188 Iowa 606 | Iowa | 1920
If we must hold that the note can be.collected now, even if said indebtedness still subsists, it will become unnecessary to pass upon whether same has been paid. Therefore, we address ourselves first to the legal effect of the promise in the note, though it be assumed that said debts of the company have not been discharged.
II. In Kiskadden v. Allen, 7 Colo. 206, recovery was permitted, though the note had words fully as indefinite as the ones found in the note before us. The same is true of Dobbins v. Oberman, 17 Neb. 163 (22 N. W. 356), of Stevens v. Blunt, 7 Mass. 240, and possibly of other cases relied on by appellant. We prefer to 'act without regard to these cases, because, while the qualifying words considered in them are as indefinite as is “when the debts of the company are paid,” they qualified a definite promise to pay by
III. But in Randall v. Johnson, 59 Miss. 317, the promise was to pay in 90 days after the return trip of a certain vessel. This is quite as uncertain and contingent as is a promise by defendant to make payment when the debts of the company had been discharged. The Randall case holds that, though the vessel was lost, payment became due in 90 days after it failed to return within the time usually needed for the return trip. We see no distinction in principle between this and the instant case.
IV. This defendant gave this note in part payment for receiving a controlling interest in the coifipany, and he assumed control and management of that company. In the course of the opinion, we shall speak fully on the effect of acquiring this interest and this control. For the present, we have to say that, after defendant got control and management, it became his duty to see to it that the company paid its said indebtedness. This being so, the case stands as if defendant had promised to pay the note when his management brought it about that the debts of the company were paid. Failure to keep promises less definite and binding than this has not been effective to delay maturity.
In the early case of Barnard v. Cushing, 4 Metc. (Mass.) 230, there was a statement:
“We agree not to compel payment for the amount of this note, but to receive the same when convenient for the promisors to pay.”
It was held that no action would lie on the promise; but it would seem that this has been practically overruled in Page v. Cook, 164 Mass. 116. In that last case, the clause was: “On demand after date I promise to pay
“Possibly, if the question arose now, a different result might be reached from that arrived at in that case.” '
A like view of the Barnard case seems to be taken in Pistel v. Imperial Mut. L. Ins. Co., 88 Md. 552 (43 L. R. A. 219). Certain it is that the trend of the later cases is to hold that agreements to pay when convenient mean that payment is due within a reasonable time after date. That is the holding of the Pistel case, supra. In Works v. Hershey, 35 Iowa 340, at 343, cited by appellee, the promise was that the note should be paid at Cincinnati “when convenient.” We held that these words “cannot be construed to nullify the words of the instrument, viz.: ‘On demand I promise to pay/ ” and that, “if any force be given to them, it will be that the maker bound himself to pay within a reasonable time after the date of the note.” That, too, is the decision in Lewis v. Tipton, 10 Ohio St. 88, and the case approves the text in 1 Edwards on Bills,.Notes, and Negotiable Instruments (3d Ed.) 154 (Note) :
“And it is now adjudged that a note by which the maker promised to pay a certain sum ‘when it is convenient’ is due within a reasonable time.”
The same rule is announced in Benton v. Benton, 78 Kan. 366 (97 Pac. 378), another case cited by appellee, in speaking to a promise to pay “as soon as he can.” It is said this is of the same effect as a promise to pay when it would be convenient, and that a promise to pay “when convenient” is held to be tantamount to an agreement to pay within a reasonable time, upon the theory that otherwise the practical effect would be to give the promisor the option to refuse payment altogether. In Smithers v. Junker, 41 Fed. 101, the promise was:
It was held this does not contemplate the money shall become due only at the pleasure of the maker, without regard to lapse of time or the rights of payee, but that the maker is to have a reasonable time, to be determined by himself, in which to pay the note.
Why is a promise that one will pay when it is convenient for him less indefinite and contingent than the promise of a manager that he will pay his own note as soon as he causes the debts of the corporation managed by him to be paid ? If a promise to pay when convenient is, in law, á promise to pay within a reasonable time after date, why is not that true of a promise to pay when certain debts have been caused to be paid?
In Cota v. Buck, 48 Mass. 588, the promise was to make payment as soon as the maker could realize the money out of property he had purchased of the payee. In Ubsdell v. Cunningham, 22 Mo. 124, it was to pay as soon as the maker collected from certain accounts described. In Nunez v. Dautel, 86 U. S. 560, payment was to be made “as soon as the crop can be sold or the money raised from any other source.” In Crooker v. Holmes, 65 Me. 195, the note was to be paid when the maker sold his place, where he was then living. In Sears v. Wright, 24 Me. 278, and in Goodloe v. Taylor, 3 Hawks (N. C.) 458, the qualifying words made payment depend, respectively, upon the time when the maker sold certain logs, and when a house being builded for him was completed. In all of these cases, it was held that the note became payable within a reasonable time after date. Surely, the promise in each of these was as indefinite and contingent as the promise at bar.
