293 S.W. 800 | Tex. | 1927
The question presented by this case was whether the undisputed facts showed that Howth was discharged from liability on a certain negotiable note signed by him and another as joint makers. The facts disclosed that Howth executed the note as an accommodation maker, receiving no consideration, the other maker being actually the principal obligor, as the payee, who sues herein, well knew; and that such payee, without Howth's knowledge, for a valuable consideration, extended to the principal obligor a further definite period of time for the note's payment. The District Court gave a peremptory instruction against Howth. On appeal, the judgment of the District Court was reversed and judgment was rendered for Howth.
We are fully satisfied with the correctness of the action of the Court of Civil Appeals and ordinarily would add nothing to what has been written by that court. The question is not only one of importance in applying the provisions of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act, but is one on which the various courts of last resort are not in accord. We, therefore, gave the question quite careful consideration before we refused the application for writ of error, and deem it best to write some of the reasons which impelled to us to conclude that the accommodation maker was not liable on the note.
Howth's right to the peremptory instruction necessarily follows from the conclusion that the payee plaintiff to whom the completed note was originally delivered, was not "a holder in due course" as defined in the Negotiable Instruments Act.
Plaintiff was the "holder" of the note as the payee in possession of it, Sec. 191, Art. 5948, and was entitled to sue thereon. Sec. 51, Art. 5935. Plaintiff not being "a holder in due course," *438
the note was subject to every defense to which it would be subject if it were non-negotiable. Sec. 58, Art. 5935. A complete defense to the suit of a holder of a non-negotiable note in behalf of an accommodation maker would be established by his pleading and proving that the holder of the note had made a binding agreement with the principal obligor to extend the note for a definite time, with knowledge of the status of the accommodation maker and without his consent. Burke v. Cruger,
The principle underlying all the cases on this subject is that one cannot be bound by a contract to which he has not given his assent. Consent to become surety for another's promise to pay at one time is not consent to be surety for such other's promise to pay at an altogether different time. The Negotiable Instruments Act recognizes the essence of the engagement of the maker of a negotiable instrument to be "that he will pay it according to its tenor," and not according to quite different terms. Sec. 60 of Art. 5936.
In order for one to be a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument under the Act's own definition, he must have had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or of any defect in the title of the person negotiating it "at the time it was negotiated to him." Sec. 52, Art. 5935. All doubt as to the meaning of the word "negotiated" as used in Sec. 52 is removed by the declaration in Sec. 30 of Art. 5934 that "an instrument is negotiated when it is transferred from one person to another in such manner as to constitute the transferee the holder thereof. If payable to bearer it is negotiated by delivery; if payable to order it is negotiated by the indorsement of the holder completed by delivery." This definition explicitly calls for a passage of title to the note itself from one person to another. This requires more than that the note has become a completed contract in the hands of the original holder or holders. In the case of a note payable in ordinary form to a person's order, the statute explicitly requires something further to accomplish its negotiations than the note's delivery to the payee as a completed instrument, to-wit: indorsement by such payee — followed by delivery by the payee to another.
There are other provisions of our statutes which persuade us *439
that in Texas the payee who is an immediate party to a negotiable note on its original completion is not intended to have the rights of "a holder in due course." Sec. 16 of Art. 5932 expressly makes available defenses arising from a note's nondelivery or unauthorized delivery "as between immediate parties" while conclusively presuming a valid delivery in favor of every "holder in due course." Sec. 28 of Art. 5932 makes partial or total failure of consideration a pro tanto or complete defense "as against any person not a holder in due course." Art. 574 of the Revised Statutes makes partial or total failure of consideration available to a defendant in every suit on a written instrument where it "shall remain in the possession of the original payee or obligee." It is our plain duty to give effect to both Sec. 28 of Art. 5932 and to the quoted provision of Art. 574, as enacted by the same Legislature at the same time, if possible. Cole v. State,
The 1925 Revised Statutes retain the articles whereby any surety may have a trial of the question of his suretyship, no matter what may be the form of his contract, and whereby any surety may require the prompt enforcement of the contract on which he is surety as soon as it matures. Arts. 6244 and 6246, R. S. The statutory rights thus accorded the surety would be utterly defeated if he were compelled to abide by extensions consummated regardless of his will.
When the Negotiable Instruments Act comes to specify the defects in title and the defenses, of which a negotiable instrument is freed in the hands of a holder in due course, it is notable that it specifies defects in the titles ofprior parties and defenses available among prior parties. Sec. 57 of Art. 5935. Ordinarily at least there are no prior parties to those whose acts are essential to the execution of the negotiable instrument as an original, completed contract.
The decisions of the Iowa Supreme Court in Vander Ploeg v. Van Zuuk,
The doctrine of the cases which we decline to follow is that a note is negotiated when any person for value becomes its owner. This doctrine seems to ignore the distinction, clearly drawn by the Act between a note's "issue" and "negotiation." Sec. 191 says: "Issue means the first delivery of the instrument, complete in form, to a person who takes it as holder." "Issue" is therefore the usual first step toward "negotiation," which results under Sec. 30 when the first or a later holder passes the note to another person in such manner as to constitute the latter a holder.
The Massachusetts cases and others in accord therewith do not regard the methods prescribed by Sec. 30 for the "negotiation" of a note payable to "bearer" or to "order" as exclusive. Yet, Sec. 30 follows Sec. 1, which prescribes as an indispensable essential to render an instrument negotiable that it be payable to order or to bearer and not otherwise.
Since the language of the Act so manifestly supported it, we much preferred that construction which prevented holding a party to an engagement to which he had never assented, and plaintiff in error's motion for a rehearing was accordingly overruled.