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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Porterfield v Fall. [1766] 5 Brn 923 (17 June 1766) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1766/Brn050923-1160.html |
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Subject_1 DECISIONS of the LORDS OF COUNCIL AND SESSION, collected by JAMES BURNETT, LORD MONBODDO.
Date: Porterfield
v.
Fall
17 June 1766 Click here to view a pdf copy of this documet : PDF Copy
[Fac. Coll. IV. 374.]
One merchant was owing money to another, which he desired payment of by an order upon Edinburgh; and accordingly a bill was sent him by the debtor on a merchant in Edinburgh, indorsed by the debtor to the creditor. This bill the creditor acknowledged the receipt of, adding, “that when paid it should be noted accordingly.” This bill was not duly negotiated, and the question was, Whether, nevertheless, the creditor had recourse against the indorser?
It was said for the creditor, that these words, “when paid,” plainly denoted that the bill was not taken either in payment or for value given, but in security of a debt, and therefore that he was bound to do no diligence upon it, because it is an established rule, that, when a debt is assigned in security, the assignee is bound to do no diligence, but only to impute the money, when he gets it, in payment of his debt;—and so it was decided in the very case of a bill betwixt merchants, 9th January 1758, Alexander against Cuming. But, on the other side, a later decision was quoted, 6th February 1762, Walter Grosset against Receiver-General, where the like judgment was given by this Court, but it was reversed in the House of Lords.
My Lord Alemore said, by this last mentioned decision of the House of Lords, and by the judgment in the case of Brebner against Haliburton, where the decree of this Court was likewise reversed by the House of Peers, he understood it to be established law, that when one merchant indorses a bill to another, in the way of commerce, whether for value received, for payment, or for security of a debt, or by way of commission, in order to recover payment of it for behoof of the indorser,
which was the case of Haliburton, the merchant who gets the bill must duly negotiate it, otherwise be liable for it; and he said the nature of commerce required this. And this was the unanimous opinion of the Court.
The electronic version of the text was provided by the Scottish Council of Law Reporting