132 P. 256 | Cal. | 1913
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the defendant from an order granting a motion for a new trial. The action was one for the cancellation of a certain promissory note. There *311 were two counts in the complaint, one alleging want of consideration and the other averring failure of consideration.
The plaintiff Philip H. Flood entered into a contract with one Joseph Petry by the terms of which the latter was to erect a building on land belonging to plaintiff for the sum of twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars. There were to be seven progress payments, according to the terms of the contract, six in cash, but the final one partly in cash and partly by a note for the principal sum of three thousand five hundred dollars, payable in eighteen months. The seventh payment was to become due when thirty-five days should have expired after the date of acceptance of the building, provided no liens nor claims against the building, lot or premises should have been filed or recorded. At the time of executing the contract, however, plaintiff signed and delivered to Petry a note which was in the following terms:
"$3500.00.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., Mch. 15th, 1907.
Eighteen months after Oct. 12, 1907, for value received I promise to pay to the order of Joseph Petry the sum of thirty-five hundred dollars, with interest thereon in like gold coin from date until paid, at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, and if the interest be not paid annually, to become as principal, and bear the same rate of interest. This note is negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount and without any relief or benefit whatever from stay, valuation, appraisement, or homestead exemption laws.
Due April 12th, 1909.
PHILIP H. FLOOD."
Petry borrowed two thousand dollars from the defendant corporation, gave his own notes for that amount and pledged the note above described as security.
The trial court made findings among which were the following:
"That the said promissory note was the note provided in the said contract to be made and delivered to the said defendant Joseph Petry as a part of the seventh payment provided in the said contract to be made, and that the sole consideration for the making, signing, and delivery of the said promissory note was the execution of the said contract by the said defendant Joseph Petry.
. . . . . . . . . . . *312
"That at and prior to the time the said promissory note of the plaintiff was indorsed and delivered by the said defendant Joseph Petry to the said defendant The National Bank of the Pacific the said defendant The National Bank of the Pacific had notice that the sole consideration for the making, signing and delivery of the said promissory note by the plaintiff to the said defendant Joseph Petry was the execution of the said contract by the said defendant Joseph Petry, and had notice of the terms and conditions of the said contract.
"That at the time the said promissory note of the plaintiff was given, made, signed and delivered by the plaintiff to the said defendant Joseph Petry, and at the time the said promissory note of the plaintiff was indorsed and transferred by the said defendant Joseph Petry to the said defendant The National Bank of the Pacific, the said defendant The National Bank of the Pacific had notice that no portion of the work to be done by the said defendant Joseph Petry under and pursuant to the terms of the said contract, between the plaintiff and the said defendant Joseph Petry, had been done by the said defendant Petry and had notice that the said work had not been commenced."
It was also found that Petry abandoned work on the building on May 22, 1907, after he had received two of the payments for which the contract provided. The court likewise found that the consideration failed as to defendant Petry (who had not answered and against whom a default had been entered).
Respondent insists that the motion for a new trial was properly granted, because the consideration for the note was not the execution of the contract by Petry, but was the completion of the building in accordance with the terms of the contract. Appellant contends, however, that the findings are sustained by evidence in which there is no substantial conflict and that failure of consideration is not a defense open to a maker as against an indorsee for value, even in a case where the indorsee knew that the note was intended to be the evidence of an indebtedness that would become due if an executory promise were performed. In behalf of his contention, respondent, Dr. Flood, contends that since the note and contract were executed at the same time, and since there is *313 evidence tending to establish the knowledge of that fact by the defendant corporation, the whole transaction must be considered together, its parts must be construed as forming one agreement, and that therefore the consideration of the note must have been that mentioned in the building contract, the completion of the structure and its acceptance free from all liens. This was the view taken by the justices of the district court of appeal, but we find ourselves unable to agree with them. It seems to us that the delivery of the promissory note (which by its express terms was made negotiable) long before the time mentioned for the payment of the final installment upon the building, precludes the maker of the instrument, upon the simplest principles of estoppel, from asserting that its only consideration was the completion of the building. The plaintiff's own account of the matter is, in substance,that he and the architect met at the latter's office; that Petry, the contractor, was there also; that after he had signed the contract and blue prints, the architect said: "About this note"; and that thereupon the