Cracowaner v. Carlton National Bank

124 So. 275, 98 Fla. 792
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 28, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 So. 275 (Cracowaner v. Carlton National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cracowaner v. Carlton National Bank, 124 So. 275, 98 Fla. 792 (Fla. 1929).

Opinion

*793 Strum, J.

This is an action in special assumpsit upon a promissory note under seal alleged to have been executed by the defendants below, Cracowaner and Weber, payable to E. M. Winemiller, or order, and by said payee endorsed and negotiated in due course to the plaintiff below, Carlton National Bank.

The declaration is in the usual form in assumpsit upon a promissory note. It is not susceptible of construction as a declaration either in debt or covenant. The note sued on is in the conventional form, but to the right of the signature of each of the makers appears the word “ (Seal).”

The first- question presented on this writ of error to a judgment for plaintiff below is whether or not assumpsit will lie upon a promissory note under seal.

At common law, and by the unwritten law merchant, an unconditional written promise to pay money, executed under the seal of the obligor, was known as a “bill single” or “writing obligatory.” It was not negotiable; the seal was held to import a conclusive presumption of a valid consideration; and though otherwise identical in form with a promissory note, it was uniformly held to be technically a distinct and different instrument.

Under the common law rules of pleading, unaffected by statute, this distinction was vigorously observed by this Court in the consideration of questions of pleading, proof and variance, so that a declaration in assumpsit upon a promissory note, eo nomine, could not be supported by proof of an instrument under seal though otherwise identical with the instrument declared on. The common law rule was that the affixing of the seal destroyed negotiability and constituted the instrument a specialty, an action upon which must sound in covenant or debt because at common law assumpsit could not be maintained upon a' contract under seal. Hooker v. Gallagher, 6 Fla. 351; *794 Comerford v. Cobb, 2 Fla. 418. Such was also the view in other jurisdictions. Pierce v. Lacy, 23 Miss. 193; January v. Goodman, 1 Dallas (Pa.) 208; Magruder v. Belt, 7 App. (D. C.) 303; 311; Davis v. McWhorter (Ala.), 26 So. R. 119; 5 C. J. 1383; 8 C. J. 813; 2 R. C. L. 744, 748; Bigelow on Bills, Notes and Checks, (3rd Ed.) Sec. 65.

The distinctions recognized at common law as specialties, grew out of the fact that such instruments were regarded as different in their essential nature from simple contracts; the rights, both substantive and remedial, and the liabilities arising therefrom were determinable in many respects according to different rules than those applicable to simple contracts. At common law simple contracts were open to defenses against which contracts under seal were immune. The issues in suits upon the two classes of instruments were usually different because of the difference in the essential nature of the instruments. It was, therefore, necessary to strictly observe the common law distinctions as to the forms of action applicable to the two classes of instruments, and in the absence of statutory influence on the rule it would necessarily follow that an action on & promissory note under seal must be brought in convenant or debt.

Sec. 6923, Comp. Gen. Laws 1927, a part of the uniform negotiable instruments act, adopted in this State in 1897, provides:

'A negotiable promissory note within the meaning of this Chapter is an unconditional promise in writing made by one person to another signed by the maker, engaging to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time a sum certain in money to order or to bearer. Where a note is drawn to the maker’s own order, it is not complete until endorsed by him. ’ ’

*795 Sec. 6766, Comp. Gen Laws 1927, also a part of the uniform negotiable instruments act, provides:

“The validity and negotiable character of an instrument are not affected by the fact that it * * * bears a seal * * *.”

Sec. 6788, Comp. Gen Laws 1927, also a part of the uniform negotiable instruments act, provides:

“Absence or failure of consideration is matter of defense as against any person not a holder in due course; and partial failure of consideration is a defense pro tanto whether the failure is an ascertained and liquidated amount or otherwise.”

See. 4663,C. G. L. 1927, which is not a part of the uniform negotiable instruments act, provides that an action on any contract, obligation or liability founded “upon an instrument of writing under seal,” shall be commenced within twenty years; an action upon any contract, obligation or liability founded upon an instrument of writing not under seal shall be commenced within five years. For the purpose of determining which of these two periods of limitation was applicable, this court has held, both prior t'o and since the enactment of the uniform negotiable instraments act, that' a promissory note in the usual form but under the seal of the maker as this note is, is an instrument of writing under seal to which the twenty year limitation applies. Comerford v. Cobb, supra; Grand Lodge v. State Bank, 79 Fla 471, 84 So. R. 528; Langley v. Owens, 52 Fla. 302, 42 So. R. 457, See also Williams v. Peninsular Gro. Co., 73 Fla. 937, 73 So. R. 517; and Fourth Natl. Bank v. Wilson, 101 So. R. 29, the two latter involving the rule of limitation as to endorsers.

*796 In all respects, however, except that last mentioned, the uniform negotiable instruments act has effaced all practical difference between a sealed promissory note and one unsealed. Both create the same rights and liabilities between the parties. The presence of a seal now has no influence on the substance or effect of the note as such, but is effective only for the purpose of determining' the time within which an action may be brought to enforce the rights of the obligee or. holder thereof. The latter proposition relates not to the form of the remedy, but to the time within which appropriate remedy is available. The negotiable instruments act expressly provides that the seal shall not affect either the validity or the negotiability of the note. Such a note is open to the defense of want of consideration. The mere addition of a seal no longer works a vital change in the essential nature of the instrument as a promissory note as it formerly did at common law. So far as the essential nature of the note as a promise to pay is concerned, all of the common law distinctions between an unsealed promissory note and a note under seal, or a bill single, are gone. The distinctions in the essential nature of the two instruments were the foundation for the technical common law distinction as to the form of action. The reasons for the rule having been removed by statute, the rule should fall with the reason.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 275, 98 Fla. 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cracowaner-v-carlton-national-bank-fla-1929.