31 N.Y.S. 605 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
The trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground that the note upon which the plaintiff sought to recover had not matured when the action was commenced. The note reads as follows:
“$22,783.33. New York, November 1st, 1892.
“Two years after date, we promise to pay to the order of Thomas W. Robertson twenty-two thousand seven hundred and eighty-three 33-100 dollars at No. 1 Broadway, New York City.
“Value received.
“Number. With interest at five per cent., payable semiannually. Due November 4, 1804.
“The Ongley Electric Company,
“By Geo. B. Hopkins, Vice President.”
The action was commenced April 4, 1893, some months before the. due date of the note, according to its terms. But at the time the note was given the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff, as collateral security for its payment, a chattel mortgage upon cer
“And the said party of the first part, for itself and its successors and assigns, covenants and agrees to and with the said party of the second part, his executors, administrators, and assigns, that in case default shall be made in the payment of the said principal sum above mentioned, or in the payment of the interest thereon, or in case the said party of the first part shall at any time before the day of payment herein provided for remove the said goods, chattels, and property, or any part thereof, or permit or suffer any attachment or other process against property to be issued against it, or permit or suffer any judgment to be entered up against it, then the said principal sum above mentioned shall become instantly due and payable. * *
If this provision be read without having in mind the circumstance which, it is alleged, caused this note to mature, it will suggest that, the parties intended to cut down the time which the note should have to run only in the event of such happenings as should endanger the plaintiff’s chances of making his claim out of the property of the defendant. It undertook to provide that in the event of a removal of the goods covered by the mortgage, whether by the voluntary act of the defendant or through legal proceedings taken by a creditor, then the note should at once mature. In other words, the parties to that instrument apparently intended to relieve the payee of the note and the mortgagee as well from any possible em