■ McVeigh v. Allen, 29 Gratt. .588, 596 ; Bank of Old Dominion v. McVeigh, 26 Gratt. 785; S. C. 29 Gratt. 546; Harris v. Memphis Bank, 4 Humph. 519; Bank of Utica i'. Phillips, 3 Wend. 408. 2 Walker v. Stetson, 14 Ohio St. 89; L. C. 314. Something is said of the defendant's having had no ' relations to the post-office ' in Chicago, whatever that may mean. The real point is that Chicago was not the defendant's place of residence or his post-office address for the purpose in question. Query, whether Cleveland would not have been a proper place to which to send, or at which to give notice ' The notice actually given there was too late, because of the delay in sending the letter to Chicago. Sect. 7.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 139 party, having knowledge of such place of abode, and no knowledge of his proper domicile or permanent home, may send notice to such abode, or give notice there. For example: The defendant, indorser of a promissory note held by the plaintiff, is a senator of the United States, having an abode in Washington during the session of Congress. He leaves an agent in a city near his legal domicile to attend to his business, but of that fact the plaintiff is not aware. Notice of dishonor is seasonably mailed to the defendant at Washington. The notice is deemed good.^ Such notice would, more clearly still, be good if the senator had given up his residence in the State he repre- sented, and had left no one there to attend to his business.'' Perhaps the case of a member of the Legislature at the Capitol, away from home, would fall within the principle governing the case of the example; but cases of the kind are considered to go to the verge of the law merchant. ^ In regard to seeking information, inquiry should be made of some one from whom, or through some source of information where, trustworthy information will be apt to be given. It is usual and proper for the notifying party to make inquiry of some other party to the paper, e. g., a later indorser, in regard to the place of residence of indorsers; and such course will be especially proper, if not necessary, where the notifying partj' has reason to think that any party to the paper knows of such place of resi- dence, assuming, of course, that the party having the knowledge is within reasonable reach.^ And if a notary is employed, the holder should give him the benefit of any information he has.^ 1 Chouteau v. Webster, 6 Met. 1. 2 Tuastall v. Walker, 2 Smedes & M. 638. 8 Walker v. Stetson, 14 Ohio St. 89 ; L. C. 314, 319. * Wolf V. Burgess, 59 Mo. 583 ; Gilchrist v. Donnell, 53 Mo. 591. « Edwards v. Thomas, 66 Mo. 468. 140 BILLS, NOTES, AKD CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. It is not enough, it seems, to make inquiry for an indorser's place of residence at the post-office, where the indorser resides in a large city, unless indeed he has lately been employed in, or connected with, the post-office. The proper way is to consult some good city directory, and in case of removal, then at the indorser's last place of busi- ness or of residence,-' Or, if in a case of the kind the indorser's name does not appear in the directory, then inquiry may be made of some other party, as the maker or acceptor; and if information is given, notice ma,j be sent accordingly, whether the information given was right or not.^ Of course, inquiry may be made of relatives of the indorser.' If on going to the indorser's house to give him notice, the house is found closed and, unoccupied, inquiry may and perhaps should be made at the next door, if there be a house near.'' Inquiry should be pursued until some satisfactory, that is, apparently trustworthy, answer is given, or until it is reasonably clear that nothing useful can be found out. When, however, the apparently trustworthy information is received, inquiry may stop, and notice may be sent accord- ingly; and the notice will be good whether the information was correct or not.*" For example : The defendant is indorser of a bill of exchange held by the plaintiff. On discounting the bill, the plaintiff inquires of the drawer where the defendant resides, and receives an answer, accord- ing to which he sends notice of dishonor seasonably to the defendant, nothing having occurred to lead him to doubt the correctness of the information. The notice is good, though the information is incorrect. ° 1 Miller v. Farmers' Bank, 30 Md. 392. 2 Gawtry v. Doane, 51 N. Y. 84. 8 Requa v. CoUina, 51 N Y. 144. « Williams v. Bank of United States, 2 Peters, 96. ^ Saco Bank w. Sanborn, supra ; Bank of Utica v. Bender, 21 Wend. 643. « Bank of Utica v. Bender, 21 Wend. 643 ; L. C. 329. Sect. 7.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 141 The place of date of a bill is presumptively the place of residence of the drawer, and so would be the place of date of an indorsement, if added, in regard to the indorser's residence ; and there is good authority for the statement that the notifying party may rely upon such date if he has no reason to doubt whether the drawer or indorser lives at the particular place. Tor example: The defendant is drawer, and the plaintiff holder, of a bill of exchange dated at A. Notice of dishonor is directed to the defend- ant, in due time, at A, though A is not his place of residence, and though the plaintiff might have learned on inquiry where the defendant resides. The notice is not received. The defendant's liability is deemed duly fixed.'' There is also equally good authority that the notice would not be sufficient in such a case, in the absence of evidence that the plaintiff had made due inquiry for the defendant's place of residence.^ But it is to be observed that the defendant, by dating the bill or indorsement as he has done, has himself misled the plaintiff ; can the defendant afterwards object to his own act ? Clearly, however, if the plaintiff had reason to know that the place of date was not the defendant's place of residence, he can- not safely treat the place of date as the proper address.' And of course, the place of date of a bill, note, or cheque has nothing to do with the place of address of an indorser not being also drawer or maker.* 1 Burmester v. Barron, 17 Q. B. 828; Pierce v. Struthers, 27 Penn. St. 249. 2 Lowery v. Scott, 24 Wend. 358 ; Spencer v. Bank of Salina, 3 Hill, 520 ; Carroll u. Upton, 3 Comat. 272 ; Taylor v. Snyder, 3 Denio, 145 ; L. C. 227, 237 ; Sprague v. Tyson, 44 Ala. 338 ; Tyson v. Oliver, 43 Ala. 458; Barnwell v. Mitchell, 3 Conn. 101. 3 Pierce v. Struthers, 27 Penn. St. 249. See further, Mason v. Pritchard, 9 Heisk. 793. * Lawrence v. Miller, 16 N. Y. 235, 240; Spencer v. Bank of Salina, 3 Hill, 520. 142 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. VIII. § 8. Diligence. The whole matter of the several steps required to fix the liability of an iiidorser may be summed up, as has already been stated or intimated more than once, by the statement that the law merchant requires reasonable diligence, and that only. What constitutes reasonable diligence is fixed, presumptively but not absolutely, in certain cases, as in the matter of time of presentment and time of notice of dishonor; in other cases it remains a question of fact upon a^l the circumstances of the case. However, when the facts are all found or admitted, the court will ordinarily deter- mine, whatever the case, whether they show a compliance with the rule of reasonable diligence.^ Reasonable diligence having been exercised, the notify- ing party may, it seems, rest in security; it matters not now what further information may come to hand; even if it show that the information acted upon was false and the true state of things is now made known, it may be disre- garded. So it has been held by high authority,'' though the contrary has since been laid down, but in ignorance apparently of the former decision.' All that has been said in the foregoing sections is said upon the assumption that no excuse for omitting the step or steps has arisen, 1 Bank of Utica v. Bender, 21 Wend. 643 ; L. C. 329 ; Carroll a. Upton, 3 Comst. 272 ; Walker u. Stetson, 14 Ohio St. 89 ; L. C. 314 ; Bank of Columbia v. Lawrence, 1 Peters, 578 ; L. C. 323 ; Wheeler v. Field, 6 Met. 290; Peters v. Hobbs, 25 Ark. 67 ; Farmers' Bank f. Gunnell, 26 Gratt. 131 ; Tardy v. Boyd, Id. 631. ^ Lambert v. Ghiselin, 9 How. 552. 3 Beale v. Parrish, 20 N. Y. 407. Sect. 2.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 143 CHAPTER IX. INDORSEE'S CONTRACT CONTINUED : EXCUSE OF STEPS. § 1. Tempoeaky Excuse. Hepetofore it has been assumed that no question of permanent excuse in regard to the steps for fixing the indorser's liability was involved, though mere delays and the reasons therefor, which may be considered temporary excuses, have been under consideration from time to time. The law in regard to temporary excuses may be thus summed up : Whenever it has become impracticable, without fault of the holder, to take the steps at the time required, the holder is excused from doing so until a reasonable time after it becomes practicable to take the steps. ^ Now, however, we encounter cases in which one or more of the steps was omitted altogether, and the plaintiff's contention is that the taking of the step at any time was unnecessary, the law merchant finding in the facts a suffi- cient excuse for the omission. What facts then excuse, not some delay, but entire omission, the indorser being held, notwithstanding, as if all the steps presumptively required had been taken ? § 2. Excuse of both Presentment and Notice. The most common cases are waivers. There is nothing to prevent the waiver by an indorser of all the conditions 1 See Windham Bank v. Norton, 22 Conn. 213 ; L. C. 344 ; Farmers' Bank v. Guunell, 26 Gratt. 131 ; Tardy y. Boyd, Id. 631 ; Lane v. Bank of West Tennessee, 9 Heisk. 419 ; Dunbar u. Tyler, 44 Miss. 1 ; Dur- den V. Smith, Id. 548. 144 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. upon which his undertaking otherwise would depend. Thus he may write, in connection with his indorsement, the words ' waiving demand and notice,' or he may orally waive demand and notice; such act will make it unnecessarj- for the holder to take any of the steps ordinarily required for fixing liability, the word ' demand ' being understood to include presentment. An unconditional promise to pay, or assurance of pay- ment, made by the indorser, would have a like effect; it would be equivalent to a waiver in terms of the taking of any steps. For example : The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note. The defendant being indebted to the plaintiff gives to him the note, indorsing it as security for the debt. The maker dies before the note matures, and afterwards before its maturity the plaintiff intrusts it to A for collection. A calls upon the defendant and asks him if he (A) should have the note protested against the maker's estate. The defendant replies that he need not do so, and says that the note shall be paid at maturitj'. A puts the note away in his portfolio, where it remains until after maturity, no steps being taken for fixing the defendant's liability. The taking of such steps is UI)necessarJ^' Indeed, when an indorser says to the holder that an arrangement for payment of the paper is about to be made, and either in direct terms or by reasonable implication requests the holder to wait or to give time, that amounts to an assurance that the paper will be paid either by the promisor or by the indorser; and hence it is a waiver of presentment and notice. Per it tends to put the holder off his guard and to induce him to forego the ordinary steps, so that it would be unjust to urge the omission of those steps thereafter.^ But it must be reasonably clear 1 Sigerson v. JIathewg, 20 How. 496 ; L. C. 371. 2 Gove v. Vining, 7 Met. 212; Bryant v. Wilcox, 49 Cal. 47; Moyer's Appeal, 87 Penn. St. 129. Sect. 2.] THE INDOESEE'S CONTRACT. 145 that the indorser's promise or assurance is to pay; words on occasions of the kind are not to be taken very strongly against the indorser. Thus for the indorser to say that he would ' stand good ' for payment is not to say that he will pay, and is no waiver of steps.* In the case of inland bills and promissory notes, it seems that a ' waiver of protest ' will have the like effect ; ^ clearly it will where the parties have already given that interpretation to such words in their previous recent deal- ings. For example: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note. The defendant sends to the plaintiff a writing in the following words : ' I do request that hereafter any notes that may fall due in the Union Bank [the plaintiff], on which I am or may be indorser, shall not be protested, as I will consider myself bound in the same manner as if the said notes had been or should be legally protested. ' The plaintiff and defendant have had a course of dealings founded upon interpretation of the writing as a waiver of all steps. No steps to fix the defendant's liability are necessary.' But the term ' protest,' in its legal sense, is obviously unsuited to any step required in the law relating to inland bills and promissory notes. Still it is plain that the inten- tion in a waiver of protest in such cases is something more than the idle one of waiving what is unnecessary; and hence a case for interpretation is raised. That may have 1 Freeman v. O'Brien, 38 Iowa, 406. But this case appears to have leaned too far in favor of the indorser, in view of other facts which appear in it. An indorsement with the words ' eventually accountable ' would waive presentment and notice. McDonald o. Bailey, 14 Maine, 101. So would writing the word ' Holden.' Bean v. Arnold, 16 Maine, 251. 2 Townsend v. Lorain Bank, 2 Ohio St. 345. ' Union Bank v. Hyde, 6 Wheat. 572. See also Duvall v. Farmers' Bank, 7 Gill & J. 44 ; S. C. 9 Gill & J. 31 ; Bird v. Le Blanc, 6 La. An. 470; Scott V. Greer, 10 Barr, 103. 10 146 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. been attended to by the parties, as we have seen; if the action of the parties has not furnished an interpretation, the court must do the best it can. lu the authority from which the last example is taken, it was intimated that mere naked waiver of protest would not excuse the require- ment of demand and notice (and it would not, in the case of a foreign bill); but it has been decided in other cases that such a waiver would be prima facie evidence of inten- tion to waive demand and notice, since otherwise it would have to be treated as having no effect at all.^ And the same has been held of the anomalous expression, ' I waive demand of protest.' ^ Waivers may be made not only before maturity, but afterwards as well, after the time for taking the steps has passed and the indorser has ceased to be under any lia- bility.' It is a peculiarity of certain waivers, of which this one is an example, that their validity does not depend upon consideration or the doing or omitting to do anything in reliance upon tbem. Still when made after maturity, the supposed waiver must have been made with full know- ledge that the indorser was discharged, in order to avail.* And if the indorser should actually make payment, sup- posing that his liabilitj'^ had been fixed when it had not, he could recover the money back.' If, however, the facts in the matter were known to the indorser when he made the promise to pay, or other waiver, that would be enough ; 1 Coddington v. Davis, 1 Comst. 186; Carpenter v. Reynolds, 42 Miss. 807 ; Townsend v. Lorain Bank, 2 Ohio St. 345. 2 Porter v. Kemball, 53 Barb. 467. ' Sigerson v. Mathews, 20 How. 496; L. C. 371 ; Rindge v. Kim- ball, 124 Mass. 209 ; Matthews v. Allen, 16 Gray, 594 ; Lewis v. Brehme, 33 Md. 412 ; Freeman v. O'Brien, 38 Iowa, 406. * Ross !.•. Hurd, 71 N. Y. 14 ; Freeman v. O'Brien, supra ; Third Nat. Bank v. Ashworth, 105 Mass. 503; Sheridan v. Carpenter, 61 Maine, 83 ; Walker v. Rogers, 40 HI. 278. ' Sheridan «. Carpenter, supra. Sect. 2.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 147 that he did not know the legal effect of them would not, it is held, help him.