Citizens State Bank v. Van Brunt Automobile Co.

196 Iowa 57
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 22, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 196 Iowa 57 (Citizens State Bank v. Van Brunt Automobile Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens State Bank v. Van Brunt Automobile Co., 196 Iowa 57 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Evans, J.

I. The note under consideration was given by the maker to the payee in purported renewal of. a previous note then falling due, held by the payee against such maker. Such previous note was for $1,072, bearing date June 12, 1918, and due in six months, without interest until after due. At the time of such renewal, the plaintiff was the actual owner of such previous note, having acquired the same as a holder in due course, by purchase from the payee. The plaintiff had consented through the brokerage agency of one Jameson to renew said previous note for a period of three months. The plaintiff had purchased the note through Jameson, as an ag;ent or broker for the Interstate Tractor Company, the payee. At the time of such purchase, Jameson had contracted to collect the note when due, without charge to the plaintiff. Prior to the due date of the note, Jameson had requested a renewal for a period of six months. He purported to do this on behalf of the Interstate Tractor Company, as indorser, and not on behalf of the maker. Pursuant to correspondence between the Interstate Tractor Company and the defendant, the defendant executed and delivered to the Interstate Tractor Company the note in suit, in discharge of the previous note, such previous note being then surrendered to it either by'said payee or by Jameson. The note thus delivered was nonnegotiable in form, in that it was drawn payable to the “Interstate Tractor Company,” and not “to the order of” the Interstate Tractor Company. The previous note then surrendered to the defendant was in proper negotiable form. The note in suit was thereupon indorsed by the payee and delivered to the plaintiff, and was accepted by it in the first instance without objection. Two months later, it discovered, as it claims, the defect of form in the note, and immediately started to obtain a reformation thereof. The [59]*59record does not disclose what such efforts were, or whether any of them were directed to the defendant. The plaintiff has never in terms rejected the note nor offered to rescind the transaction of purported renewal; nor has it predicated any right of recovery upon the original note, as having been surrendered without or in excess of authority. The Interstate Tractor Company appears to have been either a manufacturer or a distributor of tractors, located at Waterloo, Iowa. The defendant company was a distributor of automobiles and tractors at Council Bluffs, Iowa. The original note was given by the defendant to its payee for the purchase price of a tractor, to be delivered in the future by the payee and to be paid for by the defendant when sold. The agreement between the defendant and the payee was that the note should be extended from time to time without interest, until the tractor contracted for should be received and sold by the defendant. The tractor had not been received by the maker of the note at the time the original note was renewed by the note in suit. Such original note appears also to be one of many delivered by the defendant to the Interstate Tractor Company under the same agreement. At the same time, the defendant company held the promissory obligations of the Interstate Tractor Company for more than $50,000, and had at all times a complete defense by way of offset to the original note, as against the payee. Though the agreement implied an obligation on the part of the payee to retain possession and control of the defendant’s notes, yet it did, in fact, negotiate the same to innocent purchasers, to whom it paid a discount equivalent to 8 per cent interest. It employed Jameson as a broker for such purpose, and it was through such brokerage that the sale was made to the plaintiff. The plaintiff was a resident of North Dakota. All its correspondence was had with Jameson. In such correspondence, Jameson purported to represent the Interstate Tractor Company, indorser of the note.

The record discloses nothing that would justify the inference of any agency by Jameson or by the Interstate Tractor Company for the defendant company. Prior to the execution of the.note in suit, the defendant had notified the Interstate Tractor Company of its refusal to deliver its further obligations in negotiable form, and it had returned unsigned a con[60]*60siderable number of notes prepared in negotiable form. Its conduct in signing the note in suit was consistent with its previous attitude toward the payee. The note in suit, when executed by the defendant, was forwarded to the payee. Not only was such payee presumed to know and assent to the nonnegotiable form thereof, but its treasurer testified to actual knowledge that the note was drawn upon a nonnegotiable form. The note was delivered to Jameson, who did not know or discover its nonnegotiable character, and who forwarded it to the plaintiff, duly indorsed by the payee. So far as appears, the defendant had no knowledge that anyone had any interest in the note surrendered to' it, except the payee itself. The plaintiff had never communicated in any manner with the defendant. It sent the note to Jameson for collection, consenting, however, that he might take a renewal note, due in three months. We are disposed to assume that the implication of such a consent was that the renewal note should be negotiable, as was the original note. If Jameson be deemed the agent of the plaintiff for the time being, yet he did not purport to deal directly with the defendant. He simply permitted the Interstate Tractor Company to carry on the negotiations with the defendant in precisely the same manner as though it still owned the paper which it was surrendering. So far as known to the defendant, the only parties concerned in the execution of the renewal note were the maker and the payee. There was no misunderstanding between them. They both knew that the note was in nonnegotiable form. The defendant had a right to insist upon such form for its own protection. There was, therefore, no mutual, mistake in the execution of such note by the maker, or in the acceptance thereof by the payee and subsequent indorser.

We are disposed to assume, also, that the plaintiff was not required to accept from Jameson or from the Interstate Tractor Company the note in suit, as a compliance with its instructions, and that it was entitled to reject the same "and to demand the return of its original note or the proceeds of the collection thereof, on the ground that Jameson, as its agent, had no authority to surrender such original note, except upon payment thereof or upon receipt of a renewal note of like character. The difficulty with plaintiff’s position is that it did not properly [61]*61comprehend its rights when it received the renewal note, and that it was not diligent in discovering that the note tendered did not accord with the power conferred by it upon Jameson. The note was not drawn to the .plaintiff as payee, but to the Interstate Tractor Company. The plaintiff, therefore, was not a party to the note at the time it was made and only became a party in interest by a subsequent transfer and blank indorsement of the payee to it. There was no misunderstanding between the actual parties to the note in suit, at the time it was made. Whatever right or interest the plaintiff could be deemed to have had in the note at the time it was made, was a hidden equity, which had never been disclosed to the defendant. It did not hold the legal title to such renewal note- at the time it was made. It acquired that subsequently, by a formal transfer from the Interstate Tractor Company. The plaintiff did have a legal right to the original note. It held the legal title thereto. But even that fact was not made apparent to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-state-bank-v-van-brunt-automobile-co-iowa-1923.