26 Minn. 336 | Minn. | 1880
Action on a writing as follows: “$200. St. Paul, Minn., January 22, 1879.
“Dawson & Co., Bankers : Pay to the order of, on sight, two hundred dollars, in current funds. E. Lytle.’’
A check must name or indicate a payee. Checks drawn payable to an impersonal payee, as to “bills payable” or order, or to a number or order, are held to be payable to bearer, on the ground that the use of the words “or order” indicates an intention that the paper shall be negotiable; and the mention of an impersonal payee, rendering an endorsement by the payee impossible, indicates an intention that it shall be negotiable without endorsement — that is, that it shall be payable to bearer. So when a bill, note.or check is made payable to a blank or order, and actually delivered to take effect as commercial paper, the person to whom delivered may insert his name in the blank space as payee, and a bona-fide holder may then recover on it.
These eases differ essentially from the one at bar. In the latter ease the person to whom delivered is presumed, in favor of a bona-fide holder, to have had authority to insert a name as payee. In the former cases the instrument is, when it passes from the hands of the ipaker, complete, in just the form the parties intend. But in this case there is neither a blank space for the name of the payee, indicating authority to insert the payee’s name, nor is the instrument made payable to an impersonal payee, indicating a fully completed instrument. It is claimed that the words “on sight” are such impersonal payee. They were inserted, however, for another purpose — to fix the time of payment, and not to indicate the payee. It is clearly the case of an inadvertent failure to complete the instrument intended by the parties. The drawer undoubtedly meant to draw a check; but having left out the payee’s name, without inserting in lieU thereof words indicating the bearer as payee, it is as fatally defective as it would be if the drawee’s name were omitted. '
Judgment affirmed.