First National Bank of Stillwater v. Larsen

19 N.W. 67, 60 Wis. 206, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 99
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 19 N.W. 67 (First National Bank of Stillwater v. Larsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank of Stillwater v. Larsen, 19 N.W. 67, 60 Wis. 206, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 99 (Wis. 1884).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The main question in the case arises upon the objection to the evidence offered by the defendants in support of their answer. Whether the objection should have [212]*212been sustained by th‘6 court below, depends upon the question of the negotiability of the notes upon which the action was brought. If these notes were negotiable according to the law merchant, then, as the evidence shows that the plaintiff Avas a purchaser in good faith and for value before they became due, the proofs offered by the defendants should have been excluded. The question of their negotiability raises two points: (1) Were they negotiable upon their face? and (2) Were they negotiable when considered in connection with the chattel mortgage, which was given at the same time and as a part of the same transaction? As to both questions there is clearly a conflict of authority in other courts, and this court has not passed upon the precise questions raised upon this appeal. Upon the face of the notes they have all the elements of negotiable paper as to time and place of payment, and as to amount to be paid, unless the condition that if not paid when due and before suit brought, ten per centum attorney’s fees shall be collectible in addition for collecting the same. Whether this stipulation in the notes takes away their character of negotiability, is a disputed question in the courts. This question was referred to by Justice LyoN in the opinion in the .case of Morgan v. Edwards, 53 Wis., 599, and the cases sustaining the different views of the courts were cited upon the argument of that case, but the precise point raised in this case was not determined. This court held in that case that where there was a stipulation to pay expenses of collection, which expenses might as well be demanded when the collection was made at the time the note became due, as when collected after due, such stipulation necessarily rendered the amount to be paid on the instrument uncertain, and so rendered the paper non-negotiable.

In the case at bar there is no uncertainty as to the amount which will pay the notes in suit, if payment be made before or at the time the same become due or before suit brought; [213]*213and if the stipulation to pay ten per cent, for collection renders the amount uncertain, it only renders it so after the note is past due, and when an action is brought to collect the same. Whether this stipulation renders uncertain the amount recoverable upon the notes in question, depends, first, upon xhe question whether the stipulation is valid for any purpose; and, second, whether the amount stipulated to be paid is conclusive upon the parties as to the amount which may be recovered for such costs. This court has repeatedly held that a stipulation in a mortgage to pay attor-ne3^’s or solicitor’s fees, other than the taxable costs, in case it becomes necessary to foreclose the same, is not void and will be enforced when the amount stipulated to be paid is reasonable. See Boyd v. Sumner, 10 Wis., 41; Rice v. Cribb, 12 Wis., 179; Hitchcock v. Merrick, 15 Wis., 522; Mosher v. Chapin, 12 Wis., 453; Tollman v. Truesdell, 3 Wis., 443; Reed v. Catlin, 49 Wis., 686, 691. The amount, therefore, fixed by the parties is not conclusive upon the defendant, and the amount to be recovered under such a stipulation must be fixed by the court or jury on the trial of the action.

In some of the states, viz., in Michigan and Kentucky, such stipulations are held void as contrary to public policy and the statutes regulating costs recoverable in actions. See Bullock v. Taylor, 39 Mich., 137; Witherspoon v. Musselman, 14 Bush, 214. In other states they are held binding, and as this court has held them valid in case of mortgages, to be consistent, they must be held valid when applied to the collection of money on notes or securities other than mortgages. It must be admitted, therefore, that a stipulation of this kind does render the amount recoverable on the notes uncertain when an action is brought upon them in this state. When the amount recoverable in an action upon a written contract, whether in the form of a promissory note or otherwise, is uncertain, such instrument is not negotiable, [214]*214is held by most of the courts which have considered the question.

In the opinion of the supreme court of Pennsylvania in Woods v. Worth, 84 Pa. St., 407, Justice Shaeswood, who delivered the opinion in that case, says: “But in the paper now in question there enters as to amount an undoubted element of uncertainty. It is a mistake to suppose that if this ■note was unpaid at maturity, the five per cent, would be payable to the holder by the parties. It must go into the hands of an attorney for collection. It is not a sum necessarily payable. The phrase ‘collection fee’ necessarily implies this. Not only so, but this amount of percentage cannot be arbitrarily determined by the parties. It must? be only what would be a reasonable compensation to an attorney for collection. This, in reason and usage of the legal profession, depends upon the amount of the note. . . . How, then, can this note be said to be certain as to its amount, or an amount unaffected by any contingency? Interest and costs of protest, after nonpayment at maturity, are necessary legal incidents of the contract, and the insertion of them in the body of the note would not affect its negotiability. . . . But a collateral agreement, as here, depending, too, as it does, upon its reasonableness, to be determined by the verdict of a jury,' is entirely different. ... If this collateral agreement may be introduced with impunity, what may not be? ” To the same effect upon the same point are Garretson v. Purdy (Dakota), 14 N. W. Rep., 100; Jones v. Radatz, 27 Minn., 240; First Wat. Bank v. Gay, 63 Mo., 88; Hardin v. Olson, 14 Fed. Rep., 705; First Wat. Bank v. Bynum, 84 N. C., 24.

In a late case in the supreme court of Maryland the rule laid down in the cases above cited is approved and followed, after a full consideration of the cases holding a contrary doctrine. Maryland F. & M. Co. v. Newman, 60 Md., 584. In this case, the court say that, to constitute a note ne[215]*215gotiable under the law merchant, it is essential that the promise must be “ to pay a certain sum of money unconditionally.” The court further say: “ It is of great importance to the use and office of such. commercial negotiable instruments as bills and notes, that they should be kept free of all conditions, and singular and unusual stipulations, such as we find on the face of the note in question, whereby their negotiability might be seriously clogged or impeded. ... In the note declared on in this case, the stipulation, for the payment of all costs and charges incurred in the collection of the note introduces an element of uncertainty quite inconsistent with the degree of certainty required as to the sum to be paid. The costs and charges of collection could never-withaccuracy be known until the collection had been made complete; and hence, by computing the certain sum mentioned in the note with that which is uncertain, and treating the note as an entire contract, it is for an uncertain sum, and therefore uncertain on its face as to the amount proposed to be paid. This, -as we have seen, is not allowable in notes intended to be negotiable.”

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.W. 67, 60 Wis. 206, 1884 Wisc. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-of-stillwater-v-larsen-wis-1884.