99 Iowa 162 | Iowa | 1896
Plaintiffs seek by this action to charge the defendant as indorser of the note set out, which note and indorsement are as follows:
*168 “$2,225.00. Dayton, Iowa, Jan. 22nd, 1884.
“On demand,-after date, for value received, we promise to pay to Jonas O. Olson, or order, twenty-two hundred and twenty-five dollars, at Dayton, Iowa, with interest at ten per cent, per annum, payable annually. And interest in arrears shall draw ten per cent, till paid, and, in case of non-payment of interest when due, the whole sum of principal and interest to become due and collectible at the holder’s option. And in any action that may be brought for any sum due under the provisions of this note, by the holder hereof, he shall be entitled to recover of the maker hereof, a reasonable sum as attorney fees, to be fixed by court.
“No.-. Due-.
“M Olson,
“C. M. Olson.
“Pay Arah Leonard, Sami. Burnquist, Louis Ericson, Miles Allen, Lars Poulson, or order.
“Jonas O. Olson.”
It will be observed that this note is payable on demand, after date, at Dayton, Iowa; is dated January 22,1884; and provides for interest at ten per cent, per annum, payable annually, and for interest on arrears of interest. The indorsement by appellee is without date, and it is not questioned but that under the decisions it is presumed that the note was assigned on the day it was executed. Hayward v. Munger, 14 Iowa, 517.
It is alleged in the petition “that on the 18th and 16th days of January, A. D. 1894, demand was made for the payment of the note sued on, upon the makers thereof, and payment was refused, and notice of such demand and such refusal was on said days duly given to this defendant, and said note was duly protested for non-payment thereof; and said plaintiffs are the owners of said note, and the same is wholly unpaid,
Some courts have held that such a note is due the day it is made, and that, in order to charge the indorser, the rule was exactly the same as in the case of a note due on a day certain, — that demand must be made at once, the note protested for non-payment, and notice given not later than the following' day. Other courts held that, in order to charge the indorser, payment must be demanded, the note protested, and notice given to the indorser within a reasonable time; while others held that an interest-bearing demand note is a continuing security, and that, so long as it is a subsisting claim against the maker, it is not due, so far as the indorser is concerned, until demand has been made. We do not find that this court has ever passed upon this question, and therefore, we have examined with care the many authorities upon that subject. They are numerous and somewhat conflicting, and we
Our conclusion is that, while the petition alleged facts sufficient to excuse demand, it shows no facts to excuse the failure to give notice of non-payment within a reasonable time. Therefore, there was no error prejudicial to the appellants in sustaining appellee’s motion to strike from the petition, and no error in sustaining appellee’s demurrer to the petition.— Affirmed.