102 P.2d 966 | Kan. | 1940
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action on a promissory note, the plaintiff claiming as a holder in due course for value. The defendant prevailed, and the plaintiff appeals. The determining questions presented are whether the note at issue is a negotiable instrument, and, if not, whether the record supports a verdict for the defendant.
“104.77 Viola, Kan., January 7, 1938.
“On or before August 1, 1938, I, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of: Sowers Plan Crop Insurance Mutual Company at Topeka, Kan., the sum of one hundred four and 77/100 dollars with eight percent interest per annum after date of maturity.
“To secure the payment of this note, I, or we, do hereby mortgage and convey unto the payee, or its assigns, the crops described, and this mortgage extends to and covers said crops, whether standing and growing, or when cut and in shock or stack, and/or when threshed and in the bin, granary or otherwise.
“The crops covered consist of all interest in 86 and % interest 145 acres of wheat located in the SW quarter section of section 1, township 29, range 3 west, county of Sedgwick, state of Kansas.
“In the event of crop failure, I, or we, do hereby assign that portion of any insurance collected from the Sowers Plan Crop Insurance Mutual Company necessary to pay this note to Sowers Plan Crop Insurance Mutual Company. P. O. Address, Viola, Kan.
No.........................Due Aug. 1, 1938. Signed: Ben Pauly.”
The Citizens State Bank of Topeka, appellant, alleged that it acquired the note on February 1, 1938 — six months before maturity —by endorsement from the United Investment Company.
In his answer the defendant denied generally the allegations of the petition, and specifically denied that the plaintiff was a holder in due course for value; alleged that if the plaintiff in any manner obtained the note, it did so with knowledge of the infirmities therein; denied that the payee had any authority to transfer the note; alleged that prior to maturity of the note he suffered a crop loss in excess of $200; that he reported the loss to the insurance company; that the company sent a respresentative to adjust the loss, and that the adjuster agreed, in the early part of July, 1938, that the loss was approximately $130 and that the note being for less than the crop loss, would be canceled, and that the company would mail him a check for the balance due; that a short time thereafter another adjuster called upon him and agreed that his crop loss was $141, which would leave a balance due him of about $37; that the adjuster stated that the note was in the office of the insurance company and would be marked paid and immediately returned to him; that the note was not returned to him, nor did the company ever pay him any part
Prior to this action, the insurance company had gone into receivership.
The reply was a general denial. There was, however, a stipulation that the defendant had received no payment on his crop loss either from the company or the receiver. .
The action was tried in November, 1939, before a jury. It is unnecessary to narrate the record in detail. Suffice it to say that by appropriate motions the plaintiff protected its contention that the note was negotiable, was acquired in due course for value, and that any defenses the maker might have against the payee were not available to him in this action. The court refused to accept the plaintiff’s view that the note was a negotiable instrument, and instructed the jury that if they found that the plaintiff purchased the note for value, before maturity, it did so with notice that the maker had assigned such portions of insurance collected necessary to pay the note, and if they found that Pauly had suffered a crop failure equal to the face of the note or the company had so agreed, he had the right to pay the note out of insurance collected. Other parts of the instruction, not here material, need not be recited.
The jury found generally for the defendant. Whereupon, by a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the plaintiff again raised the issue of negotiability. The motion was overruled.
Some procedural questions, apparent on the record, but which are not urged by the parties, will be disregarded. And before proceeding directly to the two main questions involved, we note briefly some preliminary facts and secondary contentions. The note shows on its face that it was given to a mutual crop insurance company. Being bound to know what so appears, any holder took the note subject to any limitations which may exist, under the law, upon the power of such a company to take notes or to transfer them. The record clearly discloses that the plaintiff bought the note with knowledge that it had been given in payment of insurance premiums, though the plaintiff’s representative testified he did not know that he had ever examined one of the Sowers company policies. It may be noted in passing that when the instant note was given, mutual companies had a right to accept notes, secured by mortgage upon the crop, in payment of premiums under the provisions of G. S. 1935,
The appellee contends that the insurance company was without legal authority to sell and transfer its premium notes, and that the purchaser was bound to know of such incapacity. The record does not disclose whether the company sold this note for less than its face amount, though the plaintiff offered to show that the company sold a number of premium notes, including this one, to the United Investment Company for a total amount representing a discount of seven or eight percent. Upon objection of the defendant, however, this testimony was excluded. We recognize the substantial character of arguments that mutual companies, which pay losses out of premium or assessment payments from its members, have no right to sell their premium notes, and particularly no right to sell them at a discount. All members are entitled to equal treatment in creation of reserves for payment of losses. However, in view of the conclusions hereinafter stated, we do not now determine that question.
