69 N.W. 193 | N.D. | 1896
This action is brought to foreclose a mortgage given to secure the payment of two promissory notes dated October 12, 1892, of $300 each. The notes were executed by the defendants, and delivered to one Pulaski J. Scovil, to whose order they were made payable, and the mortgage was made and delivered by the defendants to Scovil at the same time the notes were delivered. The mortgage covered real estate situated in Burleigh County, and was properly recorded. The complaint alleges: “That thereafter the said notes were, by the indorsement of the said Pulaski J. Scovil, for a valuable consideration,
The fraud in the sale of the machinery, as set out in the answer, was established by the testimony offered at the trial in behalf of the defendants, and no evidence was offered by plaintiff to disprove such fraud. The fraud pleaded must therefore be regarded as an established fact in the case. But fraud, as between original parties, would not be available to the defendants in this action if the plaintiff in this action is a good faith purchaser of the notes, in due course, and without notice of
The notes matured, respectively, in November, 1893 and 1894, and were put in evidence without objection, as was the original instrument of assignment, whereby the mortgagee (Scovil) assigned the mortgage to the plaintiff. The notes were indorsed with the following words: “P. J. Scovil.” The instrument of assignment bears date the “14th day of March, A. D., 1895,” and said instrument was recorded in the office of the register of deeds on the “18th day of March, A. D. 1895.” Said instrument of assignment recites that the mortgagee, in addition to the mortgage, does grant, bargain, sell, and set over the “notes or obligations” described in the mortgage. To show that the notes to the plaintiff were trans
In this case the words “P. J. Scovil” appeared on the back of the notes when they were put in evidence, but, as has been seen, there was no testimony whatever tending to show when, or by whom, these words were placed upon the notes. Counsel argue that, where the name of the payee appears on the back of a note, the law will supplement such name by a prima facie presumption that the name-was written there in due course, and before maturity. Such is the settled rule of law where the fact of the payee’s signature is duly established. This elementary rule is enunciated by §4867, Rev. Codes, which reads: “The signature of every drawer, acceptor and endorser of a negotiable instrument is presumed to have been made for a valuable consideration before the maturity of the instrument and in the ordinary course of business.” And in defining an “endorsee” the statute declares that the instrument must be “duly endorsed to him or endorsed generally, or payable to the bearer, or one other than the payee who acquires such an interest of such an endorsee thereof.” Rev. Codes, §4884. Only such an indorsee is entitled to protection. Id. §4885. It therefore appears that under the provisions of the Code of this state, as well as by the rules of the law merchant, in a case like
Counsel for respondent points to an expression found in Scovil’s deposition, as follows: “That he assigned to D. W. Vickery, at that time, all right, title, and interest in said notes and mortgage.” It will be noticed that' neither the plaintiff nor Chambers, in their testimony, refer to any aisignment, or instrument of assignment, of either the notes or mortgage, as having been made or signed by Scovil at the time referred to, at which it is claimed the notes were sold; and a careful perusal of all the evidence brings out the fact that Scovil must have used the term “assign,” in his deposition, in a general sense/and as synonymous with the terms “transferred,” “set over,” and like general expressions, and did not intend to be understood as testifying that he made a written assignment, much less an indorsement, of the notes, at the time referred to. In fact, this construction of the evidence becomes manifestly the correct one, in view of the fact that the plaintiff’s own evidence shows conclusively that the mortgage, at least, was
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and a new trial ordered.