delivered the opinion of the Court.
At the foundation of this suit is an instrument as follows: “$500. Ho. 4,794.
Chicago, June 17th, 1892.
To E. J. Bowes, Jr., & Bros.:
This is to certify that Empire Building Co., contractor for the entire work of your building, Ho. — Fulton street, is entitled to a payment of five hundred dollars..
Contract. $7,850. by the terms of the contract.
Extra work. Remarks.
Deductions.
Total.
Previous issues, $6,325.
Present issue, 500 $6,925.
Balance, ' $925.
Wilson & Marble,
(Indorsed) By A. H. Dood.
Peabody, Houghteling & Co.,
Pay to the order of Empire Building Co.
John R. Bowes.
Pay to the order of Industrial Bank,
Empire Building Co.
G-. C. McArthur, Treas.”
It is assumed that the signature to the first indorsement is to be regarded as that of the appellants. There is no evidence that the instrument was presented to Peabody, Houghteling & Co.-for payment before July 17, 1892, nor that any notice of presentment for payment, and the fact of non-payment, was given to the appellants before August 3, 1892.
The appellants offered to prove that they had overpaid, the Empire Building Co., which evidence the court rejected, and the appellants excepted.
For the appellee the court gave, over exception by appellants, these instructions:
“ The jury are instructed on the plaintiff’s behalf that if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff obtained the instrument sued upon for a valuable consideration, without notice of mistake or fraud, they will find for the plaintiff and. assess its damages at $500, and interest thereon at five per cent from June 17, 1892.
If jury believe from evidence that plaintiff obtained instrument sued on for value after the Empire Building Company, or some one of them, had presented the same to° Peabody, Houghteling '& Co. for payment on or about its date, that is sufficient presentment, and you shall find for the plaintiff.
If jury believe from the evidence that plaintiff obtained certificate for valuable consideration, in ordinary course of business, and discounted the same, they must find for plaintiff.”
And refused those asked by the appellants as follows :
“ 1. If jury believe from evidence that plaintiff is holder of certificate for value, and that the same was not presented for payment until the Empire Company had been paid in full, they must find for the defendants.
2. If jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiff is the holder of the certificate for value, nevertheless the plaintiff was required to use due diligence in demanding payment, and if jury believe from evidence that plaintiff did not demand payment until after the Empire Building Company had been paid in full, must find for the defendant.
3. If jury believe from evidence that plaintiff holds certificate in good faith and for value, nevertheless the plaintiff was required to use due diligence in collecting amount called for, and if they believe from evidence that by mistake certificates for too much money were issued by architect and that plaintiff did not demand payment until after contractors had been paid in full, and the loan in Peabody, Houghteling & Co.’s hands was exhausted on certificates previously presented, they must find for defendants.”
To "which refusal appellants excepted.
That the indorsement signed John It. Bowes, in fact for or as the act of the appellants, was a bill of exchange on Peabody, Houghteling & Co., payable at.sight, the sum being adopted from the face of the instrument, is a position which is in accord with such authority as there is applicable to the subject. Story on Bills, Sec. 33; Leonard v. Mason, 1 Wend. 522.
“ Every indorsement of a bill maybe considered as a new bill, drawn by the indorser on the acceptor in favor of the payee.” (Payee under the indorsement must be understood.) Van Staphorst v. Pearce, 4 Mass. 258; same point in Heylyn v. Adamson, 2 Burr. 669.
¡Now the reason, of that doctrine is, not that the face of the paper is a bill of exchange, but that the indorsement is a direction, or an order, to the drawee to pay the amount— the sum of money—expressed in the bill, to the person, or his order, who may be named. in the indorsement. The same reason applies if that direction or order applies to the sum expressed on the other side of any paper; provided it is clear that sum is adopted in the direction or order.
And it is only because the indorsement by the appellants is a bill of exchange that the second indorser of the paper can sue the first indorser.
If it were not a bill of exchange the law merchant would not apply to it, and being not a promise or agreement to pay, or an acknowledgment of indebtedness, the statute does not. Peoria & O. R. R. v. Neill, 16 Ill. 269; Clifford v. Keating, 2 Scam. 250.
And to charge the appellants as drawers, the bill must have been presented for payment, and notice of non-payment given according to the law merchant, which we need not repeat. Montelius v. Charles, 76 Ill. 303.
But holding as we do that the instrument is a bill of exchange, the point that the appellants are discharged was not made below, where perhaps it might have been answered by evidence; nor is the point made in this court. People v. Hanson, 150 Ill. 122.
The judgment is affirmed.