First National Bank v. McCartan

220 N.W. 364, 206 Iowa 1036
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 364 (First National Bank v. McCartan) 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
First National Bank v. McCartan, 220 N.W. 364, 206 Iowa 1036 (iowa 1927).

Opinions

Kindig, J.

A rehearing was granted in this'cause. Consequently, this is the second opinion. For the first decision, see 213 N. W. 408.

There is no doubt that J. H. McCartan (now deceased) and R. B. McCartan°were accommodation makers of -the note. The facts and circumstances' are:

Two banks, the First National and the McCartan State, both of Pocahontas, were operated as associate concerns. One ~C. B. McCartan, his mother, Ella, and brother, Theodore, owned much of the stock of each. C. B. McCartan was cashier of the latter institution. Those makers of the note above named were the uncles of C. B. Perhaps because of that relationship, and the further fact that J. H. and R. B. had previously aided him and his mother financially, C- B. approached them for monetary assistance, under the following conditions: Through the voluntary action of the stockholders, an assessment approximating 100 per cent had been levied against the stock of • each bank. Therefore, on Sunday, August 8, 1923, C. B. McCartan journeyed to his uncles’ farm, and requested them to sign an accom-. modation note for $7,500, to accomplish which a blank form was left; and on Monday morning, in compliance with the nephew’s entreaty, J. II. and R. B. affixed their names thereto, without filling any of the blanks, and placed the same in the mail, ad *1038 dressed to C. B., unaccompanied by any letter of instructions. Upon receipt thereof, the addressee completed the “note” by writing in the proper places the amount and date of'maturity, which were “$7,500” and “one year,” respectively. That was unobjectionable, and about it no complaint is made.

In addition, however, C. B. also, in the appropriate space, inserted his own name as payee. About this the controversy centers, and will be hereafter discussed. Subsequéntly, and within a brief time, C. B. McCartan sold the “note” to the McCartan State Bank, and placed the proceeds thereof to his own credit in the same institution. Then he immediately proceeded to apply the entire sum in payment of the “assessment” made against the stock which he, his mother, and brother held.

Next in the course of events was the negotiation of this “note” by the McCartan State Bank for full value to the appellant. When suit was brought, appellees defended upon the ground that the “note” was nonnegotiable, and therefore subject to any defense which the “makers” might have ag'ainst C. B. McCartan,-&emdash;-which plea is that the understanding and agreement between J. TL, R. B., and C. B. McCartan were to the effect that the signers of the “note” were to sod become for the “accommodation” of ti^“bank” only, and not for C. B. Mc-Cartan, as he- himself by unauthorized insertion made it appear. No claim is interposed as to which of the two banks it is, to which reference is there made.

Appellant urges two propositions on this appeal.

I. Does the following acceleration clause destroy the negotiability l

“It is also agreed that should the holders of this note at any time deem themselves insecure, they may demand such additional security as may-seem to them necessary, a failure to comply with such demand causing this note' to become due and payable at once.”

Attempt at reconciliation between conflicting views of the judicial decisions on this point in the various states is not necessary, for the reason that this court has previously taken a definite stand. Iowa Nat. Bank v. Carter, 144 Iowa 715; Quinn v. Bane, 182 Iowa 843. Iowa Nat. Bank v. Carter, supra, contains the ensuing appropriate discussion:

*1039 ‘ ‘ It is fundamental, of course, that to make -a note negotiable it must be certain both as to time and amount of payment. * * * ‘An instrument payable upon a contingency is not negotiable, and the happening of the event does not cure the defect.’ Before the adoption of the Negotiable Instruments Law, we had held that these provisions [acceleration clauses] in a note and mortgage rendered it nonnegotiable. * * * Since the general adoption of the Negotiable Instruments Act', the courts have held to the same doctrine. * * *”

State Bank of Halstad v. Bilstad, 162 Iowa 433, does not modify the Carter case, for, as shown by 144 N. W. 363, there was removed from the Bilstad case the following sentence:

‘1 So far as the Carter case holds the notes' therein considered nonnegotiable because of uncertainty as to time of payment, it should be modified, because the statute expressly makes notes payable on or before a fixed date negotiable.”

Inconsistency does not appear in Des Moines Sav. Bank v. Arthur, 163 Iowa 205. Involved in that decision was an “acceleration clause” in a mortg'age, rather than in the “note,” and the argument was that the language of that contract of security modified and influenced the written promise to pay, to the extent that it removed its “negotiability.” We there said:

“The noté was complete in itself * * *. The purpose of the mortgage was to- afford security for the payment of- the note * * *. While the note and mortgage are to be construed together whenever the nature of the transaction becomes material, this does not mean that the provisions of the mortgage are thereby incorporated into and become part of the note.”

Accordingly, it appears that there had been no modification or abridgment of the doctrine announced by the Carter case. No incompatibility arises between that case and the following decisions: Des Moines Sav. Bank v. Arthur, supra; Commercial Sav. Bank v. Schaffer, 190 Iowa. 1088; Hubbard v. Wallace Co., 201 Iowa 1143. Of course, the default of the maker in the payment of interest or the performance of some other agreement or covenant may accelerate the “due date,” and in this event the instrument will still be negotiable, provided that it is payable upon a fixed or determinable future date; for under those oireum *1040 stances “it [is] certain that the time [will] arrive when the note would be payable, and the circumstances that it might become payable before that time upon the default of the maker in certain respects at the option of the payee or holder [would] not affect its negotiability.” Commercial Sav. Bank v. Schaffer, supra.

The criterion is, Does the election of the payee or holder to declare the paper due and payable independent of any fault and beyond the control of the maker render the contract nonnegotiable! Bes Moines Sav. Bank v. Arthur, supra, aptly explains:

“* * * but the chattel mortgage securing the note there [Iowa Nat. Bank v. Carter, supra] held nonnegotiable provided that the note should become due and payable at the election of the payee or holder. This, being independent of any default of the maker] left him without protection, and such a clause is generally held to render the note, when construed in connection with the mortgage, nonnegotiable, as was decided in the above case. ’ ’

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220 N.W. 364, 206 Iowa 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-mccartan-iowa-1927.