187 Iowa 888 | Iowa | 1919
“Charles City, Iowa, Nov. 25, 1916, $5,000.00-
On Or before five years after date, the undersigned promises to pay to
R. H. Andrews of Charles City, Iowa, or order at the office of the Commercial National Bank of
6 per cent interest at per annum payable semi-annually.
6 “Principal and interest shall draw interest at 6 per cent per annum after due, payable semiannually, and if not paid when due, the whole shall become due and payable at once without further notice, at the option of the holder. If sued or placed in hands of an attorney for collection, a reasonable attorney’s fee may be recovered. And I hereby expressly agree and consent, that in any suit brought on this note by the holder hereof, any justice of the peace, of the state of Iowa, before whom such suit may be brought, may have and exercise full and complete jurisdiction in the case to any amount not exceeding three hundred dollars. The makers and endorsers severally waive presentment for payment, protest and nonpayment of this note at maturity and all defenses on the ground of any extension of time of its payment that may be given by the holder to them or any of them.
“To secure payment of this note, and of any other lia'hility or liabilities of the undersigned to the holder hereof, due or to become due, or that may be hereafter contracted or existing howsoever acquired by said holder, the undersigned has transferred, pledged and delivered to The Commercial National Bank of Charles City the following property, to wit:
“Certificate No. 24 for fifty shares of stock Coml. Naftl. of Charles City, la. and Certf. No. 28 for five shares stock Coml. Nat. Bank of Charles City, Iowa, (the market value of which is today $11,000.00) and now agrees that upon breach of any of the promises herein contained or upon failure to pay any of said other liabilities when due said bank or the holder hereof may thereupon, or at any time or times thereafter, sell the said property or any part thereof, and any substitute therefor and any additions thereto,
“Geo. E. May.”
The plaintiff relies, for its right to lien, upon the provisions of the note pertaining to the collateral security, as set forth in the last paragraph thereof. No shares of stock were ever deposited with the Commercial National Bank of Charles City, as recited in such paragraph. However, a few days subsequent to the date of the note, the payee, Andrews, executed and delivered to May the following receipt:
“Charles City, Iowa, Dec. 2nd, 1916.
“Beceived of George E. May certificate Number 2á, and certificate Number 28, for a total of 55 shares held as collateral for George E. May’s note of $5,000.00, dated November 25th, 1916, and due five years from date. R. H. Andrews.”
, Pursuant to this receipt, the shares in question were delivered by May to Andrews.
The controlling questions in the case are:
2. If yea, then, as between the parties to the Andrews note, can the receipt above set forth be considered as qualifying the printed provisions of the original note, and as restricting the use of the collateral as security for the Andrews note alone?
3. If yea, can the plaintiff avoid such effect of the receipt by showing that it was a purchaser in due course without notice of such receipt?
4:. If yea, then, under the evidence, did the plaintiff have sufficient notice of the actual contract between the parties as to charge it with knowledge thereof?
The circumstances surrounding the parties in the making of the instrument and in the purchase thereof are few. May was the president of the plaintiff bank. He died insolvent, June 20, 1918. The indebtedness incurred by him to the plaintiff bank was so incurred while he was in active management, and some time subsequently to December 2, 1916, when the collateral was delivered to Andrews. The Andrews note was purchased by the plaintiff on June 14, 1918, after May had ceased to have active management of the bank. The Andrews note was drawn upon a blank form, in use in the plaintiff bank. This doubtless accounts for its discrepancies. The' erasures made upon such blank form are indicated above. The italics indicated above represent the written portion of the note. The remainder thereof was a part of the printed blank. The note recited that its maker had “pledged and delivered to the Oommer
We may say, also, that this case does not involve any question of right of application of surplus proceeds of collateral properly sold by the holder in collection of the original note.
(1)' The writing imported a consideration, and there is no evidence that there was no consideration.
(8) The receipt, on its face, discloses a consideration moving to Andrews, the payee, in that he received thereby the possession of the collateral; whereas, under the first contract,- the possession was to remain in the bank of which the payor was president. It discloses a consideration to May, in that the sweeping' powers conferred upon the holder by the terms of the original contract were restricted, and the lien upon the collateral was limited to the particular note.
It is further urged by the appellant that the receipt is a mere recital of fact, and not a contract. It is true that the receipt is a recital of the fact of receipt. But it also states the extent of the right of the receiptor in the collateral received, and the purpose for which it is receipted. It is to be “held as collateral for George E. May’s note of $5,000.”
It is clear, therefore, that, as between the parties, the receipt is controlling, so far as it goes, and that its legal effect was to supersede the contradictory provisions of the printed form.
• III. Do the rights of the plaintiff as to this collateral rise any higher than those of Andrews? The plaintiff contends that it had no notice of the receipt, and that, therefore, as a holder in due course, it was in no manner bound thereby, but had a right to rely upon all the terms of the note as they appeared upon its face. We will assume that the plaintiff was a holder in due course, and is entitled to the full benefit of the law of negotiable instruments. If, then, there had been any contract between the original parties which would have given the payor the right of defense or offset to the note or to its security, such right would not be available to the payor, as against the plaintiff. In such event, the rights of the plaintiff would rise higher than those of the payee. If effect be given to this receipt as the contract between the original parties, does it operate to create or present a defense, either to the note or to its security? The receipt does not in any manner impeach the note in the hands of the plaintiff nor its security. Its right to collect the note in full and to appropriate the collateral to that end has been in no manner questioned by anyone. Not only has no defense to note or security been encountered by the plaintiff, but the court has given it full affirmative adjudication in the decree appealed from. The plaintiff is in court as a holder of notes amounting to about $1,7,000. It is in court as a “holder in due course” only as to the $5,000 note purchased from Andrews. As to the other notes, it is not in court as such holder. Whatever its rights as to such other notes, the law of negotiable instruments is not involved. Such statute comes to its aid only as a