294 N.W. 166 | Mich. | 1940
The problem before us is the validity of a judgment confessed in Ohio by virtue of a purported warrant of attorney. The judgment must be respected if the warrant of attorney conferred the necessary jurisdiction on the Ohio court. First NationalBank of Athens v. Garland,
Plaintiff brought assumpsit on an Ohio judgment founded upon a promissory note executed in 1930 by defendants. The note was the culmination of a series of renewals of an obligation originally incurred in 1924. The original transaction took place in Ohio where the defendants resided at the time. They moved to Michigan in 1925. The original obligation contained in the same instrument a power of attorney to confess judgment, conceded to be valid under Ohio law. Renewal notes mailed to them in Detroit were signed and returned by mail to the payee, an Ohio bank. The renewals were on the *233 same form of instrument as the original obligation. Each time a renewal note was received, it was substituted in the files of the bank for the old, and an entry was made in the new loan ledger; generally the old note was mailed back to defendants in Detroit. The trial court granted a motion to dismiss on the ground that the note containing the power of attorney was executed in Michigan and the warrant was invalid to confer any authority to confess judgment because it was not in an instrument separate from that evidencing the demand (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14508 [Stat. Ann. § 27.1434]; Jones v. Turner,supra; Acme Food Co. v. Kirsch, supra), from which it would follow that the judgment is "without the protection of full faith and credit" (Gordon v. Heller, supra; U.S. Const. art. 4, § 1; 28 USCA, §§ 687, 688).
The case is controlled by the determination of the place of making of the renewal contract which embodied the purported authorization for the entry of judgment, for the validity of a contract is determined by the place of making. John A. TolmanCo. v. Reed,
"Delivery, however, is not the only requisite to the creation of a contract on a negotiable instrument. Value must be given, and until, therefore, there has been a delivery for value, the instrument cannot be said to have had any inception. * * *
"It follows that the place of contracting of a contract on a negotiable instrument, be it the obligation of the maker, the drawer, or the indorser, is the place where, after the signature of the party in question, the instrument is first delivered for value. Since no one is bound by the mere signature of the instrument, the place where it may have been dated, executed, or signed is immaterial."
It is argued that the contract was completed when defendants deposited the renewal note in the mails of Michigan, and that thereby it became a Michigan contract. The principle of the law of contracts that an offer authorizing a reply by mail is transformed into a binding contract by posting an acceptance (Kutsche v. Ford,
"When a negotiable instrument is made in renewal of an earlier contract, the intention of the parties is that only one of the obligations shall be in force at one time. The new contract comes into existence, therefore, at the time when the old contract comes to an end, for the intention of the parties of course controls on this point. The usual case is that of a renewal note sent to a bank and placed by the bank in its files in place of the former note. The only value given by thecreditor for the renewal instrument is the discharge of the oldnote. He will ordinarily not be willing to release the debtor from his obligation on the old note until the new note has actually been received by him. Since the intention of the parties is controlling as to the time the old instrument is discharged, and since value is essential to the creation of a contract on a negotiable instrument, it follows that the place of contracting of the renewal note is where it is received by the creditor (which is usually the place from which he returns the old note to the debtor). * * *
"It seems that the true view to be taken in the cases of renewal notes depends upon the actual practice as setting the meaning of the transaction. In the transaction of a renewal note neither party means to have but one note in effect at one time and the creditor does not mean at any time to have his debt unsecured by the actual possession of a valid note. It seems to follow from this that until the renewal note is actually delivered to the creditor who thereupon delivers back the old note or at least cancels the old note, the new note cannot be in effect, whether it has been posted direct to the creditor or is handed to him by the debtor. It is the actual *236 substitution of the new note for the old in the possession of the creditor that must constitute the moment that must determine the moment when the new note comes into effect."
See, also, American Law Institute, Restatement of Conflict of Laws, p. 398, § 313, comment "b"; Goodrich on Conflict of Laws (2d Ed.), p. 262, § 104; Phipps v. Harding, 17 C.C.A. 203 (70 Fed. 468, 30 L.R.A. 513); McGarry v. Nicklin,
In Palmer National Bank v. Van Doren,
In the case before us, while the physical acts of signing and mailing took place in Michigan, there was no completed transaction until the renewal note was accepted in Ohio and substituted for the old in the files of the bank. The result would be the same if we were to accede to the argument of counsel that the power of attorney should be analyzed as an undertaking separate from the promise to pay money (Acme FoodCo. v. Kirsch, supra), for in the *237 case before us both were incorporated in the same instrument and neither was intended to have contractual life until both were received and accepted by the bank in Ohio in place of the instrument to be supplanted and cancelled. Therefore, the place of contracting would be the same for both undertakings.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial is ordered. Plaintiff shall recover costs.
BUSHNELL, C.J., and SHARPE, BOYLES, CHANDLER, NORTH, McALLISTER, and WIEST, JJ., concurred.