note was passed to Dr. Flood who signed it an handed it back to the architect who delivered it to the contractor. Dr. Flood denied the statement made by the contractor in his testimony that the latter said during this conversation that he might want to borrow money on the note or to use it for security. It was in evidence that Petry exhibited the contract to the president of the defendant bank before that document was signed and had some conversation about wishing to borrow money if he could obtain a note from Dr. Flood. For the purposes of this appeal we must, of course, take the version of the transaction most favorable to the plaintiff. We then have this state of facts: Dr. Flood delivered to the contractor at the time of the execution of the contract a note which under the terms of that agreement he was not required to execute until after the completion of the building and the payment of all liens; he said nothing, but the note contained the declaration in terms that it was negotiable. Assuming that the president of the defendant bank knew all of these facts, the note would simply appear to him as an advance payment on an executory contract. If Dr. Flood had said to Petry: "Take this note and, if you like, negotiate it," the bank, knowing that fact, would have been justified in accepting it for a valuable consideration *314 before maturity and before breach of the executory contract. But he did say substantially the same thing more emphatically than by word of mouth. He wrote it. It was to that extent a waiver of the terms of the building contract and was a payment before performance, upon an executory agreement. There is no pleading nor assertion that Petry could not or did not intend to perform and that the officers of the bank knew of his incapacity. On the contrary, it appears without contradiction that Petry did undertake and did partially execute the work on the building. The bank was therefore a bona fide holder of the note for value.
It has long been the law in California that a failure of consideration in whole or in part after a bona fide assignment of a promissory note is no defense to a suit by the assignee against the maker, notwithstanding the former's full knowledge of the original consideration for which the note was given. In the case of Splivallo v. Patten,
In Davis v. McCready,
The rule announced above has been declared to be the true one in cases where the holder of the note knew of the contract but not of the breach thereof, at the time of taking title to the negotiable paper. It is of course equally applicable where a person has acquired a note in good faith for value before maturity, knowing that the consideration was an executory agreement on the part of the payee which might be broken and which was in fact violated after the transfer of the note. InKinkel v. Harper,
In 2 Randolph on Commercial Paper in section 1019, the rule is thus formulated: "Knowledge of an executory consideration is not knowledge of its failure, or of a breach of the agreement which formed the consideration. And a fortiori, notice of the agreement is not notice of equities arising out of it after the transfer of the note. But, if the purchaser knows that the consideration has failed, he is not a bona fide holder." In support of the last statement the learned author *317
cites Russ Lumber Mill Co. v. Muscupiabe Land Water Co.,
Respondent contends that the contract in this case should be regarded in the same light as a mortgage given for future advances and the note as an adjunct thereto, and that the equities must therefore prevail against the bank just as they might prevent the assignee of a non-negotiable note supported by a mortgage upon the security of which nothing had been advanced, from enforcing the payment of such non-negotiable instrument if he had taken it with notice or means of knowing that no advances had been actually made. It is true that, whether negotiable in form or not, a note secured by a contemporary mortgage on land, executed as a part of one transaction is subject to the equities and is not in fact negotiable if taken with notice of the existence of the mortgage. (Meyer v. Weber,
It is conceded by the appellant corporation, as of course it must be, that a trial court has the very widest discretion in the matter of granting a motion for a new trial, but it is submitted that no other rational conclusions could have been reached by the superior court under the evidence than those indicated by the findings. With this position of the appellant we agree.
The order granting a new trial is reversed.
Sloss, J., Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment solely on the ground that the conduct of Flood in executing the note, under the circumstances stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice Melvin, and the terms of the note itself, show that it was his intention that the note was to be negotiated by Petry, if he chose, before its maturity and prior to the completion of the building contracted for, and that these facts create an estoppel against Flood which prevents him from asserting the failure of the consideration of the note against a third person who took it for value with knowledge of the fact that the consideration was the completion of the building free from liens or claims, provided, as was the fact here, the person took the note before the failure of consideration occurred. I *319 think the building contract and the note constituted the parts of a single agreement, and that, under the terms of the agreement as a whole, the consideration of the note was not the mere promise of Petry to erect the building, but the actual erection thereof free from liens or claims, and that the failure to so complete it would have been available to Flood as a defense to the note if it had remained in the hands of Petry.
Hearing in Bank denied.