The statutes of Alabama require the negotiability and character
of bills of exchange, foreign and inland, and promissory notes,
payable in bank, to be governed by the general commercial law.
If a partner draws notes in the name of the firm, payable to
himself and then endorses them to a third party for a personal and
not a partnership consideration, the first endorsee cannot maintain
an action upon them against the firm if he knew that the notes were
antedated.
But if the first endorsee passes them away to a second endorsee
before the maturity of the notes in the due course of business, and
the second endorsee has no knowledge of the circumstances of their
execution and first endorsement, he may be entitled to recover
against the firm although the partner who drew the notes committed
a fraud by antedating them.
But if the second endorsee received the notes after their
maturity, or out of the
Page 45 U. S. 405
ordinary course of business, or under circumstances which
authorize an inference that he had knowledge of the fraud in their
execution or first endorsement, he cannot recover.
These things are matters of evidence for the jury.
Evidence is admissible to show that, in an account current
between the first and second endorsee, no credit was given in it
for the notes when they were passed from the first to the second
endorsee.
So evidence of drawing and redrawing between the first and
second endorsee, alluded to in the account current, is
admissible.
The testimony of one of the partners, offered for the purpose of
proving the fraud committed by the drawer of the notes, is not
admissible. This Court again recognizes the rule upon this subject
established in the case of
Henderson v.
Anderson, 3 How. 73.
The partner offered as a witness was a party upon the record,
and thus also disqualified.
The facts in the case are stated in the commencement of the
opinion of the Court, which the reader is requested to turn to and
peruse before reading the argument of counsel.
Page 45 U. S. 413
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff brought his action as the second endorsee of two
promissory notes in favor of E. Stevenson, purporting to be signed
by Strader, Perrine & Co., which partnership consisted of
Daniel
Page 45 U. S. 414
P. Strader, James Perrine, E. Stevenson, and John H. Woodcock.
The notes were assigned by Stevenson to Stinson & Campbell of
New Orleans, and by them to the plaintiff. Stevenson died before
the commencement of the suit, and the process was served only on
Perrine and Woodcock. At the fall term of 1842, Woodcock pleaded a
discharge under the bankrupt law and Perrine pleaded that the
partnership of Strader, Perrine & Co. commenced in November,
1835, and that in December of the same year he withdrew from it.
That at the time of leaving the firm he sold, for one thousand
dollars, his interest to Stevenson, who, by Stinson & Campbell
through one Primrose, paid him the above sum; and that they knew of
his withdrawal. That the notes were antedated, and were not in
possession of Stinson & Campbell or assigned to them till after
17 May, 1836.
Issues being joined on these pleas, the case was submitted to a
jury, who found in favor of Perrine, and that Woodcock had been
discharged under the bankrupt law.
The questions for decision arise on a bill of exceptions taken
by the plaintiff.
The plaintiff proved by the deposition of Hood that Stevenson
was a member of the firm of Strader, Perrine & Co., and that he
executed the notes, and that they are dated before any public
notice was given of the dissolution of the firm. That the firm of
Stinson & Campbell was indebted to the plaintiff in a large sum
in the summer of 1831, and that in part payment, the notes, before
maturity, were assigned to him, for which a credit on their account
was entered. And here the plaintiff's evidence closed.
The defendant, Perrine, proved
"that he withdrew from the firm 6 December, 1835, but that there
was no public advertisement giving notice of the dissolution of the
firm until 23 April, 1836, although the fact was known to Stinson
& Campbell at the time of Perrine's withdrawal."
The defendant also proved by John Test that in August, 1836, he
saw in the hands of the plaintiff's agent an account current
between him and the firm of Stinson & Campbell; that he made a
copy of the same, which he produced, and from which it appeared
that no credit had been entered for the notes sued on.
The plaintiff's counsel moved the court to exclude from the jury
all testimony as to the transactions between Stevenson and the firm
of Stinson & Campbell or between Stevenson and the other
members of the firm of Perrine & Co., there being no proof of
any notice to the plaintiff of any of these matters insisted on by
the defendant in his defense. But the court overruled the motion
and
"instructed the jury, that if they believed the said notes were
made by Stevenson without the knowledge and consent of his partners
and that he passed them off to the said Stinson &
Page 45 U. S. 415
Campbell without the knowledge or consent of his partners, and
that if the said Stinson & Campbell at the time of their
receiving the notes, knew that, prior to that time, to-wit, on 6
December, 1835, Perrine had withdrawn from said firm and was not
then a partner, and that if it was also proved to them that the
said notes were passed to the said Stinson & Campbell by
Stevenson for his individual benefit, and not for the interest and
benefit of the said firm, and that this was known to the said
Stinson & Campbell when they received the said notes, that then
the jury must find for Perrine, the defendant."
