DocketNumber: No. 29030
Citation Numbers: 128 Neb. 268
Judges: Day, Eberly, Good, Goss, Paine, Raper, Rose
Filed Date: 1/25/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/9/2022
In an action on a promissory note, the trial court instructed a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff bank in its amended petition alleges that the defendant on October 5, 1928, gave his note for $2,500 to the State Bank of Minatare; that said note bore 10 per cent, interest from date, and its maturity was December 5, 1928; that on October 6, 1928, the State Bank of Mina
The case was tried to a jury, and after the evidence was concluded each party moved for an instructed verdict. After argument by counsel, the court found that the plaintiff was not a holder in due course, but a mere assignee, and that the defendant paid the note to the payee thereof, without notice of any assignment or transfer of the note, and that said payment constituted a full payment and discharge of the note and a release of the defendant.
The evidence in the case discloses that the note, exhibit No. 1, was made upon the regular note form of the State Bank of Minatare,' and no indorsement of any kind appears upon the back thereof. The evidence further shows that during the summer of 1928, the exact date not being disclosed in the evidence, Mr. L. F. Johnson, the president of the State Bank of Minatare, and Mr. L. L. Conklin, a director of said bank, went to Plattsmouth, Nebraska, to borrow money of the plaintiff bank. The president of the plaintiff bank was the father of the cashier of the State Bank of Minatare. After some negotiation, the president of plaintiff bank made a loan to these two men upon a note signed by them individually, basing the loan, he said, upon the property statement of L. L. Conklin. Some months thereafter, and on October 6, 1928, the cashier of the State Bank of Minatare sent plaintiff bank 52 notes, totaling $20,000, the note sued upon being included, and in the letter, exhibit 4, accompanying them, said: “We enclose herewith notes aggregating $20,000 under guarantee of Mr. Johnson and Mr. Conklin which we would like to have you handle for us until beet pay day when they will positively be paid,” etc.
It appears that there was a balance due upon the note given by Johnson and Conklin in the summer of 1928, and
The testimony of the defendant is that he went into the State Bank of Minatare on the evening of January 18, 1929, and was waited upon by L. F. Johnson, the president thereof. He first deposited a draft from the Stock Yards National Bank for $6,148.92, the slip being- dated January 19. Defendant then said he wanted to pay off this $2,500 note, and asked Mr. Johnson to figure up the interest. The president reached in the note pouch and took out a paper and figured interest, and said that the total amount due was $2,558.34. The defendant then asked the president to write out a check for it, which he did, neglecting to insert the date, and passed it through the window, and the defendant signed his name and shoved it back, and then asked for his note. The defendant testified: “Right at the time I gave him the check I asked him for the note and he said ‘this ain’t it, it is just a copy of it.’ * * * He told me that he had sent it out and that he would get it.”
' The evidence shows that not until after the president had possession of his check did the defendant know that the payee bank did not have his note in its note pouch, ready to deliver to him the moment he paid it off.
In examining the Compiled Statutes of Nebraska, 1929, we find that section 62-301 provides generally that, if a negotiable instrument is payable to order, it is negotiated by the indorsement of the holder completed by delivery.
“A negotiable instrument payable to the order of a person can be transferred, so as to preserve the negotiable character of the instrument, only by the indorsement of the holder completed by delivery. The indorsement must be in writing on the instrument itself, or upon a paper attached thereto.” Jackson State Bank v. Laurel Nat. Bank, 111 Neb. 744; Ann. 56 A. L. R. 921.
By “a paper attached thereto” is not meant an assignment which may be written as a separate instrument, but only such a paper as an allongé, which was defined under the old law merchant as a strip of paper tacked, that is, stapled, or firmly pasted, onto the instrument so as to become a part of it. That is to say, that when the back of a promissory note is filled with indorsements, then another sheet of similar size may be attached thereto for the sole purpose of furnishing room for further necessary indorsements.
In Gookin v. Richardson, 11 Ala. 889, 46 Am. Dec. 232, decided in January, 1847, it was held: “According to the principles of - mercantile law, a bill or promissory note
However, in Nebraska, section 20-302, Comp. St. 1929, specifically provides that such an action may be brought by the assignee in his own name; but, aside from that one point, this early holding of the Alabama court is strictly in point. See Brown v. Janes, 130 N. Y. Supp. 333.
“Where a negotiable note is transferred by delivery and assignment, the holder is nothing more than an assignee of a chose in action, and * * * takes the instrument subject to any defenses existing in favor of the makers and against the assignor before notice to the makers of the assignment.” Hecker v. Boylan, 101 N. W. 755 (126 Ia. 162). See Smith v. Nelson Land & Cattle Co., 212 Fed. 56.
Where a negotiable instrument, payable to order, is transferred only by delivery and assignment, the transferee, being the one who has by such means become possessed of the instrument, has the rights therein of a chose in action. It is subject to equities against the assignor arising in favor of the maker before he has notice of the assignment.
It has often been held that the transferee is entitled to an unqualified indorsement unless the parties have agreed to the contrary. Lawrence v. Citizens State Bank, 113 Kan. 724; Queensboro Nat. Bank v. Kelly, 48 Fed. (2d) 574, 87 A. L. R. 1172.
