International Finance Corp. v. Philadelphia Wholesale Drug Co.

167 A. 790, 312 Pa. 280, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 709
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 21, 1933
DocketAppeal, 227
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 167 A. 790 (International Finance Corp. v. Philadelphia Wholesale Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Finance Corp. v. Philadelphia Wholesale Drug Co., 167 A. 790, 312 Pa. 280, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 709 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Kephaet,

May 22, 1933:

The Philadelphia Wholesale Drug Company on May 11, 1921, accepted for payment three trade acceptances drawn upon it by Reolo, Inc., payable four months after date. The acceptances read as follows: “Accepted for payment as per Reolo contract for amount and date shown hereon.” When the acceptances were made, two agreements were entered into between the parties call *282 ing for the performance of certain acts by Reolo, Inc., the drawer, in consideration of the acceptances. Before their maturity appellee purchased them for value and without notice of any defenses thereto. At the same time it obtained from Reolo, Inc., a certified copy of the contract between it and appellant. This copy omitted a provision requiring Reolo, Inc., to renew the acceptances at maturity for four months, if at that time shipments of all goods covered by the acceptances had not been made to the Drug Company, the renewals to be for the value of unsold portions of such goods. This fraud was not discovered until seven days after the drafts were purchased.

When the drafts were presented at maturity for payment at the bank named therein, it was refused because Reolo, Inc., had violated its contract by failing to perform its provisions. Appellee then brought suit. Thereafter, the parties submitted a case stated, on which judgment was entered against the Drug Company, from which it took this appeal.

Where a draft is “accepted for payment as per contract” between drawer and acceptor, is the draft in a holder’s hands subject to a defense under the contract which the acceptor has against the drawer? Did the writing give notice or carry with it a duty to inquire beyond the instrument? If it did, the acceptance was conditional and the instrument in the hands of any holder would be subject to any defense the acceptor had against the drawer. The Negotiable Instrument Act of May 15, 1901, P. L. 162, furnishes principles of law and significant definitions which aid in determining the effect of the expression now under consideration.

Section 1 of the act provides that an instrument to be negotiable “must contain an unconditional promise or order to pay a sum certain in money.” This requirement (section 1) applies to all instruments which claim negotiability.

*283 Section 3 reads :

“An unqualified order or promise to pay is unconditional within the meaning of this act, though coupled with:......(2) A statement of the transaction which gives rise to the instrument.”

• Section 139, treating of bills of exchange and acceptances, reads:

“An acceptance is either general or qualified. A general acceptance assents without qualification to the order of the drawer. A qualified acceptance in express terms varies the effect of the bill as drawn.”

Section 141 defines a qualified acceptance by saying:

“An acceptance is qualified, which is: (1) conditional, that is to say, which makes payment by the acceptor dependent on the fulfillment of a condition therein stated......”

These sections must all be read together when considering the effect of an acceptance. A qualified acceptance of a draft is not an unconditional promise or order to pay, and is therefore nonnegotiable. It must be noted in particular that an acceptance is not qualified unless it in “express terms varies the effect of the bill as drawn,” and it is qualified when dependent on the fulfillment of “a condition therein stated”; but a promise to pay is not conditional though it refers to the “transaction which gives rise to the instrument.”

It is well to restate some of the fundamental principles that underlie the law of negotiable instruments. Negotiable instruments are the chief medium of credit. As such their inviolability must be made as secure as possible. They must pass freely in the channels of commerce without embarrassment to their handlers though extrinsic matters unaffecting their integrity appear thereon. If any impediment arises in their course, it must spring from the instrument itself, and the danger signal must be so clear and certain that none may miss it. When doubt or uncertainty arises, it is resolved in favor of negotiability. Whenever an instrument shows *284 on its face that it embraces all the elements of a negotiable one, its negotiability is presumed. No extrinsic evidence may be considered to show nonnegotiability: Perth Amboy Trust Co. v. Modern School Assn., 154 Atl. 418 (N. J., 1931); International Finance Corp. v. Northwestern Drug Co., 282 Fed. 920. The paper travels as “a courier without luggage” until this presumptive freedom of transferability is clearly and definitely restrained by its own evident limitations: mere words of ambiguity will not restrain its course. There must appear on its face clear, certain and manifest notice of its conditional character. In such perilous times as now confront us, we are called upon to be particularly careful lest, in seeking to prevent the consummation of a fraud, we do great harm to business generally, for the greater the shrinkage in commerce the more certainly is the freedom of negotiable instruments required as a stimulus to commerce.

When the channels of commerce are clogged by uncertainty and apprehension, and the tide of business confidence is at its lowest ebb, an individual who places such an instrument in trade is burdened with the necessity of showing by reference to its face that the instrument is nonnegotiable.

Thus guided by these principles of interpretation and policy, in the further determination of the effect of the words used in these acceptances, it may be stated that it is of no importance what the acceptor meant by the precise phraseology he used. His subjective intention in placing the words “as per......contract” in the acceptances is a matter of indifference. The controlling factor in determining the effect of these words is the reaction of a mind ordinarily accustomed to business transactions when reading these words in such an instrument.

When the drafts were presented to appellant, they were unquestionably in form negotiable. It inserted after the word “payment” in the printed form, which read “Accepted for payment for amount and date shown *285 hereon,” the phrase “as per Eeolo contract,” thus causing it to read “Accepted for payment as per Eeolo contract for amount and date shown hereon.” It now seeks to stamp the drafts as conditional, nonnegotiable and subject to any defense by the acceptor though they are in the hands of a third person without notice and before maturity. What did the words themselves import?

Appellant contends they were inserted for the purpose of notifying future holders that the acceptance was in accordance with and subject to the terms of the contract between Eeolo, Inc., and the acceptor, while appellee urges that the phrase “as per......contract” is a mere “statement of the transaction which gave rise to the instrument”; it merely earmarked the transaction or stated the consideration for the acceptance. It may be well argued that both inferences are deducible from the language employed.

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Bluebook (online)
167 A. 790, 312 Pa. 280, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-finance-corp-v-philadelphia-wholesale-drug-co-pa-1933.