54 Ind. 164 | Ind. | 1876
Action by the appellees, as the indorsees, against the appellant, as the maker of the following promissory note, viz.:
“$500. “May 8th, 1872.
“ Six months after date, or before, if made out of the sale of Brake’s Horse Hay-Eork & Hay Carrier, I promise to pay to J ames B. Drake, or order, five hundred dollars, payable at The Citizens National Bank of Indianapolis, value received, with usé, without any relief from valuation or appraisement laws. If suit be instituted to enforce the payment thereof, I agree to pay a reasonable attorney’s fee. The drawers and indorsers severally waive presentment for payment, protest and notice of protest and non-payment of this note.
(Signed,) “James 3?. Walker.”
Issues were joined, and the cause was tried by jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs.
The appellant insists that the complaint was bad, inasmuch as that it did not aver that the amount had been made out of the sale of the hay-fork and hay carrier. He claims that the note should be construed as if it read as follows: “ On or before November 8th, 1872, if made out of the sale of Drake’s Horse Hay-Eork,” etc., “I promise,” etc.
We do not concur in the appellant’s construction of the contract. As we construe it, it is an absolute promise to pay the money six months after the date of the note, but to pay it before, if the amount should be made out of the sale of the article mentioned. There was, therefore, no need of any averment that the amount had been made out of the sale, the six months having expired before the action was brought.
But the appellant contends that, with the construction which we place upon the note, the plaintiffs were still not entitled to recover, because the note was not governed by
A note, in order that it be negotiable in accordance with the law merchant, must be payable unconditionally and at all events, and at some fixed period of time, or upon some event which must inevitably happen. But the note here, as we have seen, contains an unconditional promise to pay the money at the expiration of six months from its date. It contains a promise, it is true, to pay the money before that time if it should be made out of the sale of the property mentioned. But this conditional promise to pay the money before the time specified, unless performed, does not abrogate or interfere with the absolute promise to pay at the expiration of the time. The conditional promise not being performed, the absolute promise to pay at_the expiration of the time specified remains in full force. Such conditional promise, embodied in a note containing an absolute promise to pay at a time specified, does not destroy the negotiable qualities of the paper, or take it out of the operation of the law merchant. The case of Ernst v. Steckman, 74 Pa. State, 13, is exactly in point. There, a note was executed, payable twelve months after date, or before, if made out of the sale of a certain seeding machine. This was held to be a negotiable note according to the law merchant. See also the case of Cota v. Buck, 7 Met. 588, which is also in point.
It is also objected, that the complaint does not allege that “The Citizens National Bank of Indianapolis,” at which the note was payable, was situated in the state of Indiana, and, therefore, that it does' not appear that the note falls within that class which, by our statute, is put upon the footing of bills of exchange. A contract, when sued upon in the courts of this state, will be presumed to have been executed in this state, unless the contrary appear. Franklin v. Thurston, 8 Blackf. 160; Hutchins v. Hanna, 8 Ind. 533. So, where a note is made in this state, as it will be presumed the note in this case was,
The first paragraph of the defendant’s answer is in these words: “The defendant, James P. Walker, for separate answer to the plaintiffs’ complaint herein, says that the promissory note in said complaint mentioned is not his note, and this he is ready to verify.” There was no replication to this paragraph of answer, and the appellant claims that for that reason it stood admitted of record that the appellant was not the maker of the note. The counsel for the appellant, in their brief, say: “this is important, for in looking at the evidence, we can do so with the fact conceded in the pleadings, that the note in suit is not the note of the appellant.”
There are two conclusive answers to the position thus assumed:
First, the paragraph of answer was only a denial of what was alleged in the complaint, viz.: the execution of the note by the appellant. It alleged no new matter, and needed no replication whatever.
Second, if the answer had contained new matter requiring a reply, stjll, the going to trial without objection was a waiver of any reply, and the matter of the answer
Some questions are made, in the brief of counsel, in respect to the evidence and the instructions of the court. But these questions are not properly before us. The instructions are not in the record, except as they are contained in a bill of exceptions.
On the 23d day of May, 1871, the appellant’s motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered, and sixty days were given appellant in which to file his bill of exceptions. The bill was filed on the 23d day of July of the same year. This was one day too late. The counsel for the appellees points out this objection to the bill of exceptions, and we can not regard it as constituting any part of the record.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
The judgment below is affirmed, with costs and five per cent, damages.