^ Again, where the maker or acceptor or other party primarily liable (for the maker or acceptor may have signed for accommodation) places an available fund in the hands of the indorser with which to indemnify him if called upon to pay, the fund being sufficient for the pur- pose, presentment and notice are unnecessary; ^ the indorser takes the place of the one primarily liable. There may be ground for doubting whether the steps could be omitted where the fund was insufficient to indemnify the indorser; ' though it seems that the steps may be omitted where the entire estate of the maker or acceptor is put into the indorser's hands to indemnify him on his indorsement,* for in such a case too the indorser virtually takes the place of the principal debtor. Clearly, however, where the fund in question is put into the indorser's hand to satisfy demands which he is or may become absolutely bound to pay, the steps are not made unnecessary. For example : The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note. The maker has before maturity made an assignment of his property to the indorser in trust for the benefit of his creditors, among them the indorser, to secure them against all debts due them from the maker. The steps for fixing liability are omitted. The defendant is discharged; the proper inter- pretation of the assignment being deemed to be that it 1 Rindskopf v. Doman, 28 Ohio St. 516; Cheshire v. Taylor, 29 Iowa, 492 ; Third National Bank <^. Ash worth, 105 Mass. 503 ; Matthews v. Allen, 16 Gray, 594. ^ Beard v. Westerman, 32 Ohio St. 29 ; Beveling v. Ferris, 18 Ohio, 170; Coddington o. Dayis, 3 Denio, 16 ; S. C. 1 Comst. 186 ; Kramer V. Sandford, 4 Watts & S. 328 ; Perryw. Green,4 Harrison, 61; Andrews V. Boyd, 3 Met. 434 ; Marshall v. Mitchell, 34 Maine, 227. 3 See Watkins v. Crouch, 5 Leigh, 522. * Bond V. Earnham, 5 Mass. 170. 148 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. was intended as an indemnity against absolute liabilities only. Hence the assignment did not make the steps unnecessary.^ It may be too that to excuse the steps, the fund placed in the indorser's hands should be property, or securities available immediately, such as bonds payable on demand. It has been held that the putting into an indorser's hands ordinary choses in action as collateral security, by which is probably meant choses not at once available, will not excuse the steps. ^ So if the funds in the indorser's hands have arisen from business in which the indorser is a part- ner with the maker or acceptor, there is no sufficient reason for omitting the steps, especially where such funds can be used only for the payment of paper at maturity.^ So also where the funds are held by the indorser as executor or administrator of the estate of the maker or acceptor, they cannot be considered as immediately available to indemnify him; they are not put there for that purpose, and the executor or administrator cannot prefer himself.* In case the indorser should prove to be the primary debtor at the outset, the maker or the acceptor having acted merely for his accommodation, he would not be entitled to presentment and notice any more than if he had appeared upon the paper in his true character. He cannot suffer prejudice by the omission, because there is no one, party to the paper, bound to indemnify him, or if there be one liable with him as principal debtor, there is no one whose liability he could affect by notice of dishonor. Indeed, much of the subject may be summed up by the state- 1 Creamer v. Perry, 17 Pick. 3,32. 2 Kramer v. Sandford, 4 Watts & S. 328 ; Seacord v. Miller, 3 Kern. 55 ; Otsego Bank v. Warren, 18 Barb. 290. 8 Ray V. Smith, 17 Wall. 411. * Juniata Bank u. Hale, 16 Serg. & E. 157 ; L. 0. 359; Magruder V. Union Bank, 3 Peters, 87 ; S. C. 7 Peters, 287. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTEACT. 149 ment that if the indorser cannot possibly be prejudiced by the omission, the omission is to be excused.' It is enough, however, to require the steps that the indorser may suffer prejudice from the omission of them; the indorser is not required to show that he has suffered prejudice by the omission; it is for the plaintiff to show that the indorser could not possibly have suffered.^ The fact that the note, bill, or cheque has been lost does not dispense with these steps, for a copy may be used in making presentment, with an offer of indemnity against liability upon the lost instrument.' § 3. Excuse of Presentment. Some excuses go no further than to justify the omission of presentment and demand, or, perhaps, but one of these two steps, for it is to be remembered that presentment and demand are separate steps, severally required in the absence of legal excuse ; and, further, excuses are looked upon with scrutiny, and not allowed unless plainly made out. First, in regard to excuses for failing to make present- ment as distinguished from demand. Such a case arises where the maker or acceptor, understanding or professing to understand the errand of the holder, declines to see the paper, or expressly or virtually tells the holder that he 1 Smith u. Miller, 52 N. Y. 545 ; "Welch u. Taylor Manuf. Co., 82 111. 579, drawer. 2 Foster v. Parker, 2 C. P. D. 1 8 ; also cases in note 1 . Many of the cases relate to the omission of notice only, but the principle is suiB- cient to cover all the steps. 5 Lane v. Bank of West Tennessee, 9 Heisk. 419. Compare Fales V. Rnssell, 16 Pick. 315 ; Tattle v. Standish,'4 Allen, 481 ; Hopkins v. Adams, 20 Vt. 407 ; Thayer v. King, 15 Ohio, 242. These are cases of actions sustained against the maker of lost notes, of course upon copies ; it follows that presentment may be made upon a copy. 150 BILLS, NOTES, AUD CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. need not produce it. A case of tlie kind would arise where the maker or acceptor, before the paper is produced, should absolutely repudiate all liability upon it, and refuse to pay it ; that would be a waiver of presentment, certainly where the holder called for payment at the proper place, as, for example, at the counting-house of the maker of a note ; perhaps, it would be a waiver wherever demand was made.^ Mere refusal of payment, however, is no waiver of omitting presentment. For example: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a prom- issory note. At maturity the plaintiff, not having the note with him, calls upon the maker, and demands pay- ment, which is refused. The defendant is discharged, the refusal being no waiver of the requirement of presentment.'' Excuse of demand will doubtless excuse presentment; but, perhaps, excuse of presentment, in the special sense of that term which distinguishes it from demand, would not make demand unnecessary. Waiver of presentment, made by an indorser after maturity, must have been made with knowledge of the omission, in order to be valid.' It will not be needful to separate the two steps further, and accordingly presentment may be taken as including demand. Removal of the maker or acceptor from the State, after the making or acceptance, excuses the holder from any duty to follow him, such as would rest upon the holder in case of removal to some other place within the State in which the paper is payable. The removal would not, according to good authority,^ though there is also contrary 1 See King v. Crowell, 61 Maine, 244. 2 Arnold v. Dresser, 8 Allen, 435. ' Compare ante, p. 146. 4 Wheeler v. Field, 6 Met. 290. Sect. 3.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 151 authority,^ excuse the holder from making presentment at the last place of business or residence of the maker or acceptor; but presentment there would clearly be suffi- cient. For example : The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note payable generally and made at Troy, New York, where the maker resided at the time of making the note. Afterwards, before the maturity of the note, the maker removes to Florida, where he resides when the note matures. The plaintiff makes presentment at the maker's last abode in Troy, and not receiving payment, gives notice of dishonor presently. No presentment in Florida is made. The liability of the defendant is duly fixed.'* Concerning the effect of absconding there is some con- flict of authority. The more general doctrine is that such act excuses the holder from all duty to make presentment. For example: The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note, the maker of which, before its maturity, absconds to parts unknown; whereupon at maturity, the plaintiff, without taking other steps, gives notice of dishonor to the defendant. The defendant's liability is duly fixed.' The same authorities, however, which, in case of removal beyond the State, require presentment at the last abode or place of business, recalling the doctrine that the holder is bound to exercise due diligence in endeavoring to obtain 1 Foster v. Julien, 24 N. Y. 28 ; Gist v. Lybrand, 3 Ohio, 308. See Eeid V. Morrison, 2 Watts & S. 401. 2 See Taylor v. Snyder, 3 Denio, 145 ; L. C. 227. But if, as was the actual case in Taylor v. Snyder, the maker lived at the time of making the note in another State or country from that in which it was made, presentment there would be necessary. See ante, p. 88. 8 Lehman v. Jones, 1 Watts & S. 126 ; L. C. 357 ; Reid v. Morrison, 2 Watts & S. 401 ; Taylor v. Snyder, supra ; Spies r. Gilmore, 1 Comst. 321 ; Wolfe v. Jewett, 10 La. 383. The same rule prevails in the case of bills of exchange. Lehman v. Jones, supra. 152 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. payment from the maker or acceptor, refuse to accept that view of the case. These authorities require the plaintiff to show that, notwithstanding the absconding, he has exercised some diligence in order to obtain payment of the primary debtor; some inquiry should be made.^ The insolvency of the maker or acceptor, though known to the indorser at the time of his indorsement, is not an excuse for failing to make presentment. For example : The defendant, payee of an overdue promissory note, indorses it knowing that the maker is insolvent, the plaintiff discounting it for him at its face value. Pre- sentment is not made within reasonable time. The defendant is discharged from liability.^ AVaiving notice of dishonor does not excuse the holder from making presentment. For example : The defendant, an indorser of a promissory note, writes before or after his signature the words, ' Waiving notice.' The plaintiff, holder of the note at maturity, omits to make present- ment of the note for payment as well as to give notice of dishonor. The defendant is discharged. ° In some States, contrary to the rule in others, the fact that the maker or acceptor has deceased at the time of the maturity of the note or bill, and that the paper matures before the end of the period in which his personal represen- tative is exempt from liability to suit, excuses presentment altogether. For example : The defendant is indorser and the plaintiff holder of a promissory note due October 4. The maker dies in September preceding, and administra- ^ Pierce v. Gate, 12 Cush. 195, overruling some earlier decisions and dicta. 2 Bassenhorst v. Wilby, 45 Oliio St. 333. s Berkshire Bank v. Jones, 6 Mass. 524; L. C. 369. See also Voorhies v. Attee, 29 Iowa, 49 ; Buchanan v. Marshall, 22 Vt. 561 ; Lane v. Steward, 20 Maine, 98; Backus u. Shiplaerd, 11 Wend. 629. But see Matthey v. Gaily, 4 Cal. 62. Sect. 4.] THE INDORSEE'S CONTRACT. 153 tion is duly granted, and notice thereof given the same month. No presentment is made at the maturity of the note or at any other time to the administrator, but notice of non-payment is given to the defendant in due season. The defendant's liability is duly fixed, presentment not being necessary.^ If, however, the paper should become due after the period of exemption has passed, presentment should be made.^ § 4. Excuse of Protest. As we have seen, the term ' protest, ' as used by the law merchant, applies only to foreign bills of exchange, though by practice, to which the sanction of statute has in many States been given, it has come to be, or rather it has long been, applied also to inland bills and promissory notes. But the law merchant has not lost its supremacy in the matter; the protest of a foreign bill having, as we have seen, a significance not attaching to the protest of other paper. Protest in the case of a foreign bill is one definite and altogether unique act; in the case of other paper, while it naturally points to the same unique act, it has come to be used in a loose and vague sense, making it include other or even all the steps for fixing liability. The consequence is that excuse of protest has ordinarily a definite meaning in the one case and an uncertain mean- ing in the other. Excuse of protest of a foreign bill, at least when in the form of a written waiver, such as ' waiv- ing protest,' on the bill, is then in principle to be taken as referring to the distinctive act of protest, and nothing 1 Hale y. Burr, 12 Mass. 86. See Oriental Bank v. Blake, 22 Pick. 206 ; Landry v. Stansberry, 10 La. An. 484. But see Gower v. Moore, 25 Maine, 16. 2 Oriental Bank v. Blake, supra. 154 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX. else; ^ unless perhaps the term has received a different interpretation in tha practice of the parties.^ On the other hand, waiving the protest of paper not requiring jjrotest is an act, as has just been stated, of doubtful import; how it has been interpreted by the courts has already been seen.' By the better view it excuses presentment and notice.^ § 5. Excuse of Notice. What is referred to now, as in the case of excuse of pre- sentment above considered, is excuse of notice, excluding cases of excuse of notice and other steps; ^ in other words, the cases now referred to are those in which the only ques- tion raised is upon the failure of the holder or indorser to give notice of dishonor. Such failure is not justified by any mere waiver of pre- sentment or demand, for such a waiver may be made in confident expectation that the maker or acceptor will be ready and anxious to pay, and will therefore offer payment without waiting to be requested.^ Nor, it seems, will an excuse for making presentment, created by law, excuse, the requirement of notice. Thus the absconding of the maker or acceptor to parts unknown, though in some States making presentment unnecessary, does not dispense with the requirement of notice.' So too in States in which presentment is excused by law because of the death 1 That is fairly to be implied from language in Union Bank c. H3'de, 6 ffheat. 572. See also Coddington v. Davis, 1 Comst. 186. 2 Compare Coddington v. Davis, snpra. ' Ante, p. 146 ; and see the two cases just cited. « Id. ^ For those cases see § 2, snpra. ^ Compare Berkshire Bank v. Jones, 6 Mass.. 524 ; L. C. 369, 370. ' Foster v. Jnlien, 24 N. Y. 28, 37 ; Michand <.•. Lagarde, 4 Minn. 43. Compare Lehman v. Jones, 1 "Watts & S 126 ; L. C. 357, 358. Sect. 5.] THE INDOESER'S CONTRACT. 155 of the maker, it seems that indorsers are nevertheless entitled to notice of non-payment.'' And a personal repre- sentative of an indorser deceased is entitled to notice as much as would the indorser himself have been had he lived. ^ Indeed, omitting to give notice of dishonor is no more lightly to be excused than is omitting to take any of the other steps required by the law. The law merchant will not, it seems, excuse an omission to give notice except upon a waiver plainly having in view the very matter of notice; unless it is clear that notice would be of no use whatever, when, indeed, it would be unnecessary. If by possibility the indorser might suffer detriment by failing to give him notice, such failing will discharge him.' Accordingly, notice of dishonor is not dispensed with by reason of the fact that the maker or acceptor was insolvent all the time, and that the indorser was aware of the fact. For it does not follow, because a man is insolvent that he may not pay a particular debt, in whole or in part. A debtor is, within certain statutory restrictions, allowed to prefer his creditors; and even where his funds have passed from him, as into the hands of an assignee, friends may be ready to help him or his indorsers in the particular case.^ Even in the case of an express waiver of notice in terms, 1 See Hale v. Burr, 12 Mass. 86, 88, where the court, speaking of demand upon the personal representative within the year of liis exemp- tion from suit, says ; ' Such a demand would therefore be merely a troublesome formality, without any use ; and notice to the indorser that (the promisor being dead) he will be looked to for payment, will in every respect be as advantageous to him as a previous demand upon the promisor.' 2 Oriental Bank v. Blake, 22 Pick. 206. ' Foster v. Parker, 2 C. P. D. 18; Smith v. Miller, 52 N. Y. 545; "Welch V. Taylor Mannf. Co., 82 111. 