
    The Madison Square Bank, Resp’t, v. Warham N. Pierce, App’lt.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed March 21, 1893.)
    
    Bills and notes — Part payment by indorser.
    The holder of commercial paper may collect the entire amount against the maker, although a part payment has keen made by the indorser, receiving so much of the proceeds as represents such part payment as trustee-for the indorser. This doctrine, however, has no application to accommodation paper.
    (Maynard, J., dissents.)
    Appeal from judgment of the supreme court, general term,, first department, affirming judgment recovered at circuit on trial before the court.
    
      David Keane, for app’lt; John Delahunty, for resp’t.
    
      
       Affirming 43 St. Rep., 832.
    
   Finch, J.

We have a novel and interesting question before us on this appeal, although its apparent importance will lessen as we pass from first impressions to some slower reflection. It arises upon facts which are very brief and simple and may at once be stated. The defendant, Pierce, made his promissorv note payable to his own order, and indorsed it to the Bates Co., Limited, which indorsed it to the plaintiff bank; the latter discounting it and paying the proceeds over to the immediate indorser. Thereafter the Bates Co. became insolvent and passed into the hands of a, receiver, who paid to the bank, upon the liability of the indorser, seventy-three and one-quarter per cent of the amount secured by the note. Later, the bank sued Pierce, the maker, and recovered judgment for the full amount of the note in spite of the proof showing the payment made by the receiver, and in disregard of the claim asserted by the defendant that he should only be held liable for the balance remaining unpaid. That judgment has been affirmed by the general term, Judges Daniels and Barrett each writing very strong and valuable opinions in support of their doctrine, and relying upon the authority of Jones v. Broadhurst, 9 M., G. & S., 177; 67 Eng. Com. L., 175, which fully warrants their conclusion. The question does not seem ever before to have arisen in this country, and we are left at liberty to examine the English rule and to follow it or not as we approve or disapprove its logic and its consequences.

We are not to regard the note as being accommodation paper, but must assume its transfer for value. The form of the transaction is equivalent to what it would have been if the Bates Co. had been named as payee, and loses none of its force by the intervention of the maker as first indorser. That indorsement, in the form adopted, was needed for the regular transfer of title, but does not change or affect the nature and character of the maker’s liability. He remains the ultimate debtor, the person who ought to pay the debt, in preference to and in exoneration of all the other parties to the paper, who, in some form or other, are entitled to have final recourse to him. And it is to the case of such a maker of the note, or such an acceptor of the bill of exchange, that the English rule alone applies; and it is explicitly declared inapplicable where the indorser or drawer is the real debtor, although in form only secondarily liable.

Pierce, therefore, was the ultimate debtor, and the party who ought to pay the note, both in discharge of the obligation to the holder and in exoneration of the indorser. When the bank sued on the note, it was the legal holder and the legal party in interest Upon production of the paper and the usual proof, judgment against the maker for the full amount was inevitable, unless some defense should be interposed. The only possible one for Pierce was part payment, and he was compelled to assert, and his counsel are compelled to argue, that the money paid by the indorser to the holder inured to the benefit of the maker as a payment on his debt. But that doctrine cannot prevail for very obvious reasons. The indorser’s payment did not, in the least, lessen or satisfy the maker’s debt He owed it all exactly as before. What had happened possibly changed somewhat the real creditor, but left the whole debt due and unpaid. To whom he should pay might become a new question, but how much he should pay in discharge of the note was not made doubtful in any degree. What the receiver advanced to the holder is familiarly described as a payment; but it was such relatively to the indorser’s liability alone. While relatively to the obligation of the maker, it was an equitable purchase instead of a payment That view of it was taken in a very early case, the decision of which depended necessarily upon it.

In Callow v. Lawrence, 3 Mau. & Sel., 95, it appeared that one Pywell drew a. bill upon Lawrence to his own order, which Lawrence accepted. The drawer indorsed the bill to Taylor, who discounted it and thereafter indorsed it to Barnett. It was protested for non-payment The drawer paid Barnett the full amount and .took the bill, and, striking off the indorsements of Taylor and Barnett, transferred the bill to Callow, who sued the acceptor upon it. The latter claimed that the bill was paid and extinguished, which the court denied, saying that the drawer “ became the purchaser of the bill ” when he paid and took it up out of Barnett’s hands; that it was not paid by the drawer, animo solvendi, in order to extinguish it, but only to redeem himself from the situation in which he stood. That must always be true of payment by indorser to holder, where the maker is the ultimate debtor. To the extent of the money paid, the indorser becomes equitably entitled to be substituted to the rights and remedies of the holder, and becomes, pro tanto, the beneficial owner of the debt; so that the maker’s obligation to pay the note in full, at first due to the holder solely in his own right, becomes, after the part payment by the indorser, still wholly due to the holder, but partly in his own right and partly as trustee for the indorser. A court of law cannot split the note into parts, and must act upon the legal interest and ownership.

