255 P. 184 | Cal. | 1927
On the judgment-roll alone the defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000 and interest on a promissory note. The complaint sets forth a copy of the note which is as follows:
"$5,000.00 Capistrano, California, Dec. 22, 1922.
"Six months after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of myself Five Thousand No/100 Dollars payable at Any bank in Santa Ana, California, with interest at eight per cent. per annum from date until maturity.
"And if interest or principal is not paid when due, then accrued interest and principal are to draw interest at the rate of ten per centum per annum until paid, together with all attorney's fees and other costs and charges for the collection thereof. The makers, sureties, endorsers or guarantors severally waive presentment, protest and notice of protest, and the said sureties, endorsers and guarantors *19 further all and singular, waive the plea of discussion and division. Also agree that time for payment may be extended without further notice. This note authorizes any bank or banker to discount same for cash. There are no offsets or conditions against this note.
"No. 6379. "The makers of this note must sign upon "($1.00 in cancelled I.R.S.)
"BLANCHE L. DOLPH."
Indorsements: "Blanche L. Dolph. Capistrano."
In addition to other appropriate allegations the complaint alleged that on the twenty-second day of December, 1922, the defendant executed said note and on the same day "sold, assigned, indorsed, and transferred said promissory note to the Leach-Biltwell Motor Car Company, a corporation"; that thereafter on the same day "and prior to the maturity of said promissory note said Leach-Biltwell Motor Car Company, did, for a valuable consideration sell, transfer and deliver said promissory note to the plaintiff herein and that the plaintiff is now the owner and holder thereof." The defendant answered, setting up as an affirmative defense that she was induced to execute and deliver said promissory note in payment for stock in said corporation and solely by reason of certain representations made to her by the agents of said corporation which were false and fraudulent. She further alleged that shortly after the execution and delivery of the note she ascertained that the said representations were false, and she immediately rescinded the transaction and notified all parties in interest and every bank and banking institution in Southern California, including the plaintiff, that she had canceled and rescinded said transaction. The court found that the representations and statements were made to the defendant by the agents of the Leach-Biltwell Motor Car Company as alleged; that they were false and that they were the inducing cause of the execution and delivery of said note, but that said notice was not given by the defendant nor received by the plaintiff until after it had purchased said note and "that it purchased said note in good faith in due course of business and for a valuable consideration prior to the maturity thereof and without notice or knowledge of any equities or *20 defenses in favor of the defendant." The court thereupon rendered judgment for the plaintiff upon its conclusion of law that the note was negotiable in form and that under the facts found the plaintiff was entitled to judgment notwithstanding the equitable defense alleged and proved. The sole question for determination is whether the note sued on is negotiable in form. If the trial court was correct in holding that it is negotiable in form the judgment must be affirmed. If it be held to be non-negotiable in form the matters alleged and proved were a complete defense and the judgment must be reversed.
[1] It is first contended by the defendant that the said note is non-negotiable by reason of the inclusion therein of the words "charges for collection." Section
It is next contended that the note is non-negotiable for uncertainty in time of payment. The contention is predicated upon the fact that the note contains an agreement on the part of "the makers, sureties, indorsers or guarantors" that time of payment may be extended without further notice. Incidentally it is urged that the note is uncertain as to what parties agree to an extension of time of payment for the reason that the agreement for extension is set apart from the sentence which precedes it by a period. If a comma or a semicolon had been there used we apprehend no claim of uncertainty would have been urged. It is argued that because of the period it cannot be determined whether the maker alone or the sureties, indorsers, and guarantors as well as the maker agree that time of payment may be extended without notice. Whatever punctuation be used between the two sentences it is clear that both the maker and the sureties, indorsers, and guarantors severally agree that time of payment may be extended without further notice.
[3] It is well settled that a stipulation in a note that sureties, indorsers, and guarantors consent that time of payment may be extended without notice thereof does not destroy negotiability (McDonald v. Mulkey,
[4] The question then is, whether a stipulation expressed in the note that the maker consents to an extension of the time of payment renders the note non-negotiable. Upon this point the authorities from other jurisdictions are not in harmony and the precise point seems not to have been adjudicated in this state, although the reasons which would logically lead to a declaration that such an agreement does not destroy negotiability are stated in Navajo County Bank v. Dolson,
It would unduly prolong this opinion to review the many cases involving the same or similar provisions in promissory notes under the law-merchant of the several states. They are extensively annotated and commented upon in the cases *23
hereinafter mentioned. The supreme court of Tennessee has briefly stated the reasons and cited the authorities which indicate the correctness of the holding that the inclusion of such a provision in a note does not destroy its negotiability. The law of Tennessee with reference to certainty of time of payment is in the identical language of our own statute. In Bank ofWhitehouse v. White,
"Principle: As already observed, the note as executed is stipulated to mature on a date fixed and certain. The provision for extension does not put it in the power of the holder to extend the note without the concurrence of the maker, and the latter may not force an extension on the holder. When they concur, a new date of maturity is fixed, and one no less certain than the original date. The sureties merely assent in advance thereto and bind themselves to waive the right of defense that might otherwise accrue; or to be bound by the supplemental contract which fixes the later maturity date. There is no agreement embodied in the note operating to bind the holder to extend. There is incorporated no promise to do anything that would, of its force, affect the unconditional promise to pay on the date named in instrument. There is nothing in the note that looks towards an indefinite extension of time of payment.
"Precedent: Cases that pass on this question may be found collated in 8 Cor. Jur. 140, 17 Ann. Cas. 55, and 15 L.R.A. (N.S.) 878; Longmont Nat. Bank v. Loukonen, *24
Ann. Cas. 1914B, 210; Anniston Loan etc. Co. v. Stickney, 31 L.R.A. 234; Rossville State Bank v. Heslet, 33 L.R.A. (N.S.) 738; State Bank of Halstad v. Bilstad, 49 L.R.A. (N.S.) 132. The cases which have appeared since preparation of the last of these notes demonstrate that the above is fast becoming the settled construction of the Negotiable Instruments Act. (FirstNat. Bank v. Stover,
"Policy: Such a provision for extension not infrequently operates to the advantage of a surety in permitting the holder, at his option, safely to give grace to the maker, on the latter's application; when otherwise, pressure for payment might come inconveniently upon both maker and surety. It is common practice to embody such a provision in notes; the clause tends to give currency to the note, and the policy of the law should be in furtherance of the negotiability of such widely used instruments when they fairly fall within the spirit of the provision of the uniform act. White v. Hatcher,
Among the cases holding that a provision such as the one now before us does not destroy negotiability are the following, many of which contain elaborate notes and collation of authorities on the subject: First National Bank v. Stover (1916),
Of the cases adhering to a contrary doctrine the following may be noted: Cown v. Spencer, 39 Fed. 262; Union StockyardsNational Bank v. Bolan, 14 Idaho, 87 [125 Am. St. Rep. 146, 93 P. 508]; National Bank v. Gunter Bros.,
The appellant concedes that the interpretation we place upon the language of the note in question is in harmony with the modern doctrine on the subject, but insists that the older cases are in a majority and better reasoned. The trend of modern authority is unquestionably opposed to the appellant's construction of the note. We are satisfied with the reasoning of these later cases. It appears to us to be the better rule and is in harmony with the statement of this court in Navajo CountyBank v. Dolson, supra. Such an interpretation, in conjunction with the recent cases in other jurisdictions, tends for stability and uniformity in the interpretation of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law adopted in this state and in nearly all of the other states of the Union (Utah State Bank v. Smith,
The judgment is affirmed.
Richards, J., Seawell, J., Preston, J., Langdon, J., Curtis, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred. *26