579. ' Barton V. Baker, 1 Serg. & R. 334, L. C. 365. 156 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. IX tlie waiving heretofore suggested should be borne in mind where the waiver was after maturity; in such a case, the act, to be valid, must have been done with knowledge that notice had not been given. ^ There are one or two cases of excuse of notice peculiar in that they concern only the drawers of bills of exchange or of cheques. The drawer's contract has been explained in a preceding chapter, and it was there shown that one who draws a bill or a cheque, without reasonable ground to believe that it will be honored by the drawee, is treated much as if, instead of having drawn a bill, he had made a promissory note for the sum. Hence he is not entitled to notice in case of dishonor. The case may then be put, and commonly is put, in this way; that the act of drawing in such a case is deemed a fraud in the eye of the law, and notice of dishonor is accordingly unnecessary. This subject has, however, been fully dealt with in Chapter V., and need not be further considered here. It should be observed, however, that the law dispenses with notice to the drawer only; indorsers must still be notified, for they are no parties to the fraud, though it would be otherwise of an indorser who is the drawer of the bill. To draw upon oneself, as was seen in Chapter V., also dispenses with the requirement of notice, and perhaps of presentment; and so of cases in which the drawer draws upon a partnership of which he is a member, and the like cases referred to in Chapter V. In these cases, too, the excuse extends only to the drawer; an indorser (not being drawer) is still entitled to notice. 1 Ante, p. 146. Sect. 1.] ACCOMMODATION CONTRACTS. 157 CHAPTER X. ACCOMMODATION CONTRACTS. § 1. Nature: Consideration: Suretyship. The legal effect of eacli of the contracts dealt with in the foregoing chapters will be modified somewhat, if it appears that the defendant signed the instrument without consideration for the accommodation of another party. The result is an accommodation contract, which may be described as a gift by A to B of A's credit, to be offered to another on payment of value. A contract of the kind may take any of the forms of the law merchant; a promis- sory note may be made or indorsed for accommodation; a bill of exchange may be drawn, accepted, or indorsed for accommodation; a cheque may be -drawn or indorsed for accommodation. In a word, any party to the instru- ment may be an accommodation party. Accommodation contracts of the kind too are contracts of the law merchant as much as are those which are supported by a valuable consideration at the outset. At the outset, we say, for though accommodation contracts are not so sup- ported when first executed, a valuable consideration must spring up afterwards to make the contract binding; some one must afterwards have taken the paper for value in order to have a claim upon the accommodation party. For example (hypothetical) : The defendant accepts a bill of exchange for the accommodation of the drawer, and the drawer makes a gift of the bill to the payee and plaintiff. The defendant is not liable upon his acceptance. 158 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. X. There is then nothing peculiar in the case so far. Nor is there anj'thing peculiar in any other phase of the contract of an accummodation party under the law merchant in its ordinarj- application. Whatever would be necessarj' to make a case against one who had signed originally for value is equally necessary to make a case against an accom- modation party; and whatever would be effective against a party who signed for value will also be effective against an accommodation party after a consideration has sprung up. What is peculiar to the situation of such a party lies in the fact that he is in a certain sense only a surety for the party for whom he has given his credit. "Whatever the outward form of the contract, even though the accommo- dation party made as such his promissory note, and the person for whose accommodation it was made is an indorser of it, or indeed is not a party to it at all, the accommo- dated party or person is, between the two, the principal debtor, and the accommodation party the surety. The accommodation party is a surety, however, not always in the full sense, but often only sub modo. It appears to have been considered at one time that he was in all cases a surety in the full ordinary sense; but the authorities now consider that the suretyship may be essen- tially modified by the natural character of the particular contract made by the accommodation party. Thus, if a person has accepted a bill of exchange for the accommo- dation of the payee, a subsequent indorsee, though with notice, may still treat him as an acceptor, not merely in point of liability in the ordinary way of acceptance, but also in regard to the more special questions of suretyship, because he has taken a principal's position. That is to say, the acceptor is not a surety towards the holder, though the holder knows that he accepted for accommodation; he is a surety only between himself and the party for whose accommodation he accepted. Accordingly, he will not be Sect. 2.] ACCOMMODATION CONTRACTS. 159 discharged by acts of the holder, which would discharge him if he were aii ordinary surety, or if he were an accom- modation indorser j for an indorser is a surety for parties before him.' § 2. Taking with Notice. There is another doctrine touching accommodation accept- ance of the greatest significance, and that is, that though the undertaking is (originally) without consideration, it stands upon a footing radically different from other cases of contracts wanting consideration. If a man makes a promissory note, accepts a bill of exchange, or indorses paper, upon the supposition that there is a valuable con- sideration for his undertaking when there is not, or if there is a failure of the consideration, a person taking the paper with notice, though for value, cannot hold him (with an exception which need not be mentioned here) ; whereas if the party's undertaking was for accommodation, he would be liable, though the holder did take the paper with notice or even with full knowledge, if he took it for value. The reason is not far to seek. Where the undertaking is for accommodation, the party makes an offer by way of gift, with full understanding, of his credit, intending to respond to any one who acts upon the offer; where the undertaking is supposed by the party making it to be for value when it is not, or when the value fails, he has acted in mistake, never intending to bind himself with consider- ation wanting. In the doctrines relating to suretyship and consideration are found the characteristic features of accommodation contracts. The object of the present chapter is only to call attention to and explain the general features of such contracts, as one of the forms of contract of the law mer- 1 See post, pp. 239, 240. 160 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. X. chant, to show that there are such contracts, and what in ■ general they are. The details concerning them will be dealt with more conveniently, as details of the same nat- ure arise in connection with the other contracts of our subject. Thus, dealings with the principal debtor in their effect upon subsequent parties, the extent of the liability of accommodation parties, and' other matters of detail will be considered in later chapters. Sect. I.] CONTEACTS OF GUARANTOR AND SURETY. 161 CHAPTER XI. CONTRACTS OF GUARANTOR AND OF SURETY. § 1. Annexing Contracts of the Common Law : Distinction of Teems. Thus far we have had tinder consideration contracts of the law merchant, with but occasional reference to con- tracts of the common law annexed to or connected with them. Those contracts having been severally explained, with reference to their peculiarities, nothing further would remain but a consideration of features common to them all, were it not that it often happens, as has frequently been intimaued in these pages, that some contract of the com- mon law, in the way of further assuring performance of the contract of the law merchant, has been added. The effect of adding such a contract, not upon the contract assured, for that remains unaffected, but upon the com- mon law contract itself is now, or will from time to time become, a matter of serious importance. But in order to understand how far the assuring contract has been affected by its connection with a contract of the law merchant, we must first ascertain the very nature of the assuring contract itself, that is, its natural ordinary char- acter, uninfluenced by such connection. Two terms are used to signify further assurance, namely, guaranty and suretyship. These terms are often loosely employed, the one for the other, and each made to express a certain broader meaning than, strictly taken, it bears. That is especially true of the use of the term surety or suretyship. But there are situations of fact which are u 162 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XI followed by very different rules of law, and these coincide with the meaning of the two terms in their narrower and more specific sense; at all events, it will serve a jjurpose of convenience, and at the same time prevent confusion, if we use the two terms in the more specific sense conforming to the situations of fact referred to. Accordingly, we may in the first place unite the terms guaranty and suretyship under the general designation of contracts of assurance, by which will then be meant any sub- sidiary contract intended to secure the performance of the contract or contracts assured. Then we may separate the contract of assurance into two parts ; first, supposing the assurance to be made as a separate and distinct collateral engagement, to which the name guaranty may be and com- monly is given, — guaranty, that is, in the specific sense; secondly, supposing the assurance to be part and parcel of the contract assured, being an engagement then to which the name suretyship may be and commonly is given, — suretyship, that is, again in the specific sense. We shall find important legal consequences flowing from that division. But both guaranty and suretyship are undertakings to an- swer ' for the debt or default of another ' within the meaning of the Statute of Frauds, and must accordingly be in writing and signed by the party to be bound or by his lawful agent. § 2. Guaranty (m specific sense). Proceeding to the subject of guaranty in the specific sense of a separate contract, it is obvious that the assuring contract may be made either at the same time with the contract or contracts assured, or afterwards, — or, indeed, before the principal contract was made; but cases of that kind are infrequent, and would raise no peculiar legal questions. The time of the guaranty raises certain ques- tions in regard to consideration. It should be observed that both the guaranty and the contract assured must be Sect. 2.] CONTRACTS OT" GUARANTOR AND SURETY. 163 supported by a valuable consideration. If the contract assured is wanting in that respect, the guaranty must fall to the ground, though itself founded upon a valuable con- sideration; and on the other hand, though the contract assured is well supported in that respect, if the guaranty is not well supported also, it must fail. The connection of the guaranty with a contract of the law merchant in no way affects the case. Where, however, the guaranty is made at the same time, that is, in the same general negotiations and substantially at the same time with the principal contract of the law merchant, it is not necessary that it should be supported by any separate coTisideration from that of the principal engagement. Both contracts being made at the same time, it matters not that the consideration more immediately and fully belongs to the principal one; the guaranty, though separate in form, in terms, and in effect, makes part of a general consideration; in other words, in common lan- guage of the books, the consideration which supports the principal contract supports the guaranty. At this point it is necessary to guard against a possible mistake. Does the guaranty now draw from the contract of the law merchant, which it assures, any of its proper- ties? In a suit upon the contract assured, the law merchant, as we have seen, raises a presumption of consideration to support the instrument when produced at the trial; does this presumption flow over to the guaranty ? The answer must be iu the negative, Not yet, certainly, has the guaranty gained anything from its connection with the more favored contract. A consideration to support the guaranty must be proved as m other cases of contracts of the common law, supposing that it is not under seal. The proof may or may not appear on the face of the guaranty or the principal con'tract; of which presently. Let it next be supposed that the guaranty is made at some other time, after (or before) the making of the prim- 164 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XI. cipal contract. Now it follows from the very requirement of a consideration to support the guaranty, that there must be a separate consideration to support the assuring engage- ment; that the consideration which supports the principal contract will not support the guaranty. There are one or two apparent exceptions; first, where the guaranty was agreed upon at the time of making the principal contract, and it was merely committed to writing afterwards by a sort of nunc pro tunc; and secondly, where the consider- ation is a continuous thing, running along at the time both of the principal contract and of the guaranty. Another question now arises touching consideration, regardless of the time when the guaranty was made; to wit, whether the interpretation to be put upon the Statute of Frauds in regard to the necessity of a statement of con- sideration in the guaranty is affected by the fact that the contract assured is a contract of the law merchant, by which there is a presumption of consideration. The answer is again in the negative. If, according to the interpretation put upon the Statute of Frauds in a par- ticular State, or according to special legislation, it is necessary in other cases that the guaranty itself should recite or refer to a consideration, it is equally necessary in the case of a guaranty of a bill, note, or cheque. It should then be observed that in some States language indicating a consideration should appear within the guaranty, and that it will not be enough that such lan- guage is found in the contract assured. For example (hypothetical): The defendant sued upon a guaranty writes the following words upon the back of a promis- sory note, the contract being performable in the State of New York: 'I guaranty the payment of this note.' The face of the note reads 'For value received I promise to pay to A, or order,' etc. The defendant, by the law of New York, is not liable, there being no reference to con- sideration in the guaranty. Sect. 2.] CONTRACTS OF GUARANTOR AND SURETY. 165 In other States the law is satisfied if there is a reference to consideration in the principal contract, as hy the words ' For value ' used in the last example. In still other States it is not necessary that there should be any statement of, or reference to, consideration in either the principal con- tract or the guaranty ; it is enough that a consideration to support the guaranty existed in fact, and the fact may be shown at the trial. The conclusion then is that in regard to the first pecu- liarity of the law merchant, consideration, a guaranty is little affected, if at all, by its connection with a contract of the law merchant. We may now inquire whether a guaranty is by such connection affected in the second peculiar feature of the law merchant, to wit, negotiability. In regard to that, it should be noticed that the question whether a guaranty becomes, or can become, negotiable by being annexed to a negotiable note, bill, or cheque, has two phases. The question may be (1) whether the guaranty, when written upon the note, bill, or cheque, operates as an indorsement so as to give a remote subsequent holder the rights of an indorsee against the guarantor as an indorser; or it may be (2) whether it operates as an indorsement so as to give the transferee the rights of an indorsee against prior parties. Both questions turn upon the same considerations, it seems, so that the answer to one must be taken as the answer to the other. Unfortunately the authorities are not agreed. The earlier American authorities appear to have treated an unrestricted guaranty made by the holder of the paper (usually a promissory note), and written upon it in trans- ferring it, as practically an indorsement; and in some States that view still prevails. That, of course, means that a general contract of guaranty, when written upon a negotiable contract of the law merchant, is to be taken as 166 BILLS, NOTES, AJSTD CHEQUES. [Chap. XI. a negotiable contract as of the law mercliant. For exam- ple : The defendant, payee of a negotiable promissory note, writes on the back of it, ' I guaranty the payment of the within note,' signing the same, and transfers the note to another who indorses it to the plaintiff. At maturity the plaintiff presents the note for payment, and payment being refused, gives notice at once to the defendant, as if he were an indorser. The writing quoted is deemed an in- dorsement, and the defendant's liability is duly fixed.