91 P. 620 | Cal. | 1907
Appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff in an action brought against the defendant as indorser of a promissory note. The appeal was taken within sixty days, and the evidence is brought up in a bill of exceptions. *756
The note, which is set out in full in the complaint, reads as follows: —
"$900.00 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, Feby. 18th, 1904.
"On or before August 18th, 1905, after date and for value received, we jointly and severally promise to pay to C.W. Hatch and E.E. Hatch or order at Los Angeles, California, the sum of nine hundred dollars, with interest from date until paid, at the rate of 1 1/2 per cent per month payable monthly; should the interest not be so paid, it shall become a part of the principal and thereafter bear like interest as the principal. Should default be made in the payment of any installment of interest when due, then the whole sum of principal and interest shall become immediately due and payable at the option of the holder of this note. Principal and interest payable in gold coin of the United States in sums of twenty-five dollars or more monthly, together with interest monthly.
"E.M. JENNINGS. "MARY S. JENNINGS.
"[Indorsed.] "Without recourse on us.
"C.W. HATCH. "E.E. HATCH.
"Pay to the order of E.F. Kinsel with recourse to me.
"L.M. BALLOU."
1. One of the defenses was that the defendant had indorsed the note without recourse to him, by simply signing his name below that of the prior indorsement without recourse, and that the words "Pay to the order of E.F. Kinsel with recourse to me" had, after the delivery of the note, been written above his signature without his knowledge or consent. The court found against this allegation, and there was ample evidence to sustain the finding.
2. The defendant attacks the finding that notice of default had been given him, but the complaint alleges the giving of such notice, and the answer fails to deny it.
3. The answer alleges that at the time the defendant transferred the note to plaintiff it was understood and agreed that the plaintiff should have no recourse to the defendant should such note not be paid when due, and that plaintiff should rely *757
solely upon the security of a chattel mortgage, by which the note was secured. The evidence fully supports the findings of the court against such agreement, if it could be conceded that the defendant was entitled to introduce evidence of an oral understanding directly controverting the terms of his written agreement. It is true that, as between himself and his immediate indorsee, the indorser may sometimes show that the indorsement was made merely for the purpose of transferring the instrument.(Allin v. Williams,
4. The complaint alleges that interest was paid to August 18, 1904; that on the third day of October, 1904, default having been made in the payment of the interest installment due on September 18th, plaintiff elected to declare the whole sum of principal and unpaid interest immediately due and payable, and on said third day of October, 1904, notified the makers of such election and presented the note for payment; and that plaintiff on the same day notified the defendant of his election and of the non-payment of the note. The last sentence of the note reads: "Principal and interest payable in gold coin of the United States in sums oftwenty-five dollars or more monthly, together with interestmonthly." The italicized words are in writing, the rest of the note, with the exception of the names, date, amount, and figures, being printed. It is urged that the provision quoted is in conflict with the provision allowing the principal sum to become due for default in payment of a monthly installment of interest, and that the note read as a whole should be construed merely for monthly payments of twenty-five dollars for principal and interest together, at least until the eighteenth day of August, 1905. But we see no conflict between the different clauses. The provision for the payment of twenty-five dollars, or more, was merely an option given to the makers whereby they were permitted, in advance of the maturity of the note, to make partial payments on account of the principal. It did not limit their *758 obligation to pay the interest monthly, nor did it destroy or modify the holder's right to declare the entire sum due when there should be a default in the payment of interest.
