89 Iowa 454 | Iowa | 1893
The certificate upon which this appeal is taken is as follows:
“Where goods are purchased from an insolvent firm, but without any knowledge on the part of the pur*459 chaser of said insolvency, to be paid for in part with a pre-existing debt, and a promise on the part of the purchaser, to pay the balance on demand, but where the balance is not demanded or paid, and a receipt given to the vendor by the purchaser for the debt, as aforesaid, and when the purchase!' is told to take any goods he chooses from a large quantity, and the purchaser takes goods that were obtained by fraud on the part of the vendee, and the defrauded vendor rescinds the sale, does such a purchase constitute a purchase for value, as against the defrauded vendor?”
It is not questioned in the record, or in argument, but that the appellees had the right to, and did, rescind the contract by which they sold* the goods in controversy to the appellants’ vendors, Rae & Harker, and would be entitled to recover them from Rae & Harker, if still held by them. Nor is it questioned but that the appellants were innocent purchasers of the goods from Rae & Harker. The sole contention is whether they were purchasers for value, or, in other words, whether the pre-existing debt, and the promise to pay the excess of the value of the goods over the amount of the debt, was a valuable consideration, as against the defrauded vendors, the appellees.
The only cases we have discovered, holding contrary to the above mentioned cases, áre Shufeldt v. Pease, 16 Wis. 689; Butters v. Haughwout, 42 Ill. 18. The appellants cited Johnson v. Barney, 1 Iowa, 531, and Trustees v. Hill, 12 Iowa, 463. In the former case it is held, in harmony with the general current of decisions, “that the rights of the holder of a negotiable instrument are the same whether the debt for which it is transferred is pre-existing, or contracted at the time of the transfer. ” The latter case recognizes this rule as applying to transfers of negotiable paper in payment
It being thus settled, as the law of this state, that a pre-existing debt is a valuable consideration for the transfer of a negotiable instrument, the appellants contend that the same rule should apply to the transfer of any chattel property. In considering this claim, we must have in mind the distinction between negotiable instruments and other chattels. It is unquestionably the policy of the law, in the interest of trade and commerce, to facilitate the circulation of commercial paper. The necessities of commerce require that bills of exchange and promissory notes shall be treated as possessing some of the attributes of money; and to give them this attribute, and to give confidence in their reception, they are protected in the hands of an innocent holder for value, before due, from defenses growing out of the dealings of the prior parties. Negotiable instruments are excepted from the rule with regard to other property. It is only he who has a title himself to a personal chattel that can convey it to another; but the bona fide assignee for value of even a stolen note, who takes it innocently, in the course of trade, before due, with due caution, has a valid title, although his assignor had no title whatever. It is these distinctions between commercial instruments and other property that have led the courts to hold that a pre-existing debt is a valid consideration for the transfer of a negotiable instrument. See]3 Kent’s Commentaries, 79; Eaton v. Davidson, 46 Ohio St. 355; Carlisle v. Wishart, 11 Ohio, 172; McLeod v. Bank, 42 Miss. 112.
Manning v. McClure, 36 Ill. 490, cited, only determines that a negotiable note taken as collateral security for a pre-existing debt was taken for value. The question under consideration was not involved in that case. We think it is entirely clear, upon reason and from these authorities, that while, from the necessities of the case, and the nature of negotiable instruments, a preexisting debt is a valuable consideration for their transfer, it should not be so held as to other personal property.
The question certified is whether this purchase by the appellants constitutes a purchase for value, as against the defrauded vendors. Our conclusion is that the question must be answered in the negative, and the judgment of the district court affirmed.