To the above ruling and instruction exceptions were taken by the
plaintiff.
From the instruction of the court it appears the notes in
controversy were considered as governed by the law merchant. By the
Alabama statute of 1812 (Clay's Dig. 381), the assignee of "bonds,
obligations, bills single, promissory notes, and all other writings
for the payment of money" may sue in his own name, but all equities
and grounds of defense remain open as fully as though the
instrument had not been assigned until the defendant had notice of
the assignment. But by the act of 1828 (Clay's Dig. 383) it is
provided
"that the same remedy on bills of exchange, foreign and inland,
and on promissory notes payable in bank, shall be governed by the
law merchant, as to days of grace, protest, and notice,"
and by the succeeding section, all other contracts for the
payment of money &c., are made
"assignable as heretofore, and the assignee may maintain such
suit thereon as the obligee or payee could have done, whether it be
debt, covenant, or assumpsit."
The phraseology of this section would seem to place all other
instruments, for the payment of money &c., on a different
footing from those described in the preceding section. The
provision of that section appears only to relate to the remedy on
bills of exchange and promissory notes payable at bank under the
law merchant, as regards the days of "grace, protest, and notice."
But as the following section defines the rights of the assignee of
"all other contracts in writing for the payment of money," &c.,
it may perhaps be fairly inferred that the legislature intended the
negotiability and character of the instruments above named should
be regulated by the general commercial law. Such seems to be the
opinion of the Supreme Court of Alabama. In the case of
McDonald v. Husted, 3 Ala. 297, it was held
"that a note made negotiable and payable at bank is not subject
to offset, in the hands of a
bona fide endorsee, who has
acquired it previous to maturity, although it has never been
negotiated at the bank where it is made payable."
Also in
Beal v. Bennett, 6 Ala. 156, the same principle
is recognized.
However fairly Stevenson may have acted in the execution of
these notes payable to himself, it is clear that he could not
have
Page 45 U. S. 416
sustained on them an action at law. A partner of a firm cannot
at law sue it, for that would be to sue himself. But a
bona
fide assignee of Stevenson might maintain an action.
Jones, Assignees v. Yates, 9 Barn. & Cressw. 532;
Bosanquet v. Wray, 6 Taunt. 597;
Aubert v. Maze,
2 Bos. & Pul. 371;
Smith v. Lusher, 5 Cowen 688.
Stevenson, in executing the notes to himself, under the
circumstances proved, committed a fraud against his partners, and
this fraud was greatly aggravated if, as alleged, he antedated the
notes so as to charge Perrine as partner. That he assigned the
notes to Stinson & Campbell, if for any consideration, for one
that was personal to himself, and wholly disconnected with the
partnership, is not controverted. These facts, or a part of them,
of which Stinson & Campbell must have had knowledge, would have
defeated a recovery by them. Every
"contract in the name of the firm, in order to bind the
partnership, must not only be within the scope of the business of
the partnership, but it must be made with a party who has no
knowledge or notice that the partner is acting in violation of his
obligations and duties to the firm or for purposes disapproved of
by the firm, or in fraud of the firm."
Story on Partnership 193. This rule as well applies to the
endorsement of negotiable instruments as to other contracts.
But the fraud of Stevenson and the knowledge of that fraud by
Stinson & Campbell do not necessarily defeat the plaintiff's
action. And the charge of the court on this point was clearly
erroneous. If, before the maturity of the notes, in the due course
of business, and without any knowledge of the circumstances of
their execution and first endorsement, the plaintiff received them,
he may be entitled to recover notwithstanding the fraud. By
"forming a partnership, the partners declare themselves to the
world satisfied with the good faith and integrity of each other and
impliedly undertake to be responsible for what they will
respectively do within the scope of the partnership concerns."
Story on Partnership 161. On this principle, the firm is bound
for the frauds committed by one of its partners. Where one of two
innocent persons must suffer by the act of a third person, the rule
is just that he shall suffer who reposed the higher confidence and
credit in such person.
But if the plaintiff received these notes after their maturity,
he holds them subject to all the defenses which might have been set
up against them in the hands of Stinson & Campbell. Or if he
received them out of the ordinary course of business, without
consideration, or under circumstances which authorize an inference
that he had knowledge of the fraud in their execution or their
first endorsement, he cannot recover. These are matters of evidence
for the jury.
The testimony of John Test, which was excepted to, we think
Page 45 U. S. 417
was rightfully admitted. He proved that in August, 1836, he saw
in the hands of an agent of the plaintiff an account current
between him and the firm of Stinson & Campbell. That he copied
the account, which copy he exhibited and from which it did not
appear that a credit had been entered for the notes in controversy.
