Miller v. . Talcott

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 116 The judge at the circuit properly decided that, on the facts testified to by the defendant himself, the action was not barred by the statute of limitations. It appeared, by the case, and it was a conceded fact, that the maker of the note had become insolvent, and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors, that early in January, 1858, a dividend of nine cents on a dollar, arising from the avails of his estate was made, and that ninety dollars was paid to the defendant by one of the assignees, as the amount of the dividend payable on the note in question. The defendant, after stating that it was paid to him "to apply on this note," and that the assignee paying it told him that "it belonged on this note, that it was a distribution by the assignees," testified as follows: "I kept forty-five dollars, and the other forty-five dollars I paid to the bank, to Newton, who indorsed it as coming from the assignees. I told him it was a dividend declared by the assignees of Hughston, to apply on the note, and that I paid to him as such. Nothing was said about making it as a payment by me personally." He then said, on his cross-examination, "the other half of the amount I retained; I received that of the assignees in February, at Matthew Miller's house. I can't say I was present when this indorsement was made." And after speaking of the manner in which he paid the said sum of $500, and as to some "figuring up" on the note by Newton, he said "I requested him to indorse the forty-five dollars on the note for the assignees." The indorsement of the payment on the note is in these terms: "Forty-five dollars paid by *Page 118 Talcott, February 16, 1858; due February 16, 1858, $467.32." From this it appears that the defendant was mistaken in saying that Newton indorsed the payment "as coming from the assignees," and when the fact is taken into consideration that he afterward said "I can't say I was present when this indorsement was made," that portion of his testimony must be disregarded.

The question is then presented whether the other facts sworn to by him operate as sufficient evidence of a new or continuing contract, to take the case out of the statute of limitations. It is important, in considering its effect, to bear in mind that they occurred within a year after the making of the note, and that the defendant was at that time, confessedly, liable as indorser thereon for the balance then due. He was, therefore, personally interested in having his liability reduced, and although he received the money then paid from the assignee of the maker, to be applied toward the reduction of the amount unpaid, the application was, in fact, made by himself, and it was so made, with the object and intention of making a payment in part satisfaction of his own indebtedness. The act was his ownpersonal transaction, and what was said by him to Mr. Newton in reference to it, only disclosed the source from which the money came and that he paid it as coming from the assignees, accompanied, in view of those facts, with a request that the acknowledgment of the receipt of it, which was to be indorsed on the note, should state that fact. He did not inform Mr. Newton, nor will the statement which he made to him warrant the inference that he meant to be understood as informing him that in what he was doing, he was acting only as the agent of the assignees; on the contrary, the transaction was, in reality, a payment by him on account of the note, with money furnished to him by the assignees for the benefit of all parties liable thereon, and it was a personal act, expressive of as full an acknowledgment or declaration, by himself individually, of the non-payment of the balance then due on the note and his own indebtedness to that amount, as if he had signed, in his *Page 119 own name, a declaration or admission that the amount was then due and owing by him, and that he, in part payment of such indebtedness, paid the sum of forty-five dollars, which he had received from the assignees of Hughston, the maker, to be applied for that purpose. It may be added that the fact, sworn to by the defendant, that the amount paid to him by the assignee was ninety dollars, being a dividend of nine per cent on the whole sum ($1,000) originally payable on the note, and that he kept one-half of this sum himself is a material circumstance, in connection with the other facts stated by him, to show that he was not acting as agent merely of the assignees in the application of the money. It was paid "to apply on this note," and nothing was said in reference to the division of it or the retention of any part thereof by the defendant. That was clearly his individual action. The only other evidence, on the subject of this payment, was by Mr. Newton, to whom it was made. It does not vary the testimony of the defendant. The case was, consequently, one of undisputed facts, presented nothing for the jury to pass upon, and the court properly refused to submit it to them, and correctly decided in directing a verdict for the plaintiff. The statute of limitations had, by reason of the payment in question, no application to the case. (See Ballou v. The First NationalBank of Utica, 49 N.Y., p. 155.)

There were some exceptions arising on questions of the admission of the evidence; but I deem it unnecessary to consider them in detail. It is sufficient to say that the evidence offered in relation to the circumstances and purpose under and for which the note was given, and the relations between the defendant and Miller, the subsequent indorser, was clearly improper. It was not claimed that the bank was not a bona fide holder of the note at its maturity, or that it was for any cause invalid or uncollectible in its hands; and the plaintiff having received it from the bank on payment of full value therefor, succeeded to its rights. What was the understanding or agreement between the indorsers in relation to the note or their respective liabilities as between *Page 120 themselves was wholly immaterial to the bank and could not affect its rights nor that of the plaintiff.

The exceptions in reference to other matters of proof, do not appear to be relied on by the appellant's counsel; but they have nevertheless been examined, and neither of them is a ground for the reversal of the judgment appealed from.

It follows, from what has been said, that the judgment should be affirmed with costs.