One proposition advanced here by the appellant is that even if the note be nonnegotiable, the maker would not be entitled in the present case, to offset his crop loss against the note. The argument is based on the contention that policyholders in a mutual insurance company have no such right in the event the company has become insolvent. We do not find, however, that this issue was raised in the trial court, and it will not be here considered.
We come to the main issues.
First, is the note at issue a negotiable instrument, under the statute: (G. S. 1935, ch. 52.) The pertinent sections of the statute are G. S. 1935, 52-201 to 52-205. There can be no dispute that the first paragraph of the note (supra) is an unconditional promise to pay a certain sum, and otherwise meets the requirements of section’ 52-201. The controversy centers about two later paragraphs in the note, hereinafter referred to as “the mortgage clause” and the “assignment clause,” and which read as follows:
“To secure the payment of this note, I, or we, do hereby mortgage and convey unto the payee, or its assigns, the crops described, and this mortgage extends to and covers said crops, whether standing and growing, or when cut and in shock or stack, and/or when threshed and in the bin, granary or otherwise. . . In the event of crop failure, I, or we, do hereby assign that portion of any insurance collected from Sowers Plan Crop Insurance Mutual Company necessary to pay this note to Sowers Plan Crop Insurance Mutual Company.”
The appellee does not stress the mortgage clause, merely contending that “the mortgage clause in this particular type of note and in connection with the other provisions in the note make it nonnegotiable.” Although decisions in other jurisdictions are cited, appellant cites no decision of this court and we have found none, where the question of negotiability turned upon the incorporation of a chattel mortgage in the note itself. Cases which involve mere references to collateral instruments or other security, or which involve provisions (1) to (5) of G. S. 1935, 52-205, which do not affect negotiability, are not in point. Appellee cites the case of Rohr v. Jeffery, 128 Kan. 541, 278 Pac. 725, in which a note containing a chattel mortgage was held to be nonnegotiable. But that case is not persuasive upon the immediate question. In the Rohr case the note not only contained a chattel mortgage, but also contained a promise not to mortgage certain property. It was the latter promise, along with others, which, the court said, destroyed negotiability. (G. S. 1935, 52-205.) Inasmuch as the question of whether the incorporation in a note of a mortgage which constitutes a completed act by the maker and which contains no promise to do anything in the future has not been adequately presented on both sides, we consider it inadvisable to determine the question in this case, since our conclusion as to the assignment clause, hereinafter stated, makes it unnecessary to do so.
We now consider the character and effect of the assignment clause in the instant note. At the outset, we call attention to inaccurate references to this clause, occurring in the briefs. The clause is at times treated as an assignment of whatever may become due from the company, in settlement of crop- losses. Note, for instance, appellant’s argument on page 12 of its brief, that “prospective takers of these notes might hesitate to purchase them if they were compelled to look solely to- the personal and financial integrity of the makers, but with the assignment of the fund which might become due in the event of a crop loss the note would become more attractive” (italics ours). But that is not the way the clause
What then is the meaning and effect of the assignment clause? We agree with appellant that whatever it meant, it was a present assignment. But what did the maker assign? In effect, he said, “I now agree and promise that if I suffer a crop loss and collect for it from the company, I will hold such collection for the benefit of the holder of this note to whatever extent that may be necessary to pay the note.” While the assignment is to the company, the note is payable “to the order of” the company and any subsequent holder would succeed to whatever rights the payee might have under the assignment. In fact, it is not easy to see that as between the maker and the payee, the assignment would have great significance. In case of crop loss, the company’s liability and the maker’s liability on the note would simply be offset against each other and there would not likely be any insurance collected by the insured as long as the note was fully paid. In order, therefore, to give the assignment clause much significance, it must contemplate the rights of some endorsee or other subsequent holder. As to subsequent holders,