As this, compared with the evidence of the plaintiff, might conduce
to disprove the consideration alleged to have been paid for the
notes by the plaintiff, it was properly admitted. The relevancy of
the deposition of Charles, which was also excepted to, is not very
apparent. It shows that Stinson & Campbell in 1836, drew a
large amount of drafts on the plaintiff, in part payment of drafts
which he had previously drawn on them. This drawing and redrawing
constituted no part of the account current spoken of by Test, but
at the foot of the account a memorandum was made of these drafts.
As this deposition conduced to show the nature of the accounts
between the plaintiff and the firm of Stinson & Campbell, no
very strong objection is perceived to its admission as evidence. It
could not have misled the jury.
The deposition of Strader, which was also excepted to by the
plaintiff, was not admissible under the decisions of this Court. He
was one of the firm of Strader, Perrine & Co., and his
testimony conduced to show the fraud of Stevenson in the execution
of the notes. In the case of
Bank of the United States v.
Dunn, 6 Pet. 57, this Court said, "It is a well
settled principle that no one who is a party to a negotiable note
shall be permitted, by his own testimony, to invalidate it." The
same principle was held in
Bank of Metropolis v.
Jones, 8 Pet. 12. This was decided in the case of
Walton v. Shelley, 1 Term 296, and although that decision
was overruled by the King's Bench in the case of
Jordaine v.
Lashbrooke, 7 Term 601, this Court, in the cases cited and in
several subsequent cases, has established the rule as above stated.
In the state courts, there is a great diversity of judgment on this
point.
Strader was a party on the record, and that rendered him an
incompetent witness.
Scott v.
Lloyd, 12 Pet. 149;
Stein
v. Bowman, 13 Pet. 219.
Upon the whole, the judgment of the circuit court is
Reversed and a venire de novo awarded.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON.
In this case, my opinion is founded on considerations that
differ so much from those proceeded on in the principal opinion,
that I am under the necessity of stating my own views, or of
dissenting, which I am not prepared to do.
In the first place, Stevenson had been one of the firm of
Strader, Perrine & Co. He made the note payable to himself, and
signed the name of the firm to it. Being both a maker and the
payee, the
Page 45 U. S. 418
note was void on its face, or at least could have no legal
effect; when negotiated, that is, when it was endorsed by
Stevenson, and sold to Stinson & Campbell it could only become
a binding instrument in their hands on Strader, Perrine & Co.,
as Stinson & Campbell could enforce payment. The time of
negotiation, therefore, is the true date of the note.
It is in proof that the firm of Strader, Perrine & Co. was
dissolved on 23 April, 1836, and that the usual advertisement was
then made of the fact. This bound all persons who had not had
previous dealings with the firm; nor is there any proof found in
the record, showing that either Stinson & Campbell or Smyth,
the plaintiff, had had any such dealings. If the note was
negotiated, therefore, to Stinson & Campbell after the
dissolution of the partnership, it was void, and does not bind
Perrine, inasmuch as Stevenson had no power to bind him.
2. Perrine is proved to have withdrawn from the firm in
December, 1835. But as no regular notice was given of this fact, it
rests on him to bring home knowledge of it to the holder of the
paper. If Stinson & Campbell had knowledge, when they took the
note from Stevenson, then they could not have recovered from
Perrine on it.
So again, if Stinson & Campbell took the note from Stevenson
in discharge of the individual debt of the latter, they could not
recover from Perrine, whether he was or was not a partner at the
date of its negotiation. The proof of either of these events is
imposed on the plaintiff. But having shown either of the two last
circumstances, then the plaintiff is bound to prove "under what
circumstances, or for what value, he became the holder." I need
only refer to Chitty on Bills (9th ed) 648, for the established
rule. If the plaintiff fails to show, in such case, that he came by
the note in the due course of trade, and before it fell due, then
the defendant is entitled to a verdict.
3. In regard to the question of the competency of Strader's
evidence, I have found much difficulty. The competency of Strader
to depose, in the principal opinion, is held to be governed by the
cases of
United States Bank v.
Dunn, 6 Pet. 51, and
Bank of Metropolis v.
Jones, 8 Pet. 12. In the one case, Carr, the first endorser,
was introduced by the second endorser, Dunn, who was sued to make
out a defense. In the second case, Jones, the endorser and
defendant, introduces Mr. Blake, the maker of the note, to
establish a defense; and, in each instance, this Court held that
the witness was incompetent to invalidate the negotiable paper to
which he was a party; and the decision in
Walton v.