V. A naked briefing of these decisions falls far short
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Such words of qualification are merely an arrangement that the maker is not to pay immediately, and may delay payment until a reasonable time has elapsed, wherein, say, he can collect certain accounts. The qualification merely “prescribes the time of payment by reference, not to days and years, but to a reasonable time for the collection of the accounts.” Ubsdell v. Cunningham, 22 Mo. 124. If payment of a debt is to be made upon the happening of a future event, that is merely an agreement that it will be convenient to make payment when that event occurs, and not an agreement that no payment need be made within a reasonable time, even if such event fails to happen. De Wolfe v. French, 51 Me. 420; Crooker v. Holmes, 65 Me. 195, at 197. To like effect is Lewis v. Tipton, 10 Ohio St. 88, and Nunez v. Dautel, 86 U. S. 560. In that, payment was to be made “as soon as the crop can be sold or the money raised from any other source.” And the court held that “the stip
The weight of authority construes such agreements to ¡intend nothing except the deferring of payment until such time as gives the promisor a reasonable time wherein to cause the contingency to happen. That is to say, if he promise to pay when h® sold certain logs, the understanding and agreement is merely that he has a reasonable time wherein to perform the duty to make the sale of the logs. And see Nunez v. Dautel, 86 U. S. 560.
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Nunez v. Dautel, 86 U. S. 560, furnishes a keystone statement of a general rule which controls the issues at bar. That rule is that if, on fair construction, the whole of the provisions indicate that both parties believe a stated thing is certain to occur at some time, and have stipulated that payment is to be made when that thing does happen, then, if that prove a mistaken anticipation, and the thing, in fact, never does happen, it is no agreement that payment should, therefore, never be made, but that it should be made within a reasonable time after it is known that the thing which was anticipated to happen will never happen, or, at least, that it has not yet happened. The fair effect of De Wolfe v. French, 51 Me. 420, is that, where both parties believe a future event must or will happen, and there is no
“That, where a debt is due absolutely, and the happening of a future event is fixed upon as a convenient time for
VI. The note states that value was given for it. It has the words, “I promise to pay.” It fixes a penalty for failure to pay at maturity. Without reference to when, if ever, the debt of the company shall be paid, there is a promise to pay interest at the rate of five per cent per annum, annually, with penalty if said interest is not then paid. With due regard to these provisions as a whole, we cannot hold that it was deemed immaterial how long a time had passed wherein to pay the debts of the company, and that it was understood no payment was ever to be made if that indebtedness was never discharged. Here is an acknowledgment that the maker is indebted to the payee. It was held, in Benton v. Benton, 78 Kan. 366 (97 Pac. 378), cited by appellee, that such acknowledgment of being indebted controls the qualification that payment is to be made as soon as the maker can, and creates a definite time of payment: to wit, a reasonable time after the date of the note. It is said that such agreements as this must be held to be an obligation to pay within a reasonable time, “upon the theory that otherwise the practical effect would be to give the promisor the option to refuse payment altogether and that, where it is acknowledged that a debt was created, rather than a gift made, there should he no construction which postpones payment for more than a reasonable time after the date of the note. To that effect is, Works v. Hershey, 35 Iowa 340, at 343, also cited by appellee. It was said in Lewis v. Tipton, 10 Ohio St. 88, that, since the note recites that it was for value received, and it so appears that the payee parted with something valuable to obtain thq promise, “is it reasonable to suppose that it was parted with and received as a mere gratuity, which would be the fact if there was to be no legal obligation to return an
As effective a summary as any is found in Benton v. Benton, 78 Kans. 366 (97 Pac. 378, at 379). In Jones v. Bisler, 3 Kans. 134, the promise was to pay “when I receive it from government for losses sustained in August, 1856, or as soon as otherwise convenient.” The Benton case quotes with approval from the Jones decision, as follows:
“When did the note sued on become due? The note is not a conditional one. The maker owed the payee, who had performed labor for him. He declares in the paper that he has received the consideration, which all must admit was a valuable one. The existence of the debt was not made to depend upon a condition or contingency. Everything necessary to constitute a promissory note, except the time of payment, is clearly expressed. * * * It could not have been contemplated that, if Jones never got his money from the government, or never should be in a situation when he could conveniently pay, that the money never was to be payable. Jones evidently expected, within a reasonable time, to get the money from the government, or, failing in that, within a like time it would otherwise be convenient to pay. After having performed work to the full amount of the note, it could not have been intended that Anders should never get his money unless Jones got his from the government, or should find it otherwise convenient to pay. The intention of the parties doubtless was that it should, in any event, be payable in a reasonable time, and such is the legal effect of the instrument.”
