Howie v. Lewis

14 Pa. Super. 232, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 26, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 14 Pa. Super. 232 (Howie v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howie v. Lewis, 14 Pa. Super. 232, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

W. D. Porter, J.,

The note upon which this judgment was confessed was in all respects regular and contained upon its face nothing to excite suspicion that it had been in any way altered or changed. It was not negotiable paper, but it closed with these words: “ And I do further agree that this note shall be subject to the same rules governing commercial paper, as to equities.” ' It is admitted that the signature to this note is the genuine signature of the defendant. The defendant, in his petition for a rule to open the judgment, sets forth that the note upon which the judgment was entered was for $4,200, and that he had never given John Howie a note for $4,200; that he had signed notes payable to John Howie for sums not exceeding at any one time $200 or $300, and though he, the deponent, had not now a clear [238]*238recollection of the signing of the note in suit, yet he averred that he never knowingly signed a note payable to John Howie for $4,200; that he, deponent, was a man past seventy-five years of age and unable to read handwriting, and when he had signed notes for John Howie he always relied upon the statement of said Howie for the amount of the note, and the terms of payment. “ That the note in suit was given upon the express statement of John Howie that it was for an amount not to exceed $300, and that he, the said Howie, would not call upon him for payment. The said note was entirely without consideration, this deponent never having received any consideration whatever therefor.” The court granted a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened, and the equitable plaintiff filed an answer, in which it was set forth: “ That said bank is a holder for value of the note upon which judgment is entered in this case, and became such holder before maturity of the same; that said respondent is well acquainted with the handwriting of the maker of said note, the said Evan Lewis, the defendant in this case, and has been so acquainted for several years; that the signature of Evan Lewis attached to said note is in the handwriting of said Evan Lewis, and all the rest of the written portion of the face of said note is in the handwriting of said John Howie; that said respondent alleges that the said note does not bear any alterations, interlineations or changes of any kind, either in date, time of maturity, or amounts, whether expressed in writing or in figures, or in any portion of the written or printed portion thereof. Said respondent alleges that upon inspection the said note shows clearly that it was given for the sum of $4,200 and not for $300, and that it was impossible to have raised the said note from said lesser sum to said greater sum without that fact plainly appearing thereon.” The answer further denies knowledge of the inability of the defendant to read writing. Testimony was taken on behalf of the defendant, and John Howie, the payee of the note, testified that the note was written upon a printed form and that when Lewis signed the note the blank in which the amount of the note was intended to be written was left blank, and the place where the figures indicating the amount of the note were to be placed had filled in the figures “ 200; ” that after Lewis had signed the note, he (Howie) took it away, [239]*239placed a figure “ 4 ” in front of the “ 200 ” and wrote the words “ forty-two hundred ” in the space which had been left entirely blank in front of the printed word “ dollars.” Howie further testified that at the time Lewis signed the note he (Howie) told him the note was for $200. The equitable plaintiff, relying upon the answer filed, took no testimony. The learned court below opened the judgment and ordered an issue, which action is now assigned for error. The defendant moved to open this judgment upon two distinct grounds: first, that the note upon which it was entered was without consideration; and second, the fraud of Howie in procuring from him a note for $4,200, representing it to be a note of not more than $300. The right of this defendant to have this judgment opened upon the ground of want of consideration may well be questioned. It is true that the assignee of nonnegotiable paper takes it subject to the equities existing between the original parties, but the right of the maker of such paper to assert those equities may be defeated by superior equities in the holder.

In the present case the express covenant upon the face of the note, which the defendant sent out over his signature, that it should be subject to the same rules governing commercial paper, as to equities, must be presumed to have been intended by the parties for some purpose. So long as the note was held by the payee this clause meant nothing, and the parties must be presumed to have known that it was only when the note passed into the hands of a purchaser for value before maturity that this clause could become of any force. So long as Howie held the note the equities between him and the defendant would have been the same with regard to this note as if it had been commercial paper. But without this clause in question, the equities of the defendant as against an assignee for value would have been entirely different. It was, therefore, manifest upon the face of this instrument that it was the intention of the parties that it should be negotiated, and they made that intention a part of their contract. It was a declaration by Lewis that Howie was authorized to negotiate the note, and an agreement upon his own part that any purchaser for value before maturity should take the note discharged of any equities existing between the original parties. It did not make this note negotiable paper, but it simply invested it with that [240]*240one attribute of commercial paper. This was a waiver by the defendant of the right to inquire into the adequacy of the consideration, or the fairness of the original transaction, and invested a purchaser for value with a counter equity, which was superior to that residing in the maker of the note. The ground upon which the maker of nonnegotiable paper, who has declared that he has no defense, is estopped from after-wards alleging want of consideration in the original transaction as against a purchaser for value, to whom he had made the representation, is that he has authorized the negotiation of the instrument and induced another to part with his money upon the faith of his representation. Where the maker of such an instrument executes at the same time and delivers to the payee, mortgagee or obligee, a writing certifying that he has no defense or defalcation, it is in effect an agreement that the payee or mortgagee shall negotiate the security. It is an acknowledgment that he has received full consideration, and it would be in the highest degree inequitable to allow such maker, mortgagor or obligor to set up that there was fraud in obtaining the note, mortgage or bond. The efficacy of all certificates of no defense, or declarations of that character, is based upon the principle that he who has induced another to invest money upon the faith of his declaration of the validity of the security shall not afterwards be heard to impeach such security: Hutchison v. Gill, 91 Pa. 253; Edgar v. Kline, 6 Pa. 327; Griffiths v. Sears, 112 Pa. 523. We are of opinion that the defendant in this case was not entitled to have this judgment opened upon the ground of want of consideration in the original transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Pa. Super. 232, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howie-v-lewis-pasuperct-1900.