The Nebraska law upon the effect of a transfer without indorsement is found in section 62-320, Comp. St. 1929, which reads: “Where the holder of an instrument payable to his order transfers it for value without indorsing it, the transfer vests in the transferee such title as the transferer
This is the exact language of section 49 of the original negotiable instruments law as recommended by the National Conference of State Boards of Commissioners for promoting uniformity of legislation in the United States, and it was first adopted into our Nebraska law as section 49, art. 3, ch. 83, Laws 1905, and has never been amended.
An exhaustive discussion of this section will be found in Brannan, Negotiable Instruments Law (5th ed.) sec. 49, which is authority for saying that the transferee, without indorsement of a note payable to order, cannot be a holder in due course, as he is neither a “holder” because not a payee or indorsee, not a bearer because the instrument is not payable to bearer.
While we have not discussed it, there is a serious question whether there was a valid transfer to the plaintiff bank of the note in suit, which was the property of the State Bank of Minatare. Could there have been a valid and legal transfer of an unindorsed bank note to secure the individual indebtedness of two of the bank’s officers?
“A note which is payable to order, and which has not been indorsed, and has come into the hands of a third person by assignment merely, is subject to any defenses which could have been interposed against the original payee.” Emerson-Brantingham Co. v. Brennan, 35 N. Dak. 94. “A negotiable-promissory note may be transferred by a separate distinct assignment thereof, but in such case the transferee will not be protected as against infirmities or defenses which might be shown as against the assignor.” Gaylord v. Nebraska Savings & Exchange Bank, 54 Neb. 104. Section 62-408, Comp. St. 1929, provides that a negotiable instrument “in the hands of any holder other than a holder in due course * * * is subject to the same defenses as if it were nonnegotiable.”
While this court held in Davis v. Polak, 126 Neb. 640, “Ordinarily, no duty rests upon the indorsee or holder of a negotiable note or bond to notify the maker of such ownership; but the duty is upon the maker to seek out the holder of such instrument when making payment,” yet in the case at bar the plaintiff is but the holder of an unindorsed note, and as such has no greater rights therein than a mere assignee. The plaintiff bank, therefore, held this note subject to all the original equities between the parties arising before notice of assignment was brought to the maker.
Other authorities sustaining our holding are: Bank of Bromfield v. McKinley, 53 Colo. 279; 3 R. C. L. 987, sec. 196; Gookin v. Richardson, 11 Ala. 889; Comp. St. 1929, sec. 62-408; Peterson v. Swanson, 176 Minn. 246; Marling v. FitzGerald, 138 Wis. 93.
The plaintiff calls to our attention our decision in First Nat. Bank of Cripple Creek v. Redding, 121 Neb. 642, in which case we held that the giving of an undated check by this same defendant, made out at the same time as the check in the case at bar, that is, immediately after depositing his draft for $6,148.92, was not a payment which released Mr. Redding from a note held by the Cripple Creek bank, and they insist that the two cases are identical, and that the judgment of the trial court in the case at bar should be reversed because of this former decision. There appears to be this vital difference between these two cases, namely, that before the State Bank of Minatare sold and delivered the note before maturity to the First National Bank of Cripple Creek, it indorsed the note, “Without recourse, State Bank of Minatare, By L. F. Johnson Pt.,” thus making the Cripple Creek bank an indorsee and holder in due course for value before maturity,
It can be said that the plaintiff bank can only assert such rights as the State Bank of Minatare can assert; and the defendant paid it off in full, with interest, to that bank.
The maker of a negotiable note which has been transferred without indorsement may pay the same to the original payee where he does so without actual notice of the assignment of the note. Such a payment before notice discharges the obligation.
In Conroy v. Garries, 126 Neb. 730, we held: “The fact that the party to whom payment is made * * * did not have the same in his possession is not conclusive upon the question of his authority to collect, but is a circumstance to be considered upon that question.” Cases supporting this view are: Hatfield v. Jakway, 102 Neb. 831; Garnett v. Meyers, 65 Neb. 287; Bliss v. Falke, 125 Neb. 400.
In Dodd v. Brott, 1 Minn. 270, 66 Am. Dec. 541, that court in 1856 said: “The simple question arises whether a debtor who pays a debt in good faith to his creditor can be made liable to pay it a second time to his creditor’s assignee? If such a rule of law existed, I should not, for a moment, feel bound to follow it. It is repugnant to common sense and every principal of justice.”
Where an instrument was transferred to the plaintiff after maturity, for value and without indorsement, it was held that subsequent payment to the transferer discharged the instrument. Citizens Bank & Trust Co. v. Chase, 151 Va. 65.
“The maker of a note and mortgage not negotiable, who has no notice of a transfer of the papers, may satisfy the same by payment to the payee named therein.” Garnett v. Meyers, 65 Neb. 287. “Payment of a promissory note to the payee by the maker, without notice of a transfer of the note after maturity, is a valid defense to an action by the indorsee.” Haywood & Son v. Seeber, 16 N. W. 727 (61 Ia. 574). See Consterdine v. Moore, 65 Neb. 296; Swan v. Craig, 73 Neb. 182.
Affirmed.