Shuler v. Gillette

Mdllin, P. J.:

The only question upon this appeal is, whether the words added to the note, after its indorsement, was such an alteration as rendered it void.

An alteration of a note in a material part renders it void. (Byles on Bills, 310, and notes.)

"Was the alteration made a material one? If it was not the note was still valid, notwithstanding the alteration.

The Court of Errors, in Woodworth v. The Bank of America (19 Johns., 391), held, that when no particular place of payment is designated in a promissory note, the holder is bound to demand payment of the maker personally, or at his residence, and the indorser contracts only to be answerable, in default of the maker, after such deir and • *280has been made, and that every alteration of a note by the maker, in respect to the place of payment, or any alteration of the contract of the indorser in a part which may in any event become material, without his approbation, discharges his liability.

In that case the plaintiff in error was indorsee on a promissory note made by one Kane, and indorsed by the plaintiff for the accommodation of the maker. The note, when indorsed, was dated at Albany, but no place of payment was designated; it was delivered, to the maker after indorsement and he, without the knowledge or consent of the indorser, wrote on the margin of it the words, “ payable at the Bank of America,” and signed it with his own name and delivered it to the Bank of America, in renewal of a previous note, made and indorsed by the same parties; but the plaintiff in error did not know that it was to be used to renew another note. Demand of payment was made at the Bank of America and not of the maker at his residence or place of businesss.

The plaintiff had a verdict at the Circuit, and the Court at General Term ordered judgment for the plaintiff upon it. The Court of Errors reversed the judgment, holding that the designation of a place of payment on the margin of the note, without the knowledge and consent of the indorser, after indorsement, was such a material alteration as discharged the indorser.

The case cited left the question open whether the designation of a place in the same town or city where a note or bill was payable, without the consent of the indorser or drawer, was such a material alteration as to discharge such parties. That question was distinctly presented in the case of The Troy City Bank v. Lauman (19 N. Y., 477). The action was brought on two bills of exchange drawn upon the treasurer of the Buffalo and New York City Railroad Company at New York, by an agent of the corporation at Buffalo, and accepted “for and on account of the Buffalo and New York City Railroad Company, payable at Continental Bank, New York; they were indorsed by Lawrence, Roclcafellow & Moore, who resided in different places in Pennsylvania. The drafts were presented for payment at the Continental Bank, in New York, and payment was refused, and notices were addressed to the defendant’s firm and mailed to each of them at their places specified in the indorsement. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment, which was affirmed at the *281General Term of the Superior Court of Buffalo, in which the action was brought; and the defendant appealed to the Court of Appeals. That Court affirmed the judgment, holding, that it was not a material alteration of the bill to accept it payable at a designated place in the same city in which it was payable.

The acceptor resided in New York, and the bill not designating any particular place in the city, it was in law payable at the acceptor’s residence or place of business; and the acceptance making it payable at the Continental Bank did not change the place of payment, but merely designated the particular place where payment should be demanded by the holder.

This case was followed by this court in Niagara District Bank v. Fairman, etc., Tool Manufacturing Company (31 Barb., 403). See, also, Rowe y. Young (2 Brod. & Bing., 165); Walker v. Bank of the State of New York (13 Barb., 636).

This liability of an acceptor after acceptance, is precisely the same as that of the maker of a note. (Opinion of the chancellor in Woodworth v. Bank of America, supra.) The alteration that discharges the one will discharge the other.

The alteration in this case is substantially the same as that made in the case in the nineteenth New York (supra;); and the ruling in that case must be followed.

The judgment must be affirmed.

Present — Mullin, P. J.. and Talcott, J. ; Smith, J., no*, sitting.

Judgment affirmed.