— This action is by the payee against the drawer of a bill of exchange, of which the following is a copy: —
“$2,019.70.
“ San Francisco, December 29, 1881.
“Pay to the order of James Cashman $2,019.70, gold coin of the United States, value received, and charge the same to account of C. H. Harrison.”
“ To R. S. Howland, San Francisco. No.”
Of the defenses pleaded, two are alternately insisted upon here, viz.: 1. That the instrument was intended to effect merely an equitable assignment of a portion of a fund, and therefore is not what it purports to be; or 2. That if it be considered and treated as a bill of exchange, there was no presentment of it to the drawee for payment, and no notice to the drawer of its dishonor.
To excuse the non-presentment for payment, it was alleged in the complaint, and found by the court: “ That the defendant, at the time of drawing said bill as aforesaid, had no reason to believe that R. S. Howland, the drawee therein named, would accept or pay the same, and defendant at said time well knew that said drawee had no funds in his hands due or owing to defendant.”
The court also found that “ the said bill was not *299intended as an assignment of a portion of any fund whatsoever,” but that “ said bill was executed by defendant in settlement of a liability to plaintiff theretofore incurred by defendant under a certain bond, and said liability existed in full force as a cause of action in plaintiff’s behalf at the time of the execution of said bill bj' defendant as aforesaid.”
The judgment was for plaintiff, from which, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals. >
The facts and circumstances pertinent to the questions to be decided are substantially as follows: —
In February, 1881, one Tibbey chartered the plaintiff’s schooner for a sealing voyage in the Northern Pacific. To secure the performance of the charter-party on the part of Tibbey, and for his accommodation, the defendant executed a bond to plaintiff in the penal sum of $6,250; but the defendant was not interested in the charter-party, nor in the sealing voyage. The schooner, after fishing for a season, sailed to Yokohama, Japan, with such cargo of skins as had been taken on the voyage, and there got into trouble and litigation. When news of her arrival in Yokohama, and of her trouble there, was received in San Francisco, Tibbey, to secure indemnity to the defendant for his liability on the bond to plaintiff, assigned to him the cargo of skins. While matters were in this condition, the plaintiff was demanding of defendant payment of about three thousand one hundred dollars, which he claimed to be due him on the charter-party, and which Tibbey was unable to pay. Through the intervention and assistance of K>. S. Howland, acting as the agent and adviser of plaintiff, a settlement was effected between plaintiff and defendant, the terms of which, as then executed, were: 1. That plaintiff’s demand was reduced to the sum of $2,019.70; 2. That defendant turned over to Howland his security for indemnity (the cargo of skins), to be disposed of and converted into *300money by the latter; and 3. That defendant drew on Howland the bill of exchange in suit for the sum of plaintiff’s reduced demand ($2,019.70). This settlement was made with the consent of Tibbey. At the time of this settlement it was believed by all the parties concerned that the money product of the cargo would be even more than sufficient to pay the bill; but it was well known by plaintiff and defendant, at the time the bill was drawn, that defendant had no funds in the hands of Howland, and it was quite as well understood that Howland was not expected to accept or pay the bill until he should receive money for that purpose from the sale of the cargo, nor to pay a greater sum than he should thus receive.
There appears to have been no agreement or understanding, however, that the bill should be wholly satisfied from the fund to be realized from the sale of the cargo, nor, in any event, by payment of less than the sum it called for. Howland, in his deposition, says: “ It was understood that if sufficient funds came to me from the sale of that cargo it was to be paid to Cash-man upon this instrument [the bill], to the amount named therein. .... H trrison had no reason to believe that I would accept or pay said bill before the money came.” Again he says: “ I don’t remember any other instrument executed at that time for the purpose of portioning the fund that was expected to be realized from the sale of the cargo of said schooner, nor did I understand that this instrument was for such purpose. I understood that the legal title to said cargo of said schooner, immediately prior to the execution of the bill of exchange, was in Harrison. The legal title to the cargo was vested in Harrison by the TibbeyS by their assignment of the same to him, to secure him for the liability he had incurred in their behalf by his bond given to Cashman. Harrison gave Cashman this paper or instrument to settle his liability to Cashman on ac*301count of this very bond for the payment of the charter-money.”