^ But the question at once arises why should a contract of the common law, as such incapable of negotiabilitj', become negotiable by being written upon a negotiable instrument ? It is true that when written there by the holder, and fol- lowed by transfer, the holder parts with his title; but it does not follow that he parts with it as the law merchant requires in order to give the act the special features of the law merchant. Indeed, in so far as it departs in substance from the requirements of the law merchant, it falls short, or should fall short, of acquiring the features pertaining to an act done in conformity to such requirements. The law merchant knows nothing of guaranty, except in so far as indorsement is guaranty ; it requires indorsement to trans- fer full legal title to paper payable or indorsed to order, and what indorsement is, the law merchant has carefully and consistently laid down, as we have seen. Pursuing this or some such line of reasoning, certain later authorities have refused to follow the earlier ones, considering that a guar- anty is still a guaranty though written upon a negotiable instrument, and not an indorsement. For example: The defendant is maker, and the plaintiff transferee, of a prom- 1 Partridge v. Davis, 20 Vt. 499. So Myrick v. Hasey, 27 Maine, 9 ; Leggett V. Raymond, 6 Hill, 639 ; Manrow ;;. Durham, 3 Hill, 584. Bnt these New York cases were never satisfactory at home, and they have been overruled. Spies v. Gilmore, 1 Comst. 321 ; Hall v. Newcomb, 7 Hill, 416; Waterbury v. Sinclair, 26 Barb. 455. Sect. 2.] CONTRACTS OF GUARANTOR AND SURETY. 167 issory note payable to A. The only writing upon the note by A is in the words, ' I hereby guaranty the within note ; ' but with this writing upon it A transfers the note to F and L who indorse it to the plaintiff, who now as an indorsee sues the maker. The plaintiff is not entitled to recover, the writing quoted being a guaranty, and not an indorse- ment or the equivalent of an indorsement. ' Of course, the result of such a ruling is more than technical. It is not merely a ruling that the transferee cannot sue in his own name, a ruling which would be abrogated by statute in many States, it is a ruling that no perfect legal title, such as the law merchant recog- nizes, has been transferred. The tranferee has acquired no more than an equitable title; and hence his demand may be defeated by the existence of equities or defences which would be available by the defendant in a suit by the payee, regardless of the rule in whose name he should sue. The considerations above presented against allowing the guaranty to draw negotiability from the principal contract apply in principle, however general the language of the guaranty towards the holder. The contract, being a con. tract of the common law, is incapable of negotiability by any intention of the guarantor, however expressed, so long as his contract is expressed in the language of guaranty. Authorities, however, are not wanting which decline to take this strictly logical view; and, while not readily allow- ing negotiability to a simple guaranty of negotiable paper, allow negotiability to the guaranty if the intention to make it negotiable is plainly expressed upon the instru- ment assured.' It is probable, however, that the courts 1 Belcher v. Smith, 7 Cnsh. 482 ; Tuttle v. Bartholomew, 12 Met. 4.52, overruling Blakely !>. Grant, 6 Mass. 386, and Upham v. Prince, 14 Mass. 14. 2 The guaranty of bonds and similar instruments of corporations 168 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XI. which treat such a guaranty as negotiable would not strain the law further by allowing negotiability to a guaranty not written upon the note, bill, or cheque. And it is certain that there could be no such thing as a negotiable guaranty of an unnegotiable instrument. In regard to the third peculiarity of contracts of the law merchant, grace, no serious question can be raised. The guaranty itself does not draw grace from the law merchant, and is not entitled to grace under any other law, while the contract assured may or may not be. But of course there can be no breach of the guaranty until there is a breach of the principal contract, which cannot occur until the last day of grace, if the principal contract is entitled to grace. One question more remains : Does a guaranty draw from the negotiable instrument assured the properties of indorse- ment touching presentment and notice ? Those courts which treat the guaranty as practically an indorsement for the purpose of negotiability would probably be driyen to the conclusion that the guarantor would have the right to insist upon all the steps which an indorser could require. Otherwise the contract would be very anomalous; it would be indorsement and not indorsement at the same time. Those courts, however, which decline to treat a guaranty as the equivalent of an indorsement will find no difficulty now; the guaranty not being indorsement, the steps to fix the liability of an indorser cannot be required to fix the lia- bility of a guarantor. The guaranty stands ujion its own footing as a common law contract ; what is required touching it in that aspect is now required, and nothing more. stands upon a footing of its own. Custom or statute makes the guaranty negotiable in such cases. The text refers only to private written guaranties. Sect. 2.] CONTRACTS OF GUARANTOR AND SURETY. 169 What has been said thus far must be understood as applicable to cases already referred to of anomalous indorsement — ' indorsement ' by a stranger to secure the payee — whether such cases are called cases of guaranty or of suretyship. We are now brought to suretyship in the specific sense mentioned in section 1, namely, where the assurance is part and parcel of the contract assured. And that subject may be more shortly disposed of. The two engagements now are one, as where the instru- ment runs, in common form, 'I, A B, as principal, and I, C D, as surety, promise ' etc., or 'We promise to pay ' etc. followed by the signatures 'A B,' 'C D, surety.' And accordingly the consideration which supports the engage- ment of the principal supports that of the surety; there can be no occasion for any separate consideration to sup- port the latter's contract. But the contract being within the Statute of Frauds, the same doctrine in regard to reference to consideration prevails as in the case of guar- anty. Now, however, the contract of principal and surety being one, the only requirement that can be made, in the nature of things, in those States in which there must be a reference to consideration, is in the one contract signed by both principal and surety. It should be noticed in regard to that point that the contract, in such States, may be good against the principal and, for want of reference to consideration, bad against the surety ; indeed it would be bad against both if the contract is joint. No question of course can arise in regard to negotiability. The surety's contract being part of the principal's contract, it is, of necessity as much a contract of the law merchant as the principal's contract itself. And the same is to be said in regard to grace, and in regard to presentment and to most other questions. 170 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XII. CHAPTER XII. HOLDER'S POSITION. § 1. Change of Poinx of View. Thus far we have been investigating the several par- ticular contracts of our subject, in other words, the several positions of the parties liable; now we come to the con- sideration of questions arising on the opposite side of the law, — questions which in general affect ajike all the particular contracts heretofore under consideration. These questions will relate mainly to mediate parties ; that is, to cases in which the holder is separated by at least one link from the defendant, the plaintiff accordingly being either an indorsee, or the payee of a bill of exchange. The sub- ject of rights of immediate parties has been indirectly dis- posed of already. § 2. Eight to Sue Mediate Pakty. The first thing that calls for remark is that the right of the holder to sue mediate parties is a right given by the law merchant in its adoption of the custom of merchants as explained in Chapter I. That right is as perfect, when the plaintiff holds the paper conformably with the custom, as the right to sue an immediate party can be under the common law. And further, as a mere right to sue, that is, leaving out of sight any other question, the right rests upon the same footing substantially as the right of any other plaintiff suing upon a written contract of the com- mon law; possession of the instrument thus held raises, Sect. 2.] HOLBER'S POSITION. 171 in favor of the plaintiff, a presumptive right to it, and after maturity a presumptive right of action upon it, a right of action against mediate as well as against immediate parties. How significant that right may be, may be seen in the statement that it will support the plaintiff in the face (1) of an admission that he holds the paper only as agent or as trustee for another, for still the law presumes that he holds it rightfully until the contrary is shown; (2) of evidence offered even to show that it is not iTriprohahle that he holds it as agent for another against whom the defendant has a set-off or a defence. Something more is necessary than evidence showing that it is very likely that the plaintiff has no right to the paper, or right of action upon it, after he has produced it in evidence in court with the presumption of title in his favor, and, with that, the presumption of consideration. For example: The plaintiff in a suit upon a promissory note payable to a certain corporation or bearer offers the note in evidence of his title and right to recover. The defendant denies that the plaintiff is the ' bearer ' and owner of the note, alleging that it is the property of said corporation, against which the defendant has, and desires to plead, a valid set- off. The plaintiff is in fact the general agent of said corporation, having custody of all notes belonging to it; the corporation is insolvent and has no property, and the stockholders, of whom the plaintiff is one, are liable for its debts. The plaintiff is entitled to recover, and the defendant cannot have the benefit of the set-off; the evi- dence offered is not sufBcient to rebut the presumption in favor of the plaintiff.^ ' Pettee v. Pront, 3 Gray, 502 ; L. C. 385. 172 BILLS, NOTES, AM) CHEQUES. [Chap. XH. § 3. Legal Defences and Equities explained. Assuming now that no question of title to or ownership of the paper is raised, the plaintiff's right to recover will depend upon the defence set up, which may be either absolutely or presumptively sufficient. There are then two classes of defences : to the first of which, where the defence is absolute, is sometimes and may for convenience be given the name Legal or Absolute Defences ; to the second, where the defence is presumptively sufficient, is given the name Equities. These terms, however, must not be taken in their ordi- nary sense; in that sense they would be misleading. Equities are legal defences in the ordinary sense of defences available in suits at law, quite as much as those called legal defences. The term ' equities ' is borrowed from the Court of Chancery, to express a merely outward, and after all, rather faint analogy. By an ancient rule of the Court of Chancery, adopted in modern times at law, a man who buys a legal title to property with notice of the existence in another of an equitable title takes subject to that title; he has notice of an equity. So (so far as the analogy can be traced) one who purchases or otherwise becomes owner of a bill, note, or cheque, with notice of the existence of a defence which is not absolute ('legal'), takes s^ibject to that defence; he has notice of an ' equity.' The equity of which he has notice may be a perfect and complete defence between immediate parties to it, as where it consists in fraudulent misrepresentation; but it is only a presumptive defence against a mediate or remote holder; if the holder took the paper for value and without notice, or stands upon the rights of another who so took, the ' equity ' will not avail. The meaning given to the two terms, respectively, may be thus explained : Legal or absolute defences import either Sect. 3.] HOLDER'S POSITION. 173 want of contract, that is, want of union of minds, want of capacity, downright illegality of contract (that is, a con- tract which the law wholly repudiates), alteration of the original contract, or forgery of indorsement. No liability can exist in such cases, even in favor of a bona fide holder for value. Equities, on the other hand, imply the exist- ence of a contract between prior parties, but a contract which is invalid and hence defeasible in whole or in part. Between the parties immediately concerned, and against subsequent holders without value or having notice, these equities are perfect defences ; but against a bona fide holder for value they are of no avail. The two subjects must now be considered in detail. First, then, of Legal or Absolute Defences. That subject is considered here because it almost always appears in contests in regard to the rights of bona fide holders for value. The question then will be, what are these legal defences r'^njnst which not even a bona fide holder for value can recover ? To prevent possible misapprehension, it should be stated that in strictness of language these are not defences at all ; for it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove the existence of the contract upon which he seeks to recover. That important fact should not be obscured. The term ' defences,' in the cases about to be considered, is to be taken conventionally; and such use of the term is com- mon enough. Thus, the books speak of the ' defence ' of want of consideration in actions upon simple contract, though it is^or the plaintiff to prove the consideration. But there is better justification for the use of the term in relation to the present subject, because after all the defendant has the laboring oar for the greater part. The plaintiff, who now is usually a bona fide holder for value, makes a presumptive case rather easily, and then the defendant must do what he can to save himself. 