5. It is argued that since the unpaid installment of interest fell due on September 18th, demand should have been made on that day, and immediate notice given to defendant as indorser, in order to hold him. The demand was made, and the notice given, on October 3d, and the contention is that the delay of fifteen days discharged the defendant. (Rauer v. Broder,
But this action was not brought to recover the interest due on September 18th alone. Its purpose was to enforce the liability arising under the provision of the note that in the event of default being made in the payment of any installment of interest when due, "then the whole sum of principal and interest shall become immediately due and payable at the option of the holder of this note." This liability did not arise until the latter exercised the option so given to him, and, as the complaint alleges and the court finds, he exercised it on the third day of October. On the same day he made his demand on the makers and gave notice to the indorser. Under a clause of this kind, the holder is allowed a reasonable time in which to determine whether or not he will exercise his option and declare the principal of the note at once due and payable. (Hewitt v. Dean,
It is argued that the rule allowing a reasonable time for the exercise of the option has no application to the indorser of a note; that as to him the option must be declared and the demand made on the very day the interest installment falls due. But we see no reason for this distinction. The indorser of a negotiable instrument warrants, inter alia, that if the instrument is dishonored, he will "upon notice thereof duly given to him, . . . pay the same with interest." (Civ. Code, sec.
6. Mary S. Jennings, one of the makers, had died prior to maturity of the note, and there had been no administration of her estate. We need not here decide whether, as to her, presentment was excused by these facts. The court found that the plaintiff presented the note for payment to the person in charge of the hotel in which Mary S. Jennings resided at the time of her death. The appellant attacks this finding. The only specification of insufficiency is that "no proof was *760 introduced as to who was in charge of the Hotel Wheeler," a specification that is not sustained by the record, since the plaintiff testified that he had presented the note to Mrs. Pool, "who was in charge of the Hotel Wheeler."
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff had presented the note for payment at the place where Mary S. Jennings had her place of business and her residence at the time of her death, and that payment on behalf of the said Mary S. Jennings was refused. The defendant demurred on the ground of uncertainty in that it did not appear to whom the demand on Mary S. Jennings was delivered. We think the overruling of the demurrer was proper. The name of the person to whom presentment was made was a mere matter of evidence. But even if there may have been some want of certainty in the allegation, it was not of a character to injure the appellant. If, when the proof was made, he was without evidence to meet it, and desired time to procure such evidence, he should have asked for a continuance for that purpose.
7. As a separate defense the answer alleges that the makers of the note, at the time of its execution, executed and delivered to the original payees, as security for the note, a chattel mortgage of certain property, and that this mortgage was assigned and transferred to the plaintiff with the note. It is further alleged that no proceedings to foreclose this mortgage have been taken by the plaintiff. It is argued by the appellant that, by reason of the existence of this mortgage, the liability of the makers was not absolute, but was contingent upon a failure of the mortgaged property to realize, on foreclosure, an amount sufficient to pay the note, and that the indorsement of defendant imposed upon him no greater liability than that of the original mortgagors. On these grounds it is claimed that, so long as no sale of the mortgaged property had taken place, the defendant's obligation to pay had not become fixed. It is no doubt true that, so far as the mortgagors themselves were concerned, an action to recover the amount of the note could not have been maintained apart from a foreclosure of the mortgage. As to them the mortgaged property constituted a primary fund for the discharge of the debt, and no personal judgment could have been entered against them, unless after foreclosure a deficiency had appeared. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 726; Bartlett *761
v. Cottle,
But the defendant was not the mortgagor. His contract of indorsement was collateral to the original obligation of the mortgagors, and was not secured by the mortgage. In Vandewater v.McRae,
These cases are directly in point and establish the proposition that in this state the indorser of a note secured by mortgage may be sued upon his obligation without a foreclosure of the mortgage.
In what has been said in this opinion, we have treated the contract of defendant as one of indorsement, and this is the aspect in which both parties have treated the case in their briefs. If, however, the defendants could be held to occupy the position of a guarantor (the view taken by the district court of appeal when the case was pending in that court), it would make no difference in the result. "There is no privity, of mutuality, or joint liability between the principal debtor and his guarantor." The defendant as guarantor, if he was such, made an independent contract upon which he was liable without regard to foreclosure of the mortgage as against the principal debtors. (Adams v.Wallace,
The judgment is affirmed.
Angellotti, J., Shaw, J., Henshaw, J., Lorigan, J., and McFarland, J., concurred. *763