The cargo of sldns was finally sold in London, but after paying expenses, including expenses of litigation in Japan, Howland realized therefrom only six hundred dollars, which was not received by him until some time after May, 1883; and when it was received, the defendant took it out of his hands, so that no part of it was paid on the bill of exchange.
1. I think the bill was intended to be what it plainly purports to be, an inland bill of exchange, and that the finding, that it “was not intended as an assignment of a portion of any fund whatsoever,” is justified by the evidence.
By turning over his indemnity security to Howland, Harrison intended merely to provide funds, then supposed to be sufficient, for the payment of the bill at such future time as those funds were expected to come into Howland’s hands; thereby gaining time to realize upon his own security for indemnity. But the evidence fails to show that plaintiff agreed to rely solely upon that security, or that the bill of exchange should not have the legal effect of a bill of exchange. The substance of the transaction was,— 1. To settle and liquidate the amount of defendant’s liability on his. bond; and 2. To exchange securities for the payment thereof. The bill of exchange was given to secure the payment of the sum for which defendant was liable on his bond, thus liquidated by the settlement. Had it been the intention of the parties that thé bill was to operate only as an assignment of the fund to be realized from the cargo, and that it was to be wholly satisfied from that fund alone, it is difficult to conceive why, when the fund was received by Howland, the defendant should have thought himself entitled to demand and receive the whole of it, or why Howland should have complied with the demand. The taking of the money proceeds of the cargo *302out of the hands of Howland seems utterly inconsistent with the assignment theory, and can be rationally accounted for only upon the supposition that the defendant regarded the instrument as being what it purported to be; and so regarding it, concluded as matter of law that his liability upon it had been discharged by want of timely presentment of it to the drawee or notice of dishonor, and consequently that he was entitled to withdraw his funds from Howland.
The bill itself, before acceptance, has no tendency to prove the assignment, but the contrary. In Harris v. Clark, 3 N. Y. 118, 51 Am. Dec. 352, the court, by Buggies, J., after reviewing the cases, said: “The principle appears to be firmly established that a bill of exchange does not of itself give to the holder, either at law or in equity, a lien upon the funds of the creditor in the hands of the debtor until after acceptance by the latter.” To the same effect are Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 286, and Tiernan v. Jackson, 5 Pet. 580.
In the well-considered case of Attorney-General v. Continental Life Ins. Co., 71 N. Y. 325, 27 Am. Rep. 55, it was held that even a check upon a bank which has funds of the drawer does not operate as an assignment of the fund unless the check specify the particular fund upon which it is drawn; and a like decision was rendered in Lunt v. Bank of North America, 49 Barb. 221.
In Marine and Fire Insurance Bank v. Jauncey, 3 Sand. 257, it was insisted by counsel that a bill of exchange drawn against a consignment of cotton, but without specifying the fund, was itself an equitable assignment by the drawer of the cotton or its proceeds. To this the ■ court answered: “This is certainly carrying the doctrine of equitable assignment very far, and is, in our judgment, entirely unsupported by authority. In the cases cited by counsel, and in all the other cases where an order has been held to be an equitable assignment of a particular fund, the fund has been specified in the order, *303and the party giving the order has thereby divested himself of all right to control the fund purporting to be assigned. The form of the assignment is immaterial, but these two ingredients first named are essential. . . . . A bill of exchange, however, — and the instrument in question is nothing more nor less, — differs from such an order. It must be payable at all events, and not out of a particular fund. If its payment is contingent, either with regard to the event or the fund out of which it is to be made, it is not a bill of exchange, but an order or assignment of a fund. The converse of this is also true, that if the instrument be a bill of exchange, it is not an assignment of a fund.”
2. Assuming, as we must, that the instrument is a bill of exchange payable immediately, as it purports to be, I think presentment thereof for acceptance or payment, and notice of dishonor, according to the general rule, were excused as to the defendant. Section 8220 of the Civil Code provides: “Presentment of a bill of exchange for acceptance or payment, and notice of dishonor, are excused as to the drawer, .... if, at the time of drawing, he had no reason to believe the drawee would accept or pay the same.” (See also Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, secs. 1073, 1081; Terry v. Parker, 1 Nev. & P. 752; Commercial Bank v. Hughes, 17 Wend. 94.)
The finding of the trial court, that, at the time of drawing the bill, the defendant had no reason to believe that the drawee would accept or pay the same, is well supported by the evidence, and brings the case fairly within the code exception to the general rule requiring presentment for acceptance or payment, according to the tenor of the bill, and notice of dishonor.