174 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIII. CHAPTER XIII. LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. § 1. Want of Contract: Delivery. The first of the legal or absolute defences, in the face of which, not the most favored plaintiff in the law, to wit, a bona fide holder for value, can recover, is where there is an absence of that which is essential to the crea- tion of any contract, to wit, union of minds. Cases of the kind in the law of bills and notes "commonly arise, (1) Where there has been either nothing which the law regards as a delivery of the instrument; or (2) Where, though there has been a delivery, the defendant has been made the victim of a fraud in regard to the nature of the alleged contract to which he has given his signature, or fraud (as it may be termed) in esse contractus; or (3) Where there has been an alteration in or forgery of some part of the instrument. These subjects will be considered in the order suggested ; incapacity and illegality by statute will follow. The subject of delivery cannot be disposed of by the statement that if there has been no delivery of the instru- ment in question, there can be no recovery upon it, for it will still be a question what is meant by delivery. And besides, the statement might be misleading; for though there may have been no delivery by the maker or acceptor, upon which any liability against him can arise, there may still have been a delivery for the purpose of creating lia- bility against some other party. Thus, a servant may have stolen a promissory note signed by his master, from his SECT. 1.] LEGAL OB ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 175 master's drawer, and then have indorsed it and put it into circulation; in such a case, while there would be no delivery by the maker of the note so as to make him liable, there has been a delivery by the servant, and he and subsequent parties have incurred liability as much as if the maker had delivered the note. Delivery in the law merchant is peculiar, not so much in the principle upon which it rests as in the not infre- quent application of the principle. It is of the greatest importance that there should be a feeling of safety in purchasing a negotiable instrument, and therefore the principle of delivery is sometimes to be pressed to the utmost limit. Delivery may be effected either by inten- tion or by negligence; that probably is a general principle, applying equally to other instruments as with instruments of the law merchant; but it is often carried further in the law merchant than elsewhere. It is not quite the same thing to say, as the books often say, that delivery may be actual or constructive, for both actual and constructive delivery may be delivery by intention; and why any delivery which has the full effect of delivery should be called constructive it is difficult to see. Such nomen- clature adds, unnecessarily, a term to the situation which requires an explanation leading to nothing. Delivery is effected by intention where either the de- fendant himself delivered the instrument knowingly, or where the act is done knowingly by an agent, servant, or (it seems) custodian of the defendant, though contrary to the orders of the defendant. That is, there is either a per- sonal act by the defendant or an agency act. Such cases are clear enough in principle, but agency in the matter has sometimes perhaps been misunderstood. Thus, it has in one or two cases been supposed that where the instru- ment has been put into the hands of a mere custodian, — one, that is to say, having nothing to do but to keep 176 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIII. it — the rule of agency does not apply, and hence a violar tion of the trust by delivery of the instrument could not create any right against the party whose confidence had thus been betrayed.' But that, not unlikely, may be wrong; it is not supported by the authorities upon which it is professedly based.'' It is true that a mere custodian is not even a special agent, in the law of agency in general; but it does not follow that he may not be treated as an agent by the law merchant. It is in this very particular, for one, that the law merchant is peculiar touching delivery; mercantile interests require the protection of the purchaser of the instrument in all cases in which it has come into his hands by an act of the defendant, by which he has inten- tionally parted with physical possession of it. Delivery is effected by negligence when the defendant has done or omitted to do something contrary to the dic- tates of common prudence or care, — that is, contrary to what a man as prudent or careful as men usually are would do or omit, — whereby as the natural result, a result which might have been foreseen, the instrument has got into circulation. It would not be enough that the instrument got into circulation by reason of an act or an omission of the defendant; he should have been negligent, and negli- gent in reference to the very act of putting the paper into circulation,' just as in the case of intentional delivery he 1 Chipman u. Tucker, 38 Wis. 43 ; Roberts u. McGrath, Id. 52 ; ■ Roberts v. Wood, Id. 60. ^ Burson u. Huntington, 21 Mich. 415 ; Baxendale v. Bennett, 3 Q. B. Div. 525. These were cases in which the paper was stolen, a very different thing. Very different too are the Wisconsin cases of Walker v. Ebert, 29 Wis. 194, and Kellogg v. Steiner, Id. 626 ; these were cases of fraud in esse contractus, like Foster v. Mackinnon, infra, in which there has been no conscious execution of the contract. ' Compare Merchants of the Staple v. Bank of England, 21 Q. B. Div. 160 ; Swan v. North British Co., 2 Hurl. & N. 175, 182 ; Arnold v. Sect. 1.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 177 should have parted with physical possession intentionally. If this be sound doctrine, it will follow that where the instrument got into circulation by being dropped, picked up, and passed, there has been no delivery, unless the dropping was negligent; possibly to drop a negotiable instrument, transferable by delivery, would be presump- tive negligence.^ But a distinction is necessary at this point. If the paper has once been delivered by the maker or acceptor, whether hy intention or by negligence, no question of delivery can be raised by him, upon a loss and finding afterwards, where the paper has come to the hands of a bona fide holder for value. The maker or acceptor has delivered the paper, and that is enough so far as the ques- tion of his liability is concerned; if any one can raise the question of delivery in such a case it is only the person who lost the instrument, and at best he could do it only in an action brought against him as an indorser, — the holder would have a perfect right to the instrument. If there be doubt about such cases, it is clear that where there has been no delivery at all, in either of the two general ways mentioned, no liability can arise against the party, maker or acceptor, from whom the paper was taken. Thus it is laid down that where a negotiable instrument is stolen or fraudulently taken from the accep- tor or maker, such party cannot be required to pay it to any holder whatever; and that too though the acceptor or maker may have made the theft or fraud easy by putting the paper in an unlocked drawer in a desk to which clerks Cheque Bank, 1 C. P. D. 578 ; Bank of Ireland v. Evans Charities, 5 H. L. Cas. 389 ; holding that the result must come about in or in imme- diate connection with the negligent act or omission. See Bigelow, Estoppel, 655-659, 5th ed. ; also Bank of England v. Vagliano, 1891, A. C. 107, 115, 135, 136, 170, 171. ' Compare Chicopee Bank v. Philadelphia Bank, 8 Wall. 641 ; L. C. 202. 12 178 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIII. and servants and others had access.^ For example: The plaintiff is bona fide holder for value of a promissory note signed by the defendant, and now sued upon. A third person fraudulently obtains it from the defendant upon the false representation that he is taking something else, and puts it into circulation. The defendant is not liable; there has been no delivery by him or by any act attribu- table to him.'^ The doctrine of estoppel, sometimes applied, but for the most part doubtfully at least, against the person from whom the instrument has escaped, should never, it is well laid down, be invoked without necessity. It should be applied only in cases where the person against whom it is set up has so conducted himself, in what he has done or omitted, that, unless estopped, he would be doing some- thing contrary to his former conduct in what he then did or omitted. That principle does not apply to a case of theft or the like, even though the party stolen from was negligent; for theft is not the natural consequence of neg- ligence, though the negligence make it possible.^ Nor in any case of negligence, even without theft or other criminal or fraudulent act, does estoppel apply unless the negligence was in or in immediate connection with putting the paper into circulation; ^ the negligence must have been the cause, the proximate, legal cause, of what happened.^ The statement then sometimes found even in books of the law of bills and notes, that whenever one of two innocent persons must suffer by the act of a third person, ^ Baxendale r. Bennett, 3 Q. B. Div. 525. 2 See Burson v. Huntington, 21 Mich. 415 ; Gibbs v. Linabury, 22 Mich. 479 ; Chapman v. Rose, 56 N. Y. 137 ; Kellogg v. Steiner, 29 Wis. 626 ; Corby v. Weddle, 57 Mo. 452 ; 1 Bigelow, Fraud, 618, 619. 8 Baxendale v. Bennett, snpra, Bramwell, L. J. * See Arnold ... Cheque Bank, 1 C. P. D. 578, and other cases in note 3, p. 176. 5 See Bank of England v. Vagliano, 1891, A. C. 107, 135, and other cases in note 3, p. 176. Sect. 2.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 179 he who has enabled such third person to bring about the loss must bear the loss, is too broad ; ' ample confirmation will be found as we proceed. The statement indeed, like many another started when judges were feeling after the law, 'if haply they might find it,' is a dangerous one, so much so that the danger fairly overbalances its usefulness. § 2. Want of Contkact: Feaud in Esse Contractus. Fraud in esse -contractus, aa we have designated the other case of want of contract, is fraud in or by which consent, or union of minds in the supposed contract, was prevented. The case is to be distinguished sharply from fraud in its more common form of misrepresentation of facta touching the inducement or desirability of the con- tract, or the fraud of an agent in wrongfully filling up and delivering a blank instrument, signed by his principal. That sort of fraud does not prevent consent or union of minds in the contract ; it only makes a case in which it is or may be probable that there would have been no such consent and contract as took place, had the state of things in the one case been known by the defendant, or in the other had the instrument been under his control at the moment. Fraud of that kind creates an equity only, not a legal defence. Fraud in esse contractus may be committed in any of the various contracts with which we are concerned, and in a variety of ways ; enough that consent to the particular alleged contract was never given. One of the forms which fraud of the kind assumes is misrepresentation (not of facts of inducement, but) of the very kind of contract which the party is induced to sign, or by the substitu- tion, unperceived or misunderstood by such party, of the paper he intended to sign for another which he did not intend to sign. For example: The plaintiff is bona 1 See Arnold v. Cheque Bank, supra. 180 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIIL fide holder for value of a bill of exchange, upon which there is an indorsement in the handwriting of the defen- dant, upon which indorsement the suit is brought. The defendant, a man advanced in years, is induced to write his name upon the back of the bill bj' the fraud of the acceptor in telling the defendant that the contract he is signing is a guaranty; only the back of the paper being shown. The defendant had previously signed a guarantj' at the request of the same person, for the same purpose and amount, and he is now led to suppose that he is signing a similar guaranty to the former one (out of which no liabil- itj- resulted). There has been no negligence by the defendant. The plaintiff is not entitled to recnver, the defendant having been deceived, not in respect of the legal effect, but of the actual contents of the instruments.' That shows again that the statement that whenever one of two innocent parties must suffer by the act of a third person, he who has enabled such third person to bring about the loss must bear the loss, can only be accepted with important qualifications.^ The proposition is too broad even in cases of negligence, as was seen in speak- ing of delivery; and in the example last given there was not even negligence. The burden of the loss cannot be shifted over to the shoulders of one who never contracted, though his act or conduct may have been the occasion, if it was not the cause, of the loss. ' Foster v. Mackiniion, L. R. 4 C. f . 704 ; L. C. 554. Compare cer- tain statutory cases of tricks or devices by which men have been induced liv travelling agents for patent-rights and other thmgs to sign promis- sory notes. Champion v. Ulmer, 70 111. 320. See Gibbs v. Linabury, 22 Mich. 479. ' If that statement were true, a man might be. held. as maker of a promissory note who had merely written his name upon a blank sheet of paper which another had afterwards fraudulently filled out as a promise to pay money. Of course no lial>illty towards any one could be created in such a case. See Cline v. Guthrie, 42 Ind. 227 ; Caulkins i,-. Whisler, 29 Iowa, 495. Sect. 3.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 181 § 3. Want of Contract: Alteration : Foegekt: Estoppel. Another case of want of contract arises where there has been a material, unauthorized alteration of the instrument to which the defendant gave his signature. The author- ities in general declare that to alter the terms, written or printed, of a negotiable note, bill, or cheque, after the defendant's signature was written to it, is to destroy its validity against him, even in the hands of a bona fide holder for value. The reason is plain. The altered instru- ment is not the one he signed; and the identity of the one signed has been destroyed.^ A material alteration within the meaning of the rule stated may be defined thus : Any alteration (1) changing the legal effect of the instrument, (2) made with such intent, or being a final act, (3) without consent, (4) by a party to it, or by one in lawful possession of it, is a material alteration. The divisions of the definition as here given will serve as the basis of an analysis of the subject. First, then, of alterations ' changing the legal effect of the instrument.' It was at one time considered, and it is still occasionally intimated, that a fraudulent alteration, material or not, would destroy the instrument, because perhaps of the wrongful intent; ^ but that doctrine has 1 Wade V. Withington, 1 Allen, 561; Draper v Ward, 112 Mass. 315 , Aldrich v. Smith, 37 Mich. 468. 2 Pigot's Case, 11 Coke, 27 a, comment on 2d resolution. The word 'fraudulent' is not used there; but in its application to immaterial alterations, the language must, it seems, be understood as referring to a fraudulent intent. ' If the obligee himself,' as Coke comments in the passage referred to, ' alters the deed . . . although it is in words not material, yet the deed is void.' 182 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIII. been generally abandoned. An immaterial alteration then cannot, by the current of authority, have the effect to prevent recovery upon the paper. For example ; the plaintiff is holder for value, and the defendant, maker of a promissory note sued upon, which does not state any time of paj'ment. The plaintiff afterwards writes in the words ' on demand,' without the defendant's consent and with fraudulent intent. The plaintiff is entitled to recover notwithstanding the alteration, the note being originally payable on demand in legal effect.^ Again: The plaintiff is holder for value of an instrument made by the defen- dant, promising to pay a certain sum of money, upon a condition expressed therein, to a person named. The payee afterwards writes in the words ' or bearer ' without the defendant's consent. The defendant's liability remains unchanged} the contract, being incapable of negotiability as it was executed, could not be made negotiable by adding the words in question.^ A like case would be made where, after a change of law not governing the instrument in question, an alteration in it is made expressing no more than what was embraced in the law by which the instrument was governed.' Another case of the kind would arise where an alteration was made conforming to the true intention of the parties, correcting a mistake in the writing.