The case of Smithers v. Junker, 41 Fed. 101, is fairly to like effect. Its final conclusion is that, among other things, promise to make payment on account of value received nega
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The note absolutely promises to pay interest annually, and agrees that, if interest is not so paid, such interest shall draw interest. How can it be said the note was not to be payable at all if the indebtedness of the Highland Park Company was not discharged? If that was the intention, then the maker took the chance of paying this interest forever; for, if it was the bargain of defendant that this note must run until the debt of this company was paid, any decision that the note is to run on f orever because said indebtedness- will never be paid would saddle defendant with a perpetual interest charge. Additional to what we have alréady set forth from Lewis v. Tipton, that decision combats the construction for which appellee contends, on the ground, for one, that, if it Nad been the intention to make the promise wholly contingent, it was unnatural for the parties to “ñx a high rate of interest Till paid.’ ”
VII. Pistel v. Imperial Mut. L. Ins. Co., 88 Md. 552 (48 L. R. A. 219), cited by appellee, holds no more than that, if certificates are agreed to be paid for at such price as was paid for like certificates which have been surrendered in the past, recovery on such agreement . is, in the absence of collusion or other fraud, limited to the prices paid for said surrendered certificate, whatever they were. The case of Cassidy v. Taylor, 4 Okla. 516 (46 Pac. 560), holds, in effect, that, where a sum is due a partnership, an agreement between the partners that payment To one of them should be made when the partnership debt was paid in full, delays a right of the one partner to sue until such full payment has been made. And Jones v. Eisler, 3 Kans. 134, recognizes that these peculiar facts are the turning point in the Cassidy case. We are unable to find anything in Ramot v. Schotenfils, 15 Iowa
The club was incorporated for social purposes purely, without aim to make pecuniary profit. Its members, including plaintiff, made a subscription to raise a building fund. The club promised to repay the members, with interest, “at the convenience and pleasure of the club.” The promise was further qualified by the statement that no demand would be made for payment, in whole or in part, until such payment could be “prudently discharged in the discretion of the board from the surplus revenue of the club.” All consideration of the question of contingent promise is quite incidental. The decision involves somewhat the reasoning of the Cassidy v. Taylor case, because some consideration is given to the fact that the transaction has the aspect of a joint venture, or partnership. And it is deemed material to point out that there was no promise to pay out of funds generally, but out of a specific fund.
The case turns largely upon a finding that, since plaintiff averred the discretion of the board had not been prudently exercised, that sufficient funds were on hand, and that still the board wrongfully refused to apply them in payment, it is made plain he did not understand he had an absolute agreement to repay, but was to be paid if there existed such surplus revenue as that an honest exercise of the discretion of the board demanded an application of such surplus to the payment of this obligation. The court points out that practically all the evidence was directM to whether there had been an abuse of said discretion. The final
While there is language in Glass v. Adoue, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 21 (86 S. W. 798), which would seem to aid the appel-lee, an examination discloses that the point we are considering was not mooted. The only question tried out was whether the maker was, in fact, able to pay, it being assumed without dispute that he need not pay unless he was, in fact, able. Possibly, Tootell, Ex Parte, 4 Ves. Jr. *372, was rightly decided. The promise held to be purely contin--gent was:
“I hereby promise to pay * * * at such a period of time that my circumstances will admit without detriment to myself or family and not to be distressed upon any account whatsoever until such time that my circumstances will be as above described.”'
This was held, and probably rightly held, to be a conditional promise, which might or might not mature.
It may not be denied there is an exceptional case, here and there, which comes close to holding that, say, a promise to pay when one is able, or when one’s circumstances will permit it, is purely conditional, and there never can be a recovery until the condition actually happens. See Nelson v. Von Bonnhorst, 29 Pa. 352; and Salinas v. Wright, 11 Tex. 572. But we think it has been shown that the great weight of authority goes at least so far as to allow a recovery on\such agreement as the one at bar, even if the debts spoken to have, after reasonable opportunity to pay them, not been paid.
“While there are some authorities to the contrary, the great weight of authority and the best-reasoned cases hold that, in cases of this kind, the debt becomes due absolutely within a reasonable time.”
And, as indicated, that is our view.
IX. What is a reasonable time is a question of fact. Capron v. Capron, 44 Vt. 410, at 412; Nunez v. Dautel, 86 U. S. 560; Lewis v. Tipton, 10 Ohio St. 88. But we do not have that question to decide. For here, as in Works v. Hershey, 35 Iowa 340, 343, “there is no claim in the answer that a reasonable time had not been given defendant after the execution of the note for its payment.”
We hold it was error to direct verdict for defendant.— Reversed and remande,d.