To. bring a case within this code exception, it is not necessary, as contended by counsel for appellant, to prove fraud on the part of the drawer of the bill. The exception is based on the mere fact that the drawer, at the time of drawing the bill, “ had no reason to believe *304the drawee would accept or pay the same”; and it is certainly possible that this fact may exist without fraud. It may be attributable to folly, or to a degree of negligence not at all evincive of fraud. Indeed, it is consistent with an ill-founded belief that the drawee would accept and pay the bill. (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 1073.)
Except for the purpose of proving want of consideration, fraud, accident, or mistake, which might nullify the instrument, parol evidence is inadmissible to vary or contradict a bill of exchange. “ Therefore, if a bill or note be absolute upon its face, no evidence of a verbal agreement made at the same time, qualifying its terms* can be admitted.” If the bill is payable on demand, “it cannot be shown by verbal testimony that it was agreed that it should not be paid .... until the amount was collected from certain sources; nor until a certain draft was received; .... nor that a note (or bill) in which no time for payment is expressed, and is therefore constructively payable on demand, was to be paid at a specified time; .... nor that the liability of the drawer, maker, or other party was not to be enforced; . . . . nor that it was to be paid out of a particular estate.” (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, secs. 80, 81, and cases there cited.)
In this case there is no pretense of fraud on the part of the plaintiff or drawee, or that there was any accident or mistake affecting the express obligation of the drawee. The parol evidence introduced was admissible only for the purpose of proving the consideration or want of consideration for the bill, the timely presentment, demand, etc., or the excuse for not having made them. (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 81 a.)
But conceding, for the sake of the argument merely, that the parol evidence was competent to prove, and that it did prove, that the bill was payable only when Howland, at spine future time, should receive from Japan or England *305the cash proceeds of the cargo of-skins, yet, by withdrawing from Howland the whole cash proceeds of the cargo after they were received by him, the defendant committed a fraud by which he forfeited the right to require demand and notice. (Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, sec. 1081.) Besides, he thereby precluded any possible prejudice to himself by want of demand and notice. Said Lord Denman, in Terry v. Parker, 1 Nev. & P. 752: “The question is, whether want of effects in the hands of the drawee excuses the holder of a bill of exchange from the necessity of presenting the bill for payment, as well as of giving notice of dishonor to the drawer. Many cases establish that notice of dishonor need not be given to the drawer in such a case, and the reason assigned is because he is in no respect prejudiced by want of such notice, having no remedy against any other party on the bill. This reason equally applies to want of presentment for payment, since, if the bill was presented and paid by the drawee, the drawer would become indebted to him in the amount, instead of being indebted to the holder of the bill, and would be in no way benefited by such presentment and payment.” In Commercial Bank v. Hughes, 17 Wend. 94, Cowen, J., said: “ When the drawer has plainly suffered nothing, and can sustain no mischief for want of demand and notice, none need be made or given.” Had the plaintiff demanded and received from Howland the full proceeds of the cargo, six hundred dollars, that sum would have been credited on the bill. Had defendant, after withdrawing the six hundred dollars from Howland, paid it to plaintiff, the result would have been the same. Is defendant prejudiced by his withdrawal and retention of the six hundred dollars which should, and according to his theory would, have been paid to plaintiff if demanded? The principle upon which the exception to the general rule solely rests is, that in the cases to which it applies, the drawer is in no degree prejudiced by the failure of the holder to pro*306test the bill, and would not be benefited by demand and notice of dishonor. It thus appears that in no aspect of the case was the defendant prejudiced by want of presentment of the bill or notice of dishonor.
3. It is contended that the court erred in permitting plaintiff to introduce the bond of defendant to plaintiff as evidence in chief, against defendant’s objection, on the grounds that it was “immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent.”
The bond was certainly competent, relevant, and material on the issue as to the consideration for the bill, raised by the answer, and insisted upon here. But it was at least irregular to introducevit in chief, since the bill was prima facie evidence of a sufficient consideration; but it was not objected to on the ground that it was offered out of the proper order, or that it could properly be offered only in rebuttal. That it became relevant in rebuttal there is no question; so that the error, if it was such, of admitting it out of the proper order was harmless.
I think the judgment and order should be affirmed.
Temple, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
The Court.For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.
Hearing in Bank denied.