251 P. 561 | Wash. | 1926
Lead Opinion
The fact that instruments may be payable to bearer and issued for the purpose of passing from hand to hand does not create them negotiable instruments, any more than other forms of personal property, which are transferable by delivery, by reason only of that fact can be said to be negotiable.
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
Since the majority of the court seem to be of the opinion that the bonds here in question are clearly negotiable in every possible sense, I freely yield my assent to the elimination of the observations made by me in the Department opinion touching the law as I conceived it to be announced in Fidelity Trust Co.v. Palmer,
Dissenting Opinion
It may be, that when I concurred in the opinion in the case ofManker v. American Savings Bank T. Co.,
But I understand that all of these cases are overruled, in so far as they make the distinction noticed, and that, now, a municipal warrant is negotiable or not negotiable, dependent upon its form; that is to say, a municipal warrant payable to John Doe is not negotiable in any sense, and that the municipality may defend against it for any cause that will avoid an ordinary contract, while a municipal warrant payable to John Doe or order, or a municipal warrant payable to bearer, is negotiable in every sense, and that the municipality has no defense to it as against an innocent holder for value, no matter however fraudulent or wrongful may have been the consideration for its issuance. This change in the rule, recognized as the rule has been since early statehood, would have been, in my opinion, sufficiently startling had it been made in a case where the precise question was presented, but it is doubly so, since it is announced in a case in which the rule can be applicable only by analogy.
The fear that there is danger in "two standards of negotiability" is, in my opinion, more fanciful than real. Seemingly, where the distinctions are clearly announced and understood, no one can be deceived by it, and the question becomes, in its final analysis, a mere quarrel over terms. This, I protest, is not a sufficient reason for changing rules long established and under which the business of municipalities has been conducted for more than thirty years. Certain principles ought at some time to be deemed as settled. Under no other rule can the people of the state conduct their affairs with certainty or safety.
I think the opinion of the court, which the foregoing opinion modifies, should be adhered to as the settled doctrine of the court.
HOLCOMB and MAIN, JJ., concur with FULLERTON, J. *248