Under the pleadings and the evidence, the con *741 trolling question involved is whether the suit was brought within the statute of limitations. The note sued on was under seal. Actions upon bonds or other instruments under seal shall be brought within 20 years after the right of action shall have accrued. Code § 3-703. A promissory note under seal is within the provisions of this statute.
Upon default by the maker in the payment of the semiannual interest on this note on February 28, 1927, did the principal of the note become instantly due and payable, under the clause in the note that immediately upon such default the’ entire principal “shall become instantly due and payable”? It is to be noted that the clause in this note, unlike the acceleration clause in many notes, does not provide that upon default in the payment of the interest the entire principal shall, at the option of the holder become immediately due and payable. In such a case, the holder of the instrument would have to exercise the option in order for the note to become due and payable.
See Lee
v.
O’Quinn,
184
Ga.
44 (
So it appears to be the settled rule in this State that' where the acceleration clause in a note or other instrument for the payment of money is absolute in its terms and not optional with the holder, then upon default in the payment of the in *742 terest instalment the entire debt “automatically and ipso facto” becomes due and payable—that is, the debt matures, without regard to any affirmative action on the part of the holder to declare same due, or to enforce such provision or insist thereon, which is necessary when the acceleration clause is optional and not absolute.
The next question presents-itself as follows: Did the statute of limitations commence running from the date the maker failed to pay the semiannual interest on February 28, 1927? It is insisted by the defendant maker that this is the case and that the default in the payment of the semiannual interest having taken place more than 20 years prior to the institution of this suit by the holder of said note, same being filed August 13, 1948, the right of action of the plaintiff on the note was barred. “In considering the effect upon the running of the statute of limitations of an acceleration clause in a promissory note, a distinction must be drawn between an acceleration provision which is absolute in its terms and one which merely gives the payee or holder the option of accelerating the maturity of a note upon the happening of some contingency, usually default in payment of instalments or interest. . . According to the weight of authority, where the acceleration provision is absolute in its terms, —that is, that the note becomes due on default, without any optional features,—the statute of limitations begins to run upon such default.”
The plaintiff holder urges, however, that the defendant maker can not interpose, as to her, the plea of the statute of limitations because she was, under the facts, presumed to be a holder in due course of the note. The plaintiff relies on the principle that she being a holder in due course, without notice of any defects in the note, could not be defeated in her attempt to collect this note because she had a right to rely upon the apparent fact that the note would not mature and become payable until two years after its date. The plaintiff claims that this note is a negotiable instrument, and, nothing to the contrary appearing, she is to be deemed a holder in due course, without notice of any defects, holding the note free from any defect or other thing tending to defeat its collection. There
*743
fore, the plaintiff states, since it does not appear that she acquired this note after maturity, it is to be presumed that she acquired the same before maturity and now holds the note free of any defect in the note that would prevent its being collected. The plaintiff cites
Cook
v.
Parks,
46
Ga. App.
749 (
The note sued on is a negotiable instrument. The inclusion therein of a provision whereby the entire principal became due on failure of the maker to pay the semiannual interest did not change the note to a non-negotiable one. According to the weight of authority, a promissory note otherwise negotiable is not rendered non-negotiable by a provision therein that, upon default by the maker in the performance of certain agreements, the note is to become due and payable. See Annotations,
The most common provision for accelerating the maturity date of notes is that upon default in the payment of interest the entire debt becomes due.
The plaintiff, therefore, regardless of whether she purchased this note, before maturity, as shown by the face of the note, but at a time when the note had actually become due and payable by reason of the maker’s default in the payment of interest or’ taxes, took the instrument with this provision embodied therein. The inclusion in the negotiable instrument of a provision of this type accelerating the maturity of the instrument was sufficient to put any subsequent holder on inquiry as to whether the semiannual interest had been paid by the maker in accordance with the terms of the contract. Furthermore, a plea that a note is barred by the statute of limitations *745 is not a defensive plea on the merits, but is a plea in bar. The fact that this note contained an absolute accelerating provision automatically maturing the note upon default in the payment of semiannual'interest did not constitute an infirmity in the note. This did not constitute a default in the title. of • the person negotiating the note.
But it is insisted that the subsequent payment on September 1, 1927, by the maker of the semiannual interest instalment which was due February 28, 1927, and its acceptance by the holder, amounted to a waiver of the right to insist upon the acceleration provisions of the note and served to toll the statute of limitations. With this provision we do not agree. “Where the instrument does not provide that in case of default the amount remaining due thereon shall at once become due and payable, but provides merely that in case of such default the entire amount may, at the option of the holder, become at once due and payable, if the arrears are paid and accepted prior-to such election on the part of the holder his right to exercise the option would thereupon become extinguished; but if such an election is declared prior to the tender of such arrearage . . the rights of the parties are the same as if the entire note had by its terms become due immediately upon default,' without such an election. In either of such cases, the entire debt being then due, the mere acceptance of part payment thereon would not amount to a waiver of the prior default or undo the maturity of the remainder of the indebtedness and set it forward to the dates originally fixed therefor under the terms of the original contract.”
McRae
v.
Federal Land Bank,
36
Ga. App.
51 (2) (supra). To the same effect see
Gilford
v.
Green,
33
Ga. App.
1, 4 (
Applying the above, it is our opinion that neither the fact that the defendant maker paid the semiannual interest after it was due and this payment was accepted by the plaintiff holder nor the fact that the maker subsequently paid the taxes due on October 1, 1927, on May 5, 1928, and such payment was accepted by and accrued to the benefit of the holder, operated to prevent the statute of limitations from commencing on August 28, 1927, and from continuing to run.
Smith
v.
Gholstin,
45
Ga. App.
287 (
There was no legal agreement by the holder of the note, either express or implied, which would prevent the entire indebtedness from maturing upon such default by the maker, or prevent the statute from running from the date of such accelerated maturity, in the instant case; nor did acceptance *747 by the holder of the interest payments and of the taxes after due and after default and automatic acceleration of the maturity of the note operate as a waiver or prevent the statute from running. Furthermore, our Code provides: “A new promise, in order to renew a right of action already barred, or to constitute a point from which the limitation shall commence running on a right of action not yet barred, shall be in . . the party’s own handwriting, or subscribed by him or someone authorized by him.” Code § 3-901. There was no such promise, express or implied, involved here. The plaintiff holder asserts that under the provisions of the Code, § 3-805, which reads, “If the defendant . . shall remove from this State, the time of his absence from the State, and until he returns to reside, shall not be counted or estimated in his favor” this note is not yet barred in that it was executed in North Carolina where the maker lived at that time and that he moved to Georgia in June, 1942. It plainly states that if the defendant shall “remove” from Georgia, and the defendant here was a resident of North Carolina when the note was signed, and the debt accrued, and remained there some 16 years, then moved, not “removed” to this State in 1942. The case of Moore v. Carroll, 54 Ga. 126 is controlling here. There is nothing in Howell v. Burnett, 11 Ga. 303 to the contrary. There the note was executed.
Applying the above rulings, the trial court properly rendered judgment for the defendant, where it appeared from the evidence that the plaintiff’s right of action on the note was barred on August 13, 1948, the date when the suit on the note was filed. It follows that the court did not err in overruling the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
