274 Mass. 207 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action of contract to recover the balance due on a promissory note secured by a mortgage of real estate. The answer is a general denial and payment.
The note was in form as follows: “Boston, Mass., March 31, 1925 For value received, I, Cecilia V. Lucas promise to pay to Everett E. Dickey or order, the sum of Twenty-five Hundred Dollars with interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum payable monthly, said principal sum shall be paid in or within in the following manner, to wit: The sum of Ten ($10) Dollars on the 31st day of April 1925, and the further sum of Ten ($10) Dollars on the 31st day of every month, thereafter until the 31st day of March 1928, at which time the balance of said principal sum together with interest thereon, shall become due and payable. Upon default in any one of the above
The defendant indorsed the note at the time he transferred it to the plaintiff, on or about August 11, 1925, for a valuable consideration. The note and mortgage securing the same became due on March 31, 1928. The plaintiff foreclosed the mortgage securing the note on July 9, 1928, and bought the property in at the foreclosure sale for $200; after deducting foreclosure expenses of $78.95, it applied the balance on the note. At the trial it was admitted that no presentment of the note was made or notice of dishonor given the defendant in accordance with G. L. c. 107.
In the Superior Court the case was tried to a jury. One Pheeny, the president and general manager of the plaintiff corporation, testified that he examined the real estate in question and thereafter told the defendant he would not purchase the note as he did not like the property as security; that the defendant then asked the witness if he would buy the note if the defendant indorsed it and stood behind it, and the witness said he would think about that but that he did not want it as a straight mortgage loan; that the defendant interviewed him shortly thereafter and said that he was worth the amount of the note, and asked whether the plaintiff would take the note if the defendant would indorse it and protect the plaintiff’s interest, and the witness thereupon agreed
The defendant contends that a verdict should have been directed in his favor because, as he alleges, the note in question is nonnegotiable in that it “ clearly allowed the payment of the whole principal on any of the dates ” on which the sum or sums to be paid became due and payable. In other words the maker of the note by the provision that the “principal sum shall be paid in or within in the following manner” was given the right to pay the principal sum at the time specified or at an earlier time as he may elect. Stults v. Silva, 119 Mass. 137. Pierce v. Talbot, 213 Mass. 330. Central National Bank v. Hubbel, 258 Mass. 124. The provision that “ Upon default in any one of the above named payments the whole of said principal sum, then remaining unpaid, together with interest thereon, shall become due and payable” does not make the sum or sums to be paid
Exceptions overruled.