1 Greene 552 | Iowa | 1848
Opinion by
Assumpsit on a promissory note, in which no time of payment is specified. The defendant demurred to the declaration, principally upon .the ground, that it contains no averment of the time when the note became due and payable. The demurrer was overruled, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff. The overruling of the demurrer is the only error assigned. It is very correctly assumed by counsel for plaintiff in error, that, where no time for payment is mentioned in a note, it is, in contemplation of law, payable on demand. In Chitty on Bills, 10 Am. ed. 150, 151, the principle is recognized, that if no time of payment is mentioned in a note, it operates like a check on a banker, as payable on demand. In 8 John. 189, and 1 Colp. 404, it is held that a note payable generally is payable on demand.
In this case the declaration is objected, on the ground that it does not specifically describe the note according to its legal effect. The note should, no doubt, be declared on as a note payable on demand, but it does not necessarily follow that the particular words “ on demand” should be incorporated in the declaration, if it alleges in other terms the time when the note became due ; and in this particular we can but consider the declaration sufficient in law. It distinctly avers, in referring to the date of its delivery to the plaintiff, “ the entire amount in said note, then being due and unpaid ;” and
Judgment affirmed.