16 Pa. Super. 501 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
This action of assumpsit was brought by the indorsee against the maker of a promissory note drawn in the usual form and payable at a future date, but containing the following added clauses : “ This note is given for an Acme Turbine Separator, No. 34487. The express condition of the sale and purchase of said chattels and the giving of this note, is that the title, ownership or possession does not pass from the De Laval Separator Company, 74 Cortland street, New York, or the indorser to the maker of this note or any other person until this note is fully paid and satisfied.”
The affidavit of defense averred that the note was not nego
That this would be a valid defense if the action had been brought by the payee in the note is undisputed. The question is, whether the added words above quoted destroyed the negotiability of the note, so that the same defense is available in an action brought by one to whom the note was transferred by indorsement before maturity. The proper determination of this question depends upon the determination of the real nature of the transaction as disclosed in the paper itself.- The name which parties to a written contract give to the transaction is not conclusive as to its character. If upon a construction of the instrument as a whole, it appears that the transaction was not what they denominated it, this construction must prevail. “ It is quite unmeaning for parties to a contract to say that it shall not amount to a sale, when it contains every element of a sale and transmission of ownership: ” Heryford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235. It is equally unmeaning for them to say that it is a sale, when every element of a sale is lacking. In the contract under consideration the transaction is spoken of as the “ sale and purchase ” of a chattel. But it is by no means clear that a present sale was meant; for in the immediate context it appears that neither the “ title,” the “ ownership” nor the “ possession” of the chattel was to pass from the payee until the stipulated price was paid. To call this a sale was a misnomer. So far as we can judge from what appears in the instrument, -it was not, in its essence, an executed contract of sale, an absolute sale, to constitute which the general property in the chattel must pass, but a contract to sell, which contemplated the transfer of the title, ownership and possession in the future, or at the very best, a conditional sale. Presumably such transfer and payment of the stipulated price were to be contempera
After quoting this language, Mr. Justice Stjerrbtt said: “ Our own cases ” — referring to the cases above cited — “ in effect recognize the same doctrine. . . . The principle recognized in these and other cases is undoubtedly correct, in that it is necessary to preserve the integrity of negotiable instruments.” In the recent case of Post v. Kinzua Hemlock Railway Co., 171 Pa. 616, the instrument sued upon was in these words: “ On
Much reliance is placed by the plaintiffs on the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Chicago Ry. Equipment Co. v. Merchants National Bank, 136 U. S. 268. It was held in that case that the negotiability of a series of notes given for the purchase price of ears sold by the payee to the maker is not destroyed by a clause that the “ title to said cars shall remain in the said payee until all the notes of said series are fully paid, all said notes being equally and ratably secured on
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded. |