^ So to add the words ' with grace ' to paper entitled b}' law to grace, or ' without grace ' to paper not entitled to grace ; and so to add the legal rate of interest, as 'at six per cent,' after the words 1 Aldous V. Cornwell, L. R. 3 Q. B. 573, overruling Bigot's Case, 2d resolution. See Goodenow v. Curtis, 33 Mich. 505 ; Curtis v. Goode- now, 24 Mich. 18. But see Bridges v. Winters, 42 Miss. 135. ''■ Goodenow v. Curtis, and Curtis v. Goodenow, supra. ' Bridges v. Winters, 42 Miss. 135. * McRaven v. Crisler, 53 Miss. 542 ; Clute v. Small, 17 Wend. 238 ; Herrey v. Harvey, 15 Maine, 357. But see Miller v. Gilleland, 19 Penn, St. 119, by a divided court. Sect. 3.] LEGAL OE ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 183 ' with interest,' — such additions are immaterial ; they have no effect upon the validity of the instrument. In such cases it makes no difference whether the defendant has consented to the alteration or not; and so of all other cases in which the alteration is immaterial. It would be difficult to show what alterations are such as to change the legal effect of the instrument, in any other way than by specific Cases. And then, too, it should be remembered that we are dealing with but part of the defi- nition, and that all the other parts of it must also be met to make a material alteration. In other words, though in a particular case the alteration appears to change the legal effect of the instrument, it may appear that it was not ' made with such intent, or being a final act, ' or one of the other facts may be wanting to make it material. The following are some of the cases in which the alter- ation changes, or appears to change, the legal effect of the instrument : An alteration of the date of the instrument ; ' changing ' I promise 'to 'we promise, ' for such change would convert a several, or a joint and several, into a joint promise; " the addition of an interest clause to an instru- ment completed without it,' as for example, ' to bear legal interest,' * or ' interest payable annually' or 'semi-annually, ' ' quarterly ' or otherwise ; ^ striking out the words ' after maturity' where interest is made so payable ;° changing the name of the payee; ' changing 'to the order of A ' to ' Vance c. Lowther, 1 Ex. D. 176; Wood v. Steele, 6 Wall 80, Britton u. Dierker, 46 Mo. 591 ; Emmona v. Meeker, 55 Ind. 321 ; Kennedy v. Lancaster Bank, 18 Penn. St. 347. 2 Humplireys v. Gwillow, 13 N. H. 385. 3 Holmes v. Trumper, 22 Mich. 427 ; L. C. 544 ; Glover v. Bobbins, 49 Ala. 219. As to filling blanks in such cases, see infra. ^ Lochnane v. Emmerson, 11 Bush, 69. 5 Marsh v. Griffin, 42 Iowa, 403 , Blakey k. Johnson, 13 Bush, 197 , Lamar v. Brown, 56 Ala. 157. ' Brooks V. Allen, 62 Ind. 401. ■ Stoddard v. Penniman, 108 Mass. 366 ; s. c. 113 Mass. 386. 184 BILLS, NOTES, ANB CHEQUES. [Chap XIII. ' to A or bearer; ' ' adding the words ' payable at the Bank of S, ' ^ though it seems that an acceptor may make a bill payable at no designated place payable at any particular place he will within the town in which by lawit is pay- able;' adding another name to that of the maker of a note,^ though the case appears to be different where another surety is added, upon delivery, to a note or bill already executed by a surety;* adding an attestation clause, for that produces a possible and probable change in the evidence of execution, proof of the signature of the attesting witness proving the execution.' 'Made with such intent, or being a final act.' It may be that the alteration was the result of an accident, as where the intention was to make the change in another instrument; or it may be due to mistake in regard to the terms of agreement, or in computation of amount, or in some other particular. When that is the case, it seems that the identity of the instrument is not destroyed. If the new words have been added merely, they may in principle be struck out by the one who added them on discovering the 1 Union Bank v. Roberts, 45 "Wis. .37.3. 2 Southwarlc Bank v. Gross, 35 Penn. St. 80 ; Nazro v. Fuller, 24 Wend. 374; Whitesides v. Northern Bank, 10 Bush, 501; Burchfield „■. Moore, 3 El. & B. 683. 3 Troy Bank u. Lauman, 19 N. Y. 477. See Todd t-. Bank of Kentucky, 3 Bush, 626 ; Whitesides v. Northern Bank, supra ; of the right of an accommodation acceptor of a bill payable generally to designate a particular place of payment. * Hamilton v. Hooper, 46 Iowa, 515 ; Lunt v. Silver, 5 Jlo. App. 186 ; Haskell v. Champion, 30 Mo. 136; Crandall c. First Nat. Bank, 61 Ind. 349; Wallace u. Jewell, 21 Ohio St. 163; Gardner f. ^Valsh, 5 El. & B. 83. 6 Crandall v. First Nat. Bank, supra; Keith v. Goodwin, 31 Vt. 268, distinguishing Gardner v. Walsh, supra, and like cases, on the ground that the addition was made after the instrument had been delivered. ^ Adams v. Frye, 3 Met. 103. Sect. 3.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 185 facts; or if they are written over an erasure of the original words, and the original words cannot well be restored, they may stand, and the explanation be given at the trial.* The right to make such correction appears to be limited to the person who made the change, including possibly his agents and personal representatives. After the paper has passed from his hands it is too late, for his indorsee will have taken the paper as altered, and the only right he can have is upon the altered paper. He did not take it as it stood originally, and hence cannot restore it to its original form even where that would be physically practicable. The alteration has been allowed to stand by the party who made it, and so has permanently changed the paper; it has become ' a final act.' Nor would it make any differ- ence, it seems, that the party who made the alteration did not discover his mistake until after he had transferred the instrument; after transferring it, his rights over it are gone. The difference between material alterations made by mistake, and alterations made with intent to change the legal effect of the instrument, is plain; in the case of mistake, the object of the act is to restore the writing to the terms agreed upon; in the case of intelligent inten- tion to change, the object is to destroy the writing as evidence of the terms actually agreed upon. That will serve to explain some of the apparent contradictions of the authorities. Thus, it is laid down that a material altera- tion by a party will destroy the instrument whether it was fraudulent or not; ^ and it is also laid down that a material alteration will not destroy the instrument if it was not fraudulent.' Both statements are true. The case usually 1 Compare Horst v. Wagner, 43 Iowa, 373 ; Krause u. Meyer, 32 Iowa, 566. ^ Draper v. Ward, supra. 8 Kountz V. Kennedy, 63 Penn. St. 187. 186 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIII, presented is one in which the alteration was suffered to remain, and the paper passed as altered to the plaintiff. The alteration is final, and authority conforms to prin- ciple, that the plaintiff, though a bona fide holder, cannot maintain an action in such a case against any of the non- consenting parties who signed the paper as it stood before the alteration. For example : The plaintiff is payee for value of what purports to be a promissory note signed by the defendants. The instrument originally read: 'For value received /promise to pay,' etc., 'with interest,' and so was signed by two persons, the defendants. The note thus executed was for the benefit of the first signer, who afterwards changes the word 'I' to 'we,' and adds after the word ' interest ' the words ' at twelve per cent, ' without the other defendant's knowledge, supposing him- self to have the right to do so, the rate of interest not having been agreed upon when the note was executed, but being afterwards fixed between the first defendant and the plaintiff as inserted. Then the instrument so altered is delivered to the plaintiff. The plaintiff is not entitled to recover against the second defendant, either upon the instrument in its altered or in its original form, though the alteration was not fraudulent.^ Hence, the first of the two apparently contradictory propositions is true. But the party having made an inno- cent mistake, in making the alteration, may, while the instrument is still in his own hands, discover his mistake and desire to correct it, restoring the instrument to its original state. The alteration not having become final, that may be done, or the case may be treated as if it had been done, or as if no alteration had been made, if actual restoration is impracticable. Hence, the second of the two propositions also is correct. This explanation may not indeed align with some of the authorities, for the second ^ Draper v. Ward, supra. Sect. 3.J LEGAL OE ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 187 proposition has misled the courts in some cases, causing them to hold in general that material alterations which are not fraudulent are not fatal to the instrument ; but the explanation, it is believed, shows a sound distinction.^ The general rule then may be expanded and stated thus : If the bill, note, or cheque be altered in a material par- ticular, either by fraud or by an innocent mistake not corrected while the paper is in the hands of the party who made the alteration, it will be destroyed towards all non- consenting parties, and that too whether the alteration was made bj' the party claiming under it or by any other party to it. And no action can be maintained against non-consenting parties, either upon the altered instrument or upon the instrument as it stood before alteration, even by a bona fide holder for value. ^ The fact that tbe instru- ment maj' have been restored to its original form (after having been passed with the alteration) makes no differ- ence.^ Nor is the alteration to be deemed immaterial by reason of the fact that it is favorable to the defendant,* for still its legal effect is changed, and the identity of the contract signed is destroyed.^ 1 The Pennsylvania courts permit recovery by a bona fide holder for value to the amount of the instrument as originally executed, when the sum has been raised in such a way as not to excite the suspicion of a man in ordinary business. Worrall v. Gheen, 39 Penn. St. 388 ; Garrard v. Haddan, 67 Penn. St. 82 ; Phelau v. Moss, Id. 59. See also Brown v. Eeed, 79 Penn. St. 370 ; Neff v. Horner, 63 Penn. St. 327. That is very well if the alteration was not fraudulent or other- wise final ; but the Pennsylvania cases do not make the distinction. ^ See besides the cases supra, Smith v. Mace, 44 N. H. 553 ; Holmes V. Trumper, 22 Mich. 427 ; L. C. 544; Greenfield Bank v. Stowell, 123 Mass. 196; Citizens' Bank a. Richmond, 121 Mass. 110; Woolfolk v. Bank of America, 10 Bush, 504, 517 ; Morehead v. Parkersburg Bank, 5 W. Va. 74 ; Burchfield v.. Moore, 3 El. & B. 683. 8 Citizens' Bank v. Richmond, supra. 4 Humphreys v. Gwillow, 13 N. H. 385, 387. s Id. ; Draper v. Ward, 1 Allen, 561 ; Chism v. Toomer, 27 Ark. 108. 188 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. SHI. 'Without consent.' Consenting parties cannot setup an alteration; and, among others, all who have signed the contract after the alteration are consenting parties, with one exception to be stated presently. Thus, if an alteration in the date of a bill of exchange was made with the consent of the acceptor, or if he subsequently assented to it, he will be bound, and so will all other parties to it becoming such after the alteration; while the prior non- consenting parties may repudiate the instrument.^ The exception referred to arises in the acceptance of a bill of exoliange. A bill may have been altered after it left the drawer's hands and before acceptance; in such a case, though the acceptor appears to have accepted the bill in its altered form, he has not done so in law, — he has pre- sumably intended to accept the bill which the drawer drew. Tf he accepted the bill without notice of the altera- tion, and without negligence, he is not bound by his act. For example : The defendants being bona fide holders for value of a bill of exchange drawn upon the plaintiffs, the bill is presented to the plaintiffs for acceptance, and accepted, an alteration of the sum payable, of the date, and of the payee's name, having been made in it after it passed from the drawer's hands and before acceptance. The acceptance was without notice of the alteration and without negligence. Afterwards the plaintiffs pay the bill, and then on discovering the alteration bring the present suit to recover back the sum paid. They are entitled to recover.^ The reason is plain. The drawee of a bill of exchange accepts, if he does accept, on the ground that payment 1 Paton V. Winter, 1 Taunt. 420 ; Tarleton v. Shingler, 7 C. B. 812. '^ Compare Bank of Commerce v. Union Bank, 3 Comst. 230, bill paid at sight. See Clews v. Bank of New York, 89 N. Y.418. Accepl^ ance is an admission of the drawer's hand (as will be seen later), but not of the rest of the writing. Id. Sect. 3.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEEENCES. 189 by him gives him the right to charge the amount to the drawer as payment made upon the drawer's order ; * he would not accept except upon that footing, or upon the undertaking of some one else to protect him. But where the bill is altered after it has left the drawer's hands, the acceptor cannot on payment make such charge ; the drawer has not directed him to pay the altered bill. Acceptance, then, is not an admission of the genuineness of the con- tents of the bill, so as to work an estoppel against him in favor of a bona fide holder for value. If, however, the drawer himself has altered the bill, or consented to the alteration of it, after drawing it, the case will be different, for he will then have directed the drawee to accept and pay the bill as altered. That distinction must be taken as the explanation of one or two cases which at first maj^ seem to hold broadly that acceptance of an altered bill makes the acceptor liable upon the bill as altered. For example : The plaintiff is payee of a bill of exchange accepted by the defendant and now sued upon. The bill as originally drawn was payable three days after date, and in that condition was indorsed by the payee for the accommodation of the drawer, who now changes the word 'three' to 'thirty,' and passes the bill to A. The fact is afterwards discovered, and an arrangement made by which the bill is returned by A to the plaintiff; then it is accepted by the defendant without knowledge or notice of the alteration. The defendant is liable.^ 1 Compare the language of the court in Hortsman v. Henshaw, U How. 177. V 2 Ward V. Allen, 2 Met. 53. There were other complicating facts in this case, but they have no bearing upon the point now under consider- ation. The first head-note of the case is too broad. In Langton v. Lazarus, 5 Mees. & W. 629, also, the alteration was made by the drawer. That must be understood as the essential fact in reference to the acceptor's liability. 190 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIIL 'By a party to it or by one in lawful possession of it.' An alteration made by a stranger has no effect upon the validity of the instrument if it is possible to show what its language was before the act; the alteration must be made by a party, or by one in lawful possession, — all others are strangers, — in order to destroy the instrument.^ By a ' party ' is meant any one who has placed his signa- ture to it, or has been owner of or interested in the instru- ment; by 'one in lawful possession,' any one to whom the owner or other person interested in the instrument lias intrusted it.' If the blank has been wrongfully filled by one who has been intrusted with the instrument, with power to till the blank or not in a certain contingency, the act will not constitute a material alteration, though the paper was delivered as complete. The case is one of agency, and the party whose confidence has been betrayed, that is, the principal, will be bound m favor of a bona fide holder for value.* That assumes, however, that no alteration of the written or printed language is made,* unless the facts indicate an authority to alter.' The mere fact that one who has been acting as authorized agent of the defendant made the alteration will not bind the supposed principal, for agency confers no authority to commit a crime.' No relation of agency exists between co-signers as such of an instrument; and hence an altera- tion made by one co-maker of a promissory note, without the consent of the others, though before delivery, if the 1 Langenberger v. Kroeger, 48 Cal. 147 ; Brooks v. Allen, 62 Incl 401 , iEtna lire. Co. v. Wiuchester, 43 Conn. 391. 2 See Brooks v. Allen and jEtna Ins. Co. v. Wincliester, supra. ' Belknap v. National Bank, 100 Mass. 376, 381 ; Greenfield Bank V Stowell, 123 Mass. 196, 203. ^ Belknap v. National Bank, snpra. 