78 Tenn. 124 | Tenn. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
Suit upon a promissory note, in which the verdict and judgment were in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed.
The note was given for the rent of land let by the plaintiff to T. W. Jordan for the year 1870. It bears date October 16, 1869, and is made payable to M. C. Jordan on the 25th of December, 1870, for $750. It is in the usual form, '‘we or either of us promise to 'pay,” and is signed by T. W. Jordan, who.
The defendants, among other pleas, pleaded that they signed the note as. the sureties of T. W. Jordan upon the express condition that he would procure Thomas S. Williamson to sign the same as joint surety with them before the note should be delivered by T. W. Jordan to the plaintiff, and that without the signature of the said Thomas S. Williamson to the note, he being good and solvent, the defendants say they never would have executed the note, or become bound thereon. The plaintiff demurred to this plea, assigning as a cause of demurrer, that it failed to aver that the plaintiff had notice of the condition, under which the defendants say they signed the note, at the time the note was delivered to him. The circuit judge overruled the demurrer. The plaintiff then took issue upon the plea. On the trial of the issues joined, the judge charged the jury that if they found from the proof that the defendants signed the note upon condition that Williamson should also sign it, and placed the note in the hands of the principal maker to obtain his signature, the note was
The plea and demurrer thereto, as well as the charge of his Honor, do squarely raise the question whether the delivery of a negotiable promissory note, complete and perfect on its face, to the payee for-value, by the maker to whom it has been handed by the co-makers, his sureties, upon condition that he procure the signature of another person before delivery, without any notice, direct or constructive, to the payee of the condition, makes the note binding on the sureties?
The question, Upon principle, presents no serious difficulty, and the weight of authority is, at the present day, decidedly in favor of the conclusion to be thus reached. There is, however, some conflict in the authorities both upon links in the chain of reasoning adopted to reach the conclusion and upon the conclusion itself. But the conflict is not so great as the argument made in this case might lead us to suppose, and grows out of dicta or rulings in particular cases in which the subject is not considered in all of its aspects. A large number, of the cases are cited by Wright, J., in McCramer v. Thompson, 21 Iowa, 244, who thus refers to the variety of aspects in which the question is presented: “ Some of these cases relate to official bonds, some to acceptances in blank, some to bonds of guardians or administrators, others to deeds delivered to third persons to be handed to the grantee
The text writers say that a bill or note, as well as deed, may be delivered as an escrow — that is, delivered to a third person to hold until a certain event happens, or certain conditions are complied with: .1 Dan. Neg. Inst., sec. 68; 1 Pars. N. & B., 51. The-doctrine of delivery as an escrow originated with deeds by way of grant, and required the delivery to be to a third person other than the contracting parties to hold until something be done by the grantee: Perkins, 138; Coke Litt., 36 a; Gr. Cruise b, 4, p. 29. The instrument, in this view, was perfect and complete when delivered as an escrow, for it was to be delivered in that coirdition to the grantee when the act contemplated was performed. When the doctrine of' delivery as an escrow was extended to sealed bonds or covenants, and still further to negotiable securities, it was found that the original restrictions would no longer meet the exigences of cases actually occurring. No-
At common law and under the statute of Anne the quality of negotiability is confined to unsealed notes or bills. If a seal be attached to an instrument, although it possess all the other requisites of a bill or note, the character of negotiability is lost, and it becomes a covenant governed by the rules affecting common law securities: 1 Dan. Neg. Inst., sec 31. In the ease of such instruments no question of a bona fide holding
The question has been very fully considered, and the authorities reviewed in two recent cases, State v. Potter, 63 Mo., 212, and Deardorff v. Forseman, 24 Ind., 481. In the first of these cases, the question
It was clearly shown in the opinions delivered in these cases that in nearly all of the decisions in which a similar defense had been sustained, there was something on the face of the instrument sued on which showed that it was not complete, or some circumstance
A substantial reason for the conclusion thus reached, outside of the technical objection that to constitute an escrow the delivery must be to á third person, is that a co-maker of a bond or note cannot act as the agent of the creditor in the execution of the note. The character of agent for one party and that of principal upon the other part are incompatible. The law cannot recognize such incongruous relations. On the other hand, the law makes the principal the agent of his sureties for the special purpose of delivering the instrument. As said by Ray, J., in the case of the State v. Potter: “The original contract is between the principal and the obligee. The compliance with the
The comment of Judge Redfield, upon a review of the cases, is well warranted, that where there is nothing
This court had already reached the same result in the case of public official bonds: Buford v. Cox, 3 Lea, 518; Amis v. Marks, 3 Lea, 568. And in the last of these cases we said that even in the case of private obligations, since the abolishment of the use- of seals, ignorance of the condition between the principal and surety where there was nothing on the face of the instrument to give notice, would protect a bona fide purchaser for value. All the authorities agree .that the negotiability of the instrument operates in favor of the holder, because such instruments in their very nature are letters of credit, and become obligatory upon the maker if passed off to a bona fide holder before maturity and without notice: 1 Dan. Neg. Inst., sec. 68, 856. It would be strange if a more stringent rule were adopted in the case of ^negotiable paper than in the case of unnegotiable instruments. There is no warrant in our books for any such distinction. The language of Judge Turley, in Perry v. Patterson, 5 Hum., 133, if intended to convey the contrary idea, as insisted upon, which may well be doubted, was not called for by the facts of the ease and was a mere dictum.
The judgment must be reversed, and judgment rendered here sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s pleas, and the cause remanded for another trial.