260 Pa. 504 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
This is an action on a promissory note by the payee against an endorser. Plaintiff was proceeding by law to collect a claim against J. M. Funk, when M. Taylor Uhler came as Funk’s agent and" asked plaintiff if he would accept a note endorsed by defendant in settlement of the claim. This being satisfactory, Uhler returned the next day with a note, dated Hatfield, Pa., October 14, 1915, and stating, “one month after date I promise to pay to the order of E. E. Johnston at the First National Bank of Lansdale, Pa., Four Thousand one hundred sixty-six and 46/100 Dollars, without defalcation, for value' received,” signed J. M. Funk, and endorsed M. Taylor Uhler, Chester Knipe. Plaintiff accepted the note and in transferring it to the bank wrote his name above that of the other endorsers. He was compelled to take up the note at maturity and brought this suit thereon against defendant.
At the trial defendant contended that he was an accommodation endorser and signed the note at the request of Uhler, before the name of the payee had been written therein, and with the agreement that plaintiff’s name should not be inserted as such. Defendant also contended that, because of the fraud of Uhler, he accepted a worthless mortgage as security for such endorsement.
The case presents the single question, Can the payee in a promissory note be a holder thereof to whom it has been negotiated in due course? In our opinion he can.
Regardless of what the rule was at common law, the question seems to be governed by section 64 of the Negotiable Instruments Act of May 16, 1901, P. L. 194 (203), 3 Stewart’s Purdon, pp. 3281, 3282, that, “Where a person, not otherwise a party to an instrument, places thereon his signature in blank before delivery, he is liable as endorser in accordance with the following rules: 1. If the instrument is payable to the order of a third person, he is liable to the payee and to all subsequent parties.” This section is construed and the change is made in the law pointed out in the opinion of our late Brother Potter in Alldred’s Estate, 229 Pa. 627.
Appellant calls our attention to section 30 of said Negotiable Instruments Act, (P. L. 199, 3 Stewart’s Purdon, p. 3268), 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 endorsement of the holder, completed by delivery.” Of course, a note payable to order can be and usually is negotiated as therein stated. HoAvever, the statute fails to say that it may not be negotiated in any other way.
In our opinion in Pennsylvania a payee may now be a holder in due course, although in other jurisdictions under like statutes the decisions ai;e conflicting. For example in Iowa. (Vander Ploeg v. Van Zuuk, 135 Ia. 350) the question is decided in the negative; whereas, in Massachusetts (Liberty
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.