5 .(Etna Ins. Co. v. Winchester, 43 Conn. 391. 8 Id. ; Brooks v. Allen, 62 Ind, 401 . Sect. 3 ] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 191 other makers have already signed, is a destruction of the instrument towards the latter.* Thus far of the meaning of the term 'material alteration.' But suppose that the defendant, being maker of a promis- sory note, or drawer of a bill of exchange or a cheque, has facilitated the alteration, as for example, by leaving a blank space in the instrument, which has afterwards been fraudulentlj' filled out, is he now estopped or barred from setting up the alteration? It must be understood that the case under consideration is one in which the instrument left the hands of the maker or drawer as a complete instru- ment; cases of entrusting one's blank signature, or one's signature to an uncompleted instrument stand upon a very different footing, as will be seen in another place. It has sometimes been held that if the maker or the drawer, by leaving a blank, has made it easy for the wrong- doer to fill the blank and so alter the instrument, he, rather than the bona fide holder for value, must bear the loss. That is commonly put upon the ground of (supposed) negligence, sometimes upon the ground that of two inno- cent parties, he who occasioned the loss must bear the loss. The last is, at best, but a very imperfect statement of law, and cannot be taken as satisfactory in any such case; and tlie first, the ground of negligence, finds an answer in what has been said already in regard to delivery, — to wit, the negligence, if it be admitted that there is negligence, is not the legal, otherwise called the proximate cause, in ordinary cases, of the alteration. To be the legal cause of what was done, the negligence must have been in or in immediate connection with the alteration; the alteration must have been the natural or the probable result of the negligence.^ ^ > Wood V. Steele, 6 Wall. 80 ; Greenfield Bank v. Stowell, 123 Mass 196 ; Wood v. Draper, 112 Mass. 315. 2 In a case of the fraudulent transfer of stock by the plaintiffs' 192 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIIL Though there are then cases to the contrary,' it may be safely stated that in principle, and by the weight of authority, a material alteration by a party, or by one in lawful possession, made in a note, bill, or cheque delivered as a completed instrument, by writing or printing words in a blank space, destroys the instrument so that no action can be maintained against the maker or drawer, or other non-consenting parties, even by a bona fide holder for value. ^ Nor does it make any difference whether the blank was left in the body or at the end of the instrument. For example : The plaintiff is a bona fide holder for value of a promissory note sued upon, purporting to have been signed by the defendant as maker, and containing at the end the words '10 per cent.' What the defendant did sign was the instrument in question without those words, delivering the same as a completed undertaking. The instrument signed closed with the words, ' with interest at,' after which there was a blank, which after delivery to the payee was filled in with the words above quoted, ' 10 per cent.' The defendant is not liable, the alteration having the effect to destroy the instrument.* The contrary view, which has found favor in some of our clerk, Bowen, L. J., said ' The proximate cause ' — that is, the legal cause — ' was the felony and crime ' of the clerlt:, ' and it cannot be said that the felony was either the natural or liltely or necessary or direct consequence of the carelessness of the plaintiffs.' Merchants of the Staple v. Banlc of England, 21 Q. B. Div. 160. See also Bank of Ireland u. Evans Charities, 5 H. L. Cas. 389 ; Swan v. North British Co. 2 Hurl. & N. 17.5, 182 , Arnold v. Cheque Bank, 1 C. P. Div. 578; Bigelow, Estoppel, 65.5, 656, 5th ed. 1 Isnard r. Torres, 10 La. An. 103 ; Capital Bank v. Armstrong, 62 Mo. 59 , Iron Mountain Bank v. Murdock, Id. 70 ; Ridingtou v Woods, 45 Cal. 406. See also Worrall v. Gheen, 39 Penn. St. 388. 2 Holnjes v. Trumper, 22 Mich. 427 ; L. C. 544 ; Greenfield Bank v. Stowell, 123 Mass. 196, and cases reviewed therein. 3 Holmes v. Trumper, supra. See also McGrath v. Clark, 56 N. Y, 34. But see Kedlich v. Doll, 54 N. Y. 234, and queere. Sect. 3.] LEGAL OR ABSOLUTE DEFENCES. 193 courts, appears to have been based originally upon a mis- understanding of the effect of a decision of the English Common Pleas in relation to a blank space left in a cheque just before the amount for which the cheque had been made payable; the drawer's clerk, by whom the cheque ■was drawn, and to whom the cheque was then entrusted to obtain payment, having raised the sum payable by writing certain words in the blank.' But the contest there was between the drawer of the cheque and his banker, the drawee ; no case arose of the claim of a bona fide holder for value, and though it was held that the drawer must under the circumstances bear the loss, nothing was said about estoppel. Moreover there was something approach- ing agency in the facts.'' The case is, therefore, no authority for the position upon which some courts have acted, that the drawer of a cheque or bill, or the maker of a note, is estopped or barred from setting up the alteration in a suit by the holder of the instrument. The English courts, followed by some of the ablest of our own, have plainly repudiated the idea of any estoppel, and have declared that the decision must be understood as confined in its bearing to questions arising upon facts of the same nature.^ The case, if to be regarded as rightly decided, is clearly distinguishable from cases such as w^e have been considering.* 1 Young V. Grote, 4 Bing. 253. 2 See Holmes v. Trumper, supra; Greenfield Bank «. Stowell, supra. 8 Swan V. North British Co., 2 Hurl. & C, 175, 189, 190; Halifax Union v. Wheelwright, L. R. 10 Ex. 183, 192 ; Arnold v Cheque Bank, 1 C. P. Div. 578, 587, 588 ; Greenfield Bank c. Stowell, 123 Mass. 196, 200, 201 ; Holmes v. Trumper, 22 Mich. 427 ; L. C. 544, 551, 552. ' The cheque had been left in blank entirely, save si Leavitt v. Putnam, 3 Comst. 494 ; L. C. 129. 2 Chester V. Dorr, 41 N, Y. 279 ; Bower v. Hastings, 36 Penn. St. 285 ; Kellogg v. Barton, 12 Allen, 527. Contra, Charles v. Harden, 1 Taunt. 224; Sturtevant v. Forde, 4 Man. & G. 101 ; Caruthers v. West, 12 Q. B. 143; Jewell v. Parr, 13 C B. 909 ; Story, Notes, § 194. " Patten V. Gleasoa, 106 Mass. 439. * Dresser v. Missouri Const. Co., 93 U. S. 92. IS 226 BILLS, KOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIV. Absolute Defences, may be and commonly are called equities, — with one or two exceptions. The exceptions are made by accommodation contracts of the law merchant. It is no defence to a suit upon a bill, note, or cheque, that the plaintiff took the paper with notice or even with direct knowledge that the defendant signed the same for accommodation, not doing so for the accommodation of the plaintiff; for he gave the use of his name and credit for the express purpose of enabling the party accommodated to get credit.^ The case is as if the defendant had said to the plaintiff, ' If you will let this man have money I will see that you are paid; ' the accom- modation, unlike want or failure of consideration in the ordinary sense, is not an equity. If, however, the instrument was used in violation of the terms, If any, upon which the accommodation was given, that will make a different case; a fraudulent diversion, and such use would be a fraudulent diversion, would con- stitute an equity, in the face of which the plaintiff could recover only upon the footing that he was a bona fide holder for value. For example : The plaintiffs are indorsees for value, and the defendant is accommodation indorser, of a promissory note now sued upon. The maker of the note was indebted to the plaintiffs, and in adjusting the debt the plaintiffs said that they would accept the defen- dant as suret}-. The defendant finally indorses the note for the accommodation of the maker upon condition that a third person, who then held a note made by the defendant, deposited that note with another to be held by him until the defendant should be discharged from the indorsement. The condition was not complied with, and the facts were known to the plaintiff when he took the note. The plain- tiff is not entitled to recover.'^ 1 Grant v. Ellicott, 7 Wend. 227 ; L. C. 448, 2 Small V. Smith, 1 Deuio, 583 ; L. C. 449. Sect. 5.] EQUITIES. 227 The distinction between legal or absolute defences and equities, after what has been said in the preceding chap- ter, will geuenilly be plain. One case, however, already alluded to, should be stated with clearness here. Alterar tion of the instrument makes au absolute defence ; to fill a blank space left in a completed instrument being an example. But to fill a blank space in an wjicompleted instrument, — such as a promissory note signed in blank, — which has been put into the hands of a person who betrays the signer's confidence by filling the blank and delivering the instrument in violation of instructions, is not an alteration. It is or may be a fraudulent act, but it is not criminal. It is simply a case of agency in which the principal's confidence has been abused; but the act, notwithstanding its wrongfulness, binds the principal in favor of bona fide holders for value.* It is only an equity. The rule of law upon this point may be thus stated: One who writes his name as maker, acceptor, drawer, ot indorser, and intrusts the paper to another to fill up the contract and make him party to a negotiable instrument, thereby confers upon tlie person so intrusted, in favor of bona fide holders for value, the right to complete the con- tract at pleasure, so far as consistent with the instrument as written or printed at the time it is delivered to the per- son intrusted with it.'* By the law merchant equities can arise only out of the transaction itself in which the defendant became a partj' to the paper. Statute may, indeed, enable a defendant to ' Angle I- Northwestern Ins. Co., 92 U. S. 330. ^ Angle r. Northwestern Ins Co., supra ; Whitmore v. Niokerson, 125 Mass. 496 ; Greenfield Bank v. Stowell, 123 Mass. 196, 199, 203; Blakey v. Johnson, 13 Bush, 197; Sittig v. Birkestack, 38 aid. 158; Ledwick i-. McKim, 53 N. Y. 307; Burson v. Huntington, 21 Mich. 415 ; Van Etta v Evenson, 28 Wis. 33 ; Yociim v. Smith, 63 lU. 321. ^228 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIV avail himself of other claims against the immediate party thereto, by way of set-off, but unless the statute go fur- ther, these will not be equities, and will not be available against a later party, even though he took the paper (for value) with knowledge of the right of set-off,^ at least if the paper was taken by him before maturity. If it was taken after maturity, the contrary appears to be true, under some statutes.* Finally an indorsee may recover in the face of equities known to him when he took the paper, and further though he took it without valuable consideration, if between him and the defendant there is one who was a bona fide holder for value. The defendant would be liable to such prior holder, and the plaintiff only stands in his place. For example: The plaintiffs are joint indorsees, and the defen- dant is maker, of a promissory- note sued upon. There was no consideration between the original parties, and the note was not made for accommodation. One of the plaintiffs is a bona fide holder for value, the other took the note with notice of the want of consideration; but title is derived through others who were bona fide holders for value. The plaintiffs are entitled to recover.' 1 See Whitehead b. Walker, 10 Mees. & W. 695 , In re Overend, L. R. 6 Eq 344 ; Chandler v Drew, 6 N. H. 469 ; Arnot v Woodborn, 35 Mo 99 ; Way v Lamb, 15 Iowa, 79. 2 Baxter V. Little, 6 Met. 7. •'• Hascall v. Whitmore, 19 Maine, 102 ; L. C. 404 See also Croni- weU V Sac, 96 U. S. 51 ; Marion v. Clark, 94 U. S. 278; Mornyer v. Cooper, 35lawa,257; Boyd v. McCann, 10 Md. 118, Prentice v Zane, 2 Gratt. 262 ; Bassett v. Avery, 15 Ohio St, 299 ; Woodworth v. Hun- toon, 40 m. 131 ; Kobinson v. Reynolds, 2 Q. B. 196, 211 Sect 6.] EQUITIES. 229 § 6. Amount of Eeco^'eet. The question often arises where the holder, being a bona fide holder for vaRie, has not paid the face value of the bill, note, or cheque, whether he is entitled to recover the face value or must be content with less, and if with less, then with how much less, assuming the existence of equities available against a prior holder. The question will depend upon the consideration whether the instrument was (1) bought outright or taken in absolute payment of debt, or (2) taken to secure or in conditional payment of debt. If the holder took the instrument in the first of these modes, he is entitled, by the decided weight of authority, to claim the face value, though he may have paid much less for it, assuming, of coursej that he is a bona fide holder for value.* The holder is entitled to recover the face of the instrument not only when he has bought the paper in the ordinary sense, as by discounting it, but also when he has taken it in paj'ment of property then sold, or in the course of a barter, or has given his negotiable security for it, provided it was received in absolute payment.^ It matters not whether the defendant's contract was entered into for actual or supposed valuable consideration or for accommodation.* Some authorities, however, hold that where the plaintiff ' Fowler v. Strickland, 107 Mass. 552 ; Cromwell v. Sac, 96 U. S. 51 ; Dresser v. Missouri Ky. Co., 93 TJ. S. 92 ; Moore v. Baird, 30 Penn. St. 138 ; Bange v. Flint, 25 Wis. 544 ; Lay v. Wissman, 36 Iowa, 305 ; Bailey 17. Smith, 14 Ohio St. 396; Jones v. Gordon, 2 App. Cas. 616, 622 ; In re Gomersall, L. R. 1 Ch. 137, 142. ^ Dresser v. Missouri By. Co., supra; Woodruff v. Hill, 116 Mass. 310. = Allaire u. Hartshome, 1 Zabr. 665 ; Williams v. Smith, 2 Hill, 301 ; Edwards v. Jones, 2 Mees, & W. 414. 230 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XIV. paid less than the face value, he can recover no more, against one in whose favor equities exist which would be available against a prior holder, than he or some holder before him paid for the paper.' ■ If the holder took the paper to secure or in conditional payment of a debt, precedent or then newly created, obvi- onsly his claim, between him and his debtor, cannot be greater than the amount due on the debt;- but it may be that the debtor himself had a claim for the full amount of the paper, notwithstanding the equities, and in that case his creditor, the holder, would be entitled to recover the face value, holding the excess above the debt in trust for the debtor.' But the debtor might probably stop him in claiming for anything more than the debt, as by a release to the defendant. Or it may be tha/t some other holder might claim the face value of the instrument. In such cases the defendant owes the amount to some one, and it cannot matter to him who demands it, provided the person can give him a discharge.^ ' Holcomb V. Wyckoff, 3J N. J. 35 ; Holman v. Hobson, 8 Humph. 127. 2 See PMk Bank v. Watson, 42 N. Y. 490. 8 Lay V. Wissman, 36 Iowa, 305 ; Allaire v. Hartshorne, 1 Zabr. 665 ; Chicopee Bank v. Chapin, 8 Met. 40, 44. * Allaire v. Hartshorne, supra. Sect. 1.] DISCHARGE OF SUEETY. 231 CHAPTER XV. DISCHARGE OF SURETY : DEALINGS WITH PRINCIPAL DEBTOR. § 1, Indoeser as Sukety. If the doctrines of the law pertaining to the contracts of guaranty and suretyship in regaid to dealings with the principal debtor were confined to those two subjects, this chapter would be unnecessary; at any rate, it would only be necessary to say that dealings with the principal debtor have the same effect upon the contract of a guarantor or a surety in contracts of the law merchant as elsewhere in the law. But those doctrines are not confined to guaranty and suretyship; they apply to indorsement as well, indorse- ment itself being in reality a contract of assurance, though in a sense of its own; indeed, for the purposes in question, indorsement is often called a contract of suretyship. It is obvious that each indorser is then a surety, not merely for the maker or acceptor, but also for all parties before him ; all prior parties, in other words, are i^xincipal debtors in relation to any particular indorser, and so the matter must be understood in this chapter. The fact should, therefore, be stated that dealings with the principal debtor which would have the effect to dis- charge a surety in the ordinary sense will have a like effect upon an indorser. The chief cases of the kind may be stated in order to a clear understanding of the matter. 