117 Va. 1 | Va. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
The following are the pleadings and evidence in this case; so far as necessary to be stated:
On June 14, 1898, the defendant in error (designated the plaintiff) recovered a judgment by default against the plaintiff in error (called the defendant) on forty-four negotiable notes aggregating $660.00. These notes were made by the defendant and two other persons to James H. Barton for land, and contained the recital that they constituted a lien thereon, and were made payable at the First National Bank of Richmond, Virginia, and were indorsed by the payee and delivered to the plaintiff as collateral security for his individual note for borrowed money. Barton’s note was in excess of the collateral, and he died insolvent, leaving it unpaid.
To a bill in equity by the plaintiff to subject the ¡iefendant’s land to the payment of its judgment, the latter filed an
The section provides that such judgment may be obtained “after fifteen days’ notice, which notice shall be returned to the clerk’s office . . . within five days after the service of the same . . .’■’ Notice was executed June 9,1898, and judgment rendered June 24, following. Counting the day of service the judgment was not entered until after fifteen days’ notice.
In Swift & Co. V. Wood, 103 Va. 494, 49 S. E. 643, it was held, that “Notice of a motion for a judgment under section 3211 of the Code, must be returned to the clerk’s office within five days after the service. In computing the time the day of service is to be computed, as prescribed by Code, section 8, but not the date on which the notice is returned, hence a notice served February 21, and returned February 26, is not within the time prescribed, and a judgment by-default thereon is invalid. The provision of the statute is mandatory.”
This decision shows that the day of service is to be counted in computing the fifteen days’ notice. Therefore, the terms of section 3211 were complied with in the instant case.
(2) The second ground of objection is that the plaintiff ought to have sold the collateral notes, and had no right to bring suit upon them.
It appears that the plaintiff, in good faith, tried to dispose of the notes but could not find a purchaser. But in this jurisdiction an attempt to sell the notes is not a prerequisite to the plaintiff’s right to sue. Payne v. Zell, 98 Va. 294, 36 S. E. 379; Selden v. Williams, 108 Va. 542, 62 S. E. 380.
(3) The third and last ground of contention that demands our notice is that, in the year 1890, the defendant
The plaintiff made full answer, denying all the material allegations of the cross-bill, and declaring that the notes were negotiable paper and received by it from the payee in due course of business for value and before maturity and without notice of any equities existing between the defendant and Barton.
In such case it is the settled rule that the answer must be taken as true, unless overcome by other evidence; and there is no such evidence in this record. Ward v. Cornett, 91 Va. 676, 22 S. E. 494, 49 L. R. A. 550, and authorities cited.
The controlling principles of law in relation to the rights of a holder of negotiable paper as collateral are clearly stated in Jones on Pledges and Collateral Securities, section 89: “The holder of negotiable paper as collateral is its owner. One taking negotiable paper before maturity as collateral security is, for all practical purposes, the owner of it, and a bona fide holder for value, may collect it, at least to the extent of the debt for which it was pledged, without regard to the equities between the original parties, whether arising out of the original transaction or from subsequent dealings. Thus, it is no defense for the maker of a collateral note taken before maturity in good faith, and without notice of any infirmity in it, that it was made for accommodation or was misapplied by an agent, broker or other person having it for a special purpose; or was pledged by a holder fraudulently or in violation of a statute making his assignment of it a criminal offense; or that the maker had paid the note to the payee. . . .
“A pledgee of negotiable paper before maturity is not affected by a payment made by the maker to the payee, though made in good faith, without knowledge of the assignment of it by the payee as- collateral security, unless the maker
Our conclusion is, that the decree of the Law and Equity Court of the city of Richmond, granting the plaintiff relief under the original bill and denying the prayer of the cross-bill, is plainly right and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.