In the present case there was no privity between maker and indorser as it respects the action of the latter. He paid not as the agent of the maker, not at his request, not for his benefit, and under no duty to relieve him, but independently, upon his own obligation, to lessen his own responsibility, and not at all to discharge the ultimate debt which it was the maker’s duty to pay. It seems very clear, therefore, that the maker cannot utilize for his own benefit a payment which, as to him, is not a payment upon the debt It becomes, as I have said, merely a question to whom he shall pay and who may sue for and collect the whole unpaid sum. In that question the maker has no concern beyond the inquiry whether he may become liable to different persons for the same debt, and encounter the danger of _ paying it twice. I can discover no such peril. The judgment in favor of the holder is a bar to any other suit on the same note, and payment to the holder discharges the note utterly. Ordinarily, the indorser cannot recover except upon the note, and as holder, and in accordance with the law merchant. If he ever has any other right of action against the maker, it is either in equity or by force of some facts beyond the bare relation established by the paper. And where the note is merged in the holder’s judgment, or paid in full to him by the maker, the indorser’s only right is through the judgment or against the proceeds, if he has made a partial payment to the holder. That does the indorser no wrong. If he is not content that the holder shall collect to some extent as his trustee, he may prevent it by payment in full to the holder, and so entitle himself to the possession of the note on which to sue, or if judgment has been obtained, to be subrogated to all of the rights of the plaintiff therein.

I think this result is clearly indicated by our own decisions. In Mechanic's Bank v. Hazard, 13 Johns., 351, the maker of the note had been arrested in an action upon it, and his bail sought to relieve themselves by force of a payment made by the indorser to the holder, but such effect was denied to it; the court saying that it was not a payment by or on behalf of the maker, or of which he or his bail could avail themselves. And in Guernsey v. Burns, 25 Wend., 411, where the suit was by the holder, representing the legal title and interest, it was said to be no defense to the maker, and no concern of his that some property in the note was in another.

It thus becomes apparent that there is no very great importance in the question which method of securing payment from the maker is adopted, since the same result follows from each, and that it narrows down to the inquiry whether as matter of correct doctrine and of convenience in practice the holder may recover the whole debt against maker or acceptor for himself and as trustee for the indorser to the extent of his acquired interest; or whether he shall take judgment only for the balance, leaving the indoi-ser to sue in some way and on some theory, which apparently could not be upon the note because already merged in the judgment, but might be for money paid for the use of the maker since he gets the benefit of it in the reduction of the judgment, as was held in Pownal v. Ferrand, 6 B. & Cress., 439, where the holder deducted the indorser’s payment from the levy against the maker. The former seems to me to be the logical and convenient method, and so I think we should follow the English doctrine.

I have not underrated the assault made upon it by the appellant He asserts that Jones v. Broadhurst is contrary to the earlier cases, and has been criticized and shaken by the later ones. I have examined them all, with some wonder at the amount of learning and ingenuity expended upon the subject. Pierson v. Dunlop, Cowper, 571; Walwyn v. St. Quintin, 1 Bos. & P., 652; Bacon v. Searles, 1 H. Bl., 88; Hemming v. Brook, 1 Car. & M., 57; Randall v. Moon, 12 C. B., 261; Cook v. Lister, 13 id., 543; Solomon v. Davis, 1 Cahabe & Ellis, 83; Thornton v. Maynard, 10 Com. Pl., L. R., 695. The prior cases were very fully and carefully reviewed by Baron Cresswell in the opinion rendered-in Jones v. Broadhurst, and of the subsequent cases I deem it only necessary to say that, along with some criticism and occasional doubt, the doctrine has remained substantially unshaken, and the case last cited was declared by Lord Coleridge to be the accepted law.

It must not be forgotten, however, and I may prudently repeat, that the doctrine has no application to accommodation paper, and rests wholly upon the actual and ultimate indebtedness of maker or acceptor as the party who ought to pay. In such a - case as that, which correctly describes the one now before us, and where no disturbing facts affect the relations of the parties as fixed by the paper itself, I think the holder may sue and recover the full amount, receiving so much of the proceeds as represents a part payment by the indorser as trustee for him.

It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur, except Maynard, J., dissenting.  