232 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XV. § 2. SUEEENDEE OF SeCUEITIES, One of the cbief rules of suretyship is that the creditor must not surrender to the principal debtor securities placed in his hands to assure performance of the contract or pay- ment of the debt, on the ground that the surety, in virtue of a doctrine of equity called subrogation, would be entitled to such securities for the same purpose in case he should be compelled to pay, or being bound to pay should pay voluntarily. The surrender of such securities, without the surety's consent, would, therefore, be a violation of the surety's rights, and hence would discharge him. Tliat rule applies as well in favor of an iudorser in the case of dealings of the kind between the holder of the paper and any party before the indorser. § 3. Agkeesiext for Time : Compositions : Reservation of Eights. Another of the chief rules of suretyship is this: The creditor must not discharge tlie princi].ial debtor, or make any binding agreement with him to extend the time of performance agreed upon in the contract with the surety, without the surety's consent, unless (in cases where he may) he plainly reserves his rights against the surety. To give such a discharge, or to make such an agreement, without the reservation of rights, would discharge the surety. That rule also applies to indorsers; binding agreements of the kind, without consent of the indorser and without a reservation of rights against him, operate as a discharge of the indorser's liability. In regard to discharges, the rule is that a discharge of any party to a bill, note, or cheque is a discharge of all subsequent non-consenting parties, not merely where the Sect. 3.] DISCHARGE OF SURETY. 233 discharge granted in iajvov of the earlier party is effected by payment of tie paper by him, \)\xt presumptively where it arises from mere agreement to compound or release liability. Payment of the paper extinguishes it, and hence the liability of all parties to it; agreement to compound discharges the party towards the holder, and so may well be treated as a presumptive discharge of all who follow as sureties for him. For example: The defendant is second iudorser, with liability once duly fixed, and the plaintiff is holder of a promissory note. The plaintiff gives a discharge, without the defendant's consent, to the first indorser of the note, by contract under seal; that party's liability also having been duly fixed. The defendant is discharged.* It is true that in such a case the defendant, if compelled to pay, would have recourse over against the prior party discharged; but the practical result of such recourse in roost cases would be that the party who gave the dis- charge would have to defend the suit, or would be liable for the amount of the judgment obtained. To hold, then, that that party cannot sue the later indorser prevents needless circuity of action.'^ Still the resulting discharge of the later party is deemed presumptive only, and the presumptive intention may in some cases be rebutted. That may be accomplished by the holder's reserving his rights, so far as he may, against the subsequent parties, as where the indorser himself is a party to the discharge granted to the earlier party. For example : The defen- dant is indorser with liability once fixed, and the plaintiff is holder, of a promissory note payable to A, who indorses it to the defendant, who indorses it to the plaintiff. The maker and A make a composition deed with their creditors, conveying all their estate to trustees, among them the 1 Newcorob V. Eaynor, 21 Wend. 108, L. C. 597. 2 Id. 234 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES^ [Chap. XV. defeudant, and are discharged, tlie deed, however, contain- ing a proviso that 'it sliall not operate in favor of or be construed to release any persons or person who may be bound ' for the maker or A, ' or who may have indorsed any note or notes drawn or indorsed by' both or either of them. The defendant, being a party to the composition deed, is not discharged.^ A like case would be made where the discharge arises from a merely personal agreement by the holder not to sue the party in whose favor the discharge runs; for in such a case the person so agreeing would not incur any liability if another should sue, and hence he would not have to defend suit brought by the later party against the one discharged by agreement, nor would he bo affected in any way by judgment obtained by the plaintiff in such suit. True, the party discharged might not gain much by the agreement, as would be the ca.^e where the later party, compelled to pay, should sue him upon his indorse- ment or other contract; but that would be his own affair, and would not affect the case. The presumptive intention to discharge the later party would be duly rebutted.^ It must be understood, however, that the composition deed, or other agreement of discharge, does not amount to a release in the technical sense of the common law. A release in that sense is a conveyance (by deed) of all the releasor's interest, as is shown by the English common law mode of conveying land by lease and release; and if a man has once conveyed away all his rights, there is noth- ing left for him to reserve. The attempted reservation I Pannell v. McMechen, 4 Har. &.J. 474 ; L. C. 598. See also Sohier >• Loriug, 6 Cash. 537 ; Morse v. Huntington, 40 Vt. 488 ; Hagey i'. Hill, 75 Penn. St. 108; Overend v. Oriental Corp., L. R. 7 H. L. 348. ^ Compare Sohier v. Loriug, supra; Kearsley v. Cole, IG Mees. & W. 128. Sect. S.] discharge OF SURETY. 235 would be repugnant to the deed, and hence would be void. If, however, the instrument, though in general form a release, can be construed an agreement not to sue, the reservation may be good.* In regard to indulgence, there must be a plain agreement to extend the time of payment; it is not enough that there xs a delay to sue, however long, within the period of limi- tation, even though the iudorser suffer damage by reason of the delay. ^ And the agreement must, of course, be valid.3 But an express agreement is not necessary, and difficulty is encountered in some cases in determining whether the facts amount to an agreement for extension. That is apt to be the case where an additional security is taken from the principal debtor without any express under- standing on the point of time. The effect of such a transaction is reached in certain cases by presumption. How the courts have treated the taking of security may be shown by a few brief statements and one or two examples. Where the holder, at maturity of the paper in question, takes a further security due thereafter, a pre- eumption arises that it was understood that the time of payment of the paper already due was to be extended, at least where the security was, as it usually is, to be con- sidered in satisfaction, if paid, of the paper thus secured. And the result will be that non-consenting iudorsers are discharged, rights against them not having been reseiwed- For example : The defendant is indorser, and the plaintiff holder, of a promissory note now sued upon, upon which tlie usual steps to fix the indOrser's liability have been taken. At the maturity of the note the holder takes from the maker a cheque on others payable six days thereafter, > Sohier v Loring and Kearsley v. Cole, supra, explaining some of the cases. a Allen V. Brown, 124 Mass. 77. « Infra, p. 237. 2.36 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XV. to be in satisfaction of the note if paid. The cheque is not paid when it comes due. The defendant is discharged from his liability on hi.s indorsement, on the ground that presumptively the plaintiff agreed to extend the time uf payment by the maker of the note for i^ix daj's, and that there is nothing in the facts to over(;ome the presumption.' Again: The defendant is indorser, and the plaintiff holder, of a bill of exchange overdue, upon which the usual stej)s have been taken. After the bill becomes due the jdaiutiff takes part payment of the acceptor, and agrees to take a new acceptance from him payable at a future day for the rest, meantime keeping the bill in suit as security. This is presumptively an agreement to give time, and there being no evidence to rebut the presumption the defendant is discharged.'^ As we have seen in the preceding chapter, the presump- tion appears to arise, if the collatei-al taken is due at a time subsequent to that of the pajier so secured, whether the amount due in the collateral is as great as, or greater than, that of the paper secured. But the presumption is probably stronger where the amount is the same.' Where the sum payable in the collateral is less than in the other, or where the new security is of a different character, as where the holder takes a mortgage for the payment of the sum thereafter, it is doubtful if any presumption for exten- sion of time of the note or bill arises.* So where the new security is not given in place or on account of the paper in suit, but as a mere pledge, the title being retained bj^ the ' Okie V. Spencer, 2 Whart. 2.->3; L. C. .'J84. 2 Gould r. Robson, 8 East, 576. The later case of Pring c. Clark- Son, I B. & C. 14, apparently contra, was not well decided, and ha.s Keuerally been repudiated. See Kendrick ;;. Loinax, 2 Cromp. & J. 405 ; Okie v. Spencer, supra. 3 See Michigan Bank v. Leavenworth, 28 Vt. 209 ; Atkinson v. Brooks, 26 Vt. 569. « See United States i-. Hodge, 6 How. 279. SfiCT. 3.] DISCHARGE OF SURETY. 237 debtor, so that the creditor in taking the security' is a mere trustee or agent of the debtor for collecting it and applying the money on the note or bill in suit, the presumption, it seems, does not arise.' Again, it is not enough that there is an agreement for extension of time (or for discharge) ; the agreement must, as has already been stated, have been valid, in order to work a discharge of the indorser. For example: The defendant is indorse!* and the plaintiffs are holders of a bill of exchange, the steps for fixing liability having been duly taken. Afterwards one of the plaintiffs applies to the drawer of the bill for payment, and threatens to sue immediately if an arrangement is not made to pay the bill. The drawer then proposes to the plaintiff that if the plaintiff will indulge him four or five weeks, he him- self will certainly pay the bill. The plaintiff agrees, and does not inform the defendant, but the drawer does not pay the bill, though the time of indulgence has passed* The defendant'is not discharged, the agreement being without consideration.'' Indeed it seerns that the indorser is not discharged by an agreement for delay, though the agreement is valid, if still the indorser Could not have had recourse against the party to whom the indulgence was given, for between those two the situation is not on^ of principal and surety. Such would be the case where the party granted indulgence was a bankrupt in law at the time. For example : The defen- dant is indorser, and the plaintiff holder, of a promissory ndte, steps being duly taken. At the maturity of the note the plaintiff enters into a valid, binding agreement with the maker, then a discharged bankrupt, without the defen- dant's knowledge, by which the plaintiff agrees not to sue the maker for two months- The defendant is not dis- > Austin V. Curtis, 31 Vt. 64. a McLemor^ v. Powell, 12 Wheat. 554; L. C. 589. -'38 BILLS, NOTES, AND CHEQUES. [Chap. XV. cliarged, because tlie indulgence could not prejudice him, the defendant having no recourse under the hankruptcy laws against the maker.' Where the agreement, of whatever nature, made with the principal debtor is in writing, as usually it is, the reservation of rights must be in writing also, by reason of the rule which excludes parol evidence to vary a written contract.^ There appears to be no reason, however, why the whole agreement for discharge or giving time, together with the reservation of rights, where permissible, may not be oral. There can be no reservation of rights either in the cases already referred to, where there has been a pa3'ment, or where the party attempting to reserve would be liable over to the party discharged or indulged if that one were sued I>y the later party ; or in any case in which the rights of the indorser might he prejudiced if he were to be held as still liable. A case of the kind would occur where the holder surrendered securities to which the indorser would be entitled on payment, a case already referred to.' § 4. E.EQT.rEST TO SuE. Another important rule of suretyship prevails in many States, but not in all, to wit, that the surety may request the creditor, when the time of performance comes on, to bring suit; failing to heed which request will have the effect to discharge the surety to the extent of any detri- ment he might thereby sustain, as where there was property of the debtor within reach at the time, which afterwards disappeared. That rule, it seems, applies to 1 Tiernan )■ Woodruff, 5 McLean, 350 ; L. C. 593. 2 .Hagey i: Hill, 75 Penn St 108^ 3 Id. ; Jlayhew v. Boyd, Md. 102. Sect. 5.] DISCHARGE OF SUBETY. 239 indorsers; that is, an indorser whose liability has been fixed, or who had waived the taking of the usual steps, may, where the rule just stated prevails, require the holder to sue any prior party bound to pay, on pain of discharging such indorser to the extent of any loss he may sustain by failing to sue as requested. § 5. Accommodation Contracts. The foregoing doctrines govern not only indorsement, but all other engagements which are on their face, or are known to be, secondary, such as accommodation undertak- ings. For example: The defendant is one of two joint makers of a promissory note, having joined for accom- modation, of which fact the plaintiff, holder of the note, was aware when he took it. Without the defendant's consent he has made a binding agreement with the prin- cipal joint maker for an extension of time. The defendant is discharged.' Formerly, indeed, the situation of an accoinmodati the student who will con- sult the references. — Prof. M. F. Force, LL.D., Chicinnati Law School. ELEMENTARY LAW. — By William C. Robinson, LL.D., Professor of Elementary Law in Yale College. 12nio. Cloth, $2.50 net; law sheep, $3.00 net. It contains a statement of the principles, rules, and definitions of American Common Law, both civil and criminal, arranged in logical order, with refer- ences 'to treatises in which such definitions, rules, and principles are more extensively discussed. This volume is used largely in law schools, and the author has a special knowledge of the requirements of the student, being a leading instructor at the Law School of Yale College. The student who intelligently studies this work may store hia mind with lucid and concise statements of the leading topics of law ; and, having been grounded in this primary information, a course of read- ing is laid down, including the best text-books together with the special por- tions of the, works which relate to the subjects in question. It may also be used with great benefit as a review book for examinations. The purpose of this most useful elementary work cannot better be explained than by here reprinting, from page 33, Section 61, relating to Transfer of Estates : — Section 61. Of the Ownership and Transfer of Estates. An estate may belong to one person or to several persons collectively. It may also be transmitted from one person to another, or lesser estates may be carved out of it by the owner and be granted to others. The relation between co-owners or successive owners of the same estate, or between persons one of whom derives his estate from the other, is known as privity of estate. Kead 2 Bl. Comm., pp. 107, 179, 200, 201. 1 Wash. R. P., B. i, Ch. xiii, Sec. 1, § 1. 2 Wash. E. P., B. ii, Ch. i. Sec. 1, § 16. 1 Greenl. Ev., §§ 189, 523. The principles are admirably stated. — Albany Law Journ(fl. It would be a benefit to every law student to put this volume into bis hand, and make it his vade mecum throughout the whole of his professioDal studies. — Boston Advertiser. 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