Shelley, 1 Term 296, was followed. Of this case, Mr. Chitty
says (669) -- "Though it was formerly held, that no party should be
permitted to give testimony to invalidate an instrument he had
signed, a contrary rule now prevails," and refers to
Bent v.
Baker, 3 Term 36, and
Page 45 U. S. 419
Jordaine v. Lashbrooke, 7 Term 601. "The general rule
is," says Chitty,
"that it is no objection to the competency of a witness, that he
is also a party to the same bill or note, unless he be directly
interested in the event of the suit, and he be called in support of
such interest or unless the verdict, to obtain which his testimony
is offered, would be admissible evidence in his favor in another
suit."
This was the principle on which the cases of
Bent v.
Baker and
Jordaine v. Lashbrooke proceeded. By the
statute of 3 and 4 Will. IV, ch. 42, § 26, for the amendment
of the law, the rule was enlarged so as to let in parties to
negotiable paper as witnesses for or against whom the verdict and
judgment might be evidence, the statute providing that the record
should not be evidence for or against them. And thus the law of
evidence in this regard now stands in the courts of Great Britain.
It is also settled, and had been long before 1832, when the
decision in
Bank of the United States v. Dunn was made, in
a large majority of the states of this Union, in accordance with
the principles laid down in
Jordaine v. Lashbrooke and
Bent v. Baker, and the question now is for this Court to
determine how far the United States circuit courts, when acting in
the states, shall enforce the doctrine laid down in
Dunn's
Case, and which was very properly applied in that of
Jones. The decision is "That no man who is
a party' to
the note or bill shall, by his own evidence, invalidate it." But
suppose he is no party to it, and that his name has been put on it,
or to it, by forgery, and he is called on by another to establish
that the defendant's name was forged as well as that of the
witness, is he then competent? He gave no credit to the paper, and
if the evidence of all those who could prove the defense is cut off
by the mere name appearing, nothing more would be required to
effectuate the fraud than to put on the names of all persons who
could prove the fraud. In such an instance I feel sure the rule
laid down by this Court does not apply. Nor can I, satisfactorily
to my own mind, distinguish the case put from one where a
fraudulent note is made in the name of a firm, by one of the
original partners, after the dissolution of the partnership, when
he had no authority to use the name of those he attempts to bind.
Indeed it is difficult to say that Stevenson was not guilty of
forgery, if he made the notes and passed them off to Stinson &
Campbell after the dissolution of the partnership in discharge of
his own debt and with the intention to defraud his former partners.
In the cases that have heretofore come before this Court, the
witnesses proved in advance that they gave credit to the paper by
signing their names, and that they were, beyond dispute, parties to
it as well as the defendant.
The principle assumed in
Walton v. Shelley is in
violation of one of the most familiar and general principles of
evidence known to courts of justice -- that is to say that any
person of sufficient
Page 45 U. S. 420
age and sanity can be a competent witness to depose in any cause
where he is not directly interested in the event of the suit. To
this rule there are exceptions, but they are almost uniformly
favorable to the admission of the testimony, are of comparatively
recent origin, founded on experience, and conducive to the due
administration of justice in a high degree.
Again, the Act of May 19, 1838, declares that
"The forms and modes of proceeding in suits, in the courts of
the United States (in states admitted into the Union since 1789),
in those of common law, shall be the same in each of those states
respectively as are now used in the highest court of original and
general jurisdiction of the same."
That the court below proceeded, in the admission of Strader as a
witness, according to the modes of proceeding in the circuit courts
of the State of Alabama, is not questioned. The method and manner
of administering justice in the state courts is the mode referred
to in the act of Congress, as I understand it, and I cannot resist
the conclusion, that the modes prescribed by the act of Congress to
the federal courts held in that state embrace the rules in regard
to the competency of evidence; without evidence there can be no
proceedings; rules for its admission are indispensable; these rules
must be derived from some authority; from statutes they cannot be,
and therefore Congress has said the state courts shall furnish them
to the foreign tribunals administering, the laws there -- and this
for the plain reason, that the measure of justice shall be the same
in the foreign that it is in the domestic tribunals, and evidence
is the measure of justice in great part.
There can be no objection to the competency of Strader because
he was a party of record. The original writ issued against him and
Perrine jointly, but Strader was not found, and a
nolle
prosequi was entered as to him, and Perrine was declared
against alone.
I concur that the charge of the circuit court was erroneous
insofar as it assumed that the instruments sued on were subject to
the same equities in the hands of Smyth that they were when held by
Stinson & Campbell. The courts of Alabama have construed the
statutes of that state affecting negotiable paper, and held they
did not apply to notes payable in bank; of which description are
the ones sued on. The charge therefore violated the commercial rule
that the innocent endorsee takes the paper discharged of a previous
infirmity.