The note assigned for value and before maturity was, upon its face, made "negotiable and payable to Durham Fence Factory,or office of Wortham, Warren Co. Planing Mills." The plaintiff testified that when he bought the note he knew there was no factory in Durham called "the Durham Fence Factory"; but neither plaintiff, defendant, nor any other witness, disputed the fact stated by the witness Wortham, as well as Justice, who was introduced by the (244) defendant, that there was a place of business in the town well known as the "office of Wortham Co." If, therefore, we concede the correctness of the legal proposition laid down in the former opinion in this case (
But we must be understood as adhering to the principle laid down in the former opinion, and as modifying the ruling heretofore made on the ground only of inadvertently mistaking the facts. Upon more mature consideration we are not prepared to dispute the correctness of the legal propositions laid down by the court below (245) without regard to the plaintiff's knowledge of the existence or nonexistence of the place of payment at the time of purchase. The purchaser might well conclude that, though the office and plant might not then have been established, it would be before the maturity of the note. The production of the note was prima facie evidence of present ownership, and it being admitted that it was bought for $100, though less than its face value, $125, and before maturity, in the absence of actual notice of fraud in the factum at the time of assignment, the purchaser took it discharged of all equities in favor of the maker. 1 Dan. Neg. Inst., secs. 770, 782, 789 and 789a; R. R. v. Schutt,
There was not evidence sufficient to constitute this case an exception to the general rule and shift the burden of proof upon the plaintiff as purchaser of the note before maturity.
On a review of the exceptions, we find no error in the rulings of the court below.
PETITION ALLOWED.
Cited: Carrington v. Waff,
(246)