Mr. Justice Audrey
delivered the opinion of the court.
On February 8, 1913, Bemigio Martinez signed a note to the order of Benito Machado for $3,000, which he acknowledged having received and promised to pay on February 10, 1915, with interest at 12 per cent, payable monthly. It was set out in the note that the obligation might be renewed upon maturity if both parties agreed.
Before the maturity of the note the maker, Bemigio Martinez, paid his creditor, Benito Machado, the following amounts on account thereof: One hundred and twelve dollars on October 18, 1913, $910 on May 9, 1914, $180 on November 7, 1914, and $1,105 on March 2, 1915, or a total of $2,307. Beceipts were given for these amounts, but they were not endorsed on the note.
The note having matured, Manuel Bomán brought an action against Bemigio Martinez on April 19, 1915, to recover the full amount of the note, $3,000, and the interest, alleging that Machado had endorsed the1 note to him on D.ecember 31, 1914. The defendant pleaded that he had made the said payments to Machado, reducing his indebtedness to $693, and that the plaintiff had conspired with his creditor, Ma-chado, to defraud him of the’$2,307 which he had paid on account of said obligation. The case went to trial and the lower court rendered judgment ag’ainst the defendant for only $693 and interest thereon at 1 per cent a month, as agreed upon. From that judgment the plaintiff took the present appeal, alleging as grounds therefor that the trial. court erred in not giving judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed with interest, disregarding the rights of [612]*612plaintiff Román as tlie assignee of a promissory note payable to order and endorsed in good faith for value received prior to its maturity.
At tire trial tbe plaintiff exhibited the promissory note with the endorsement thereon dated December 31, 1914,- and as witness for the defendant testified that the note was endorsed to him on the said date, he having purchased the same from Benito-Machado for the sum of $2,700, paying him $2,500 in cash and canceling a debt of $200 which Machado owed him. He also testified that when he purchased the note he was not aware that the debtor had made any payments on account of the obligation and that the defendant had paid him nothing.
We believe that this testimony is sufficient to prove these facts inasmuch as it is not contradicted and there is nothing in the rest of the evidence to impugn its credibility although the endorser of the note did not testify.
The defendant’s defense regarding'a conspiracy between the plaintiff and his endorser to defraud him of the $2,307 which he had paid was not proved, and the trial judge so holds in the opinion on which his judgment is based.
Therefore the plaintiff being a bona, fide holder of the note by purchase before its maturity and having no knowledge of the payments made by his debtor to the original creditor before the obligation was due, has the plaintiff the right to recover the whole amount of the note with the interest stipulated?' Such is the question raised by the appellant and to be decided by this court.
The note on which the action is brought is made payable to the order of Benito Machado. The fact that the maker stated at the foot of the note that it was payable to order is immaterial. Being payable to order, the said note is negotiable by endorsement and it is not necessary to give the maker notice of the transfer. According to article 2 of the Code of Commerce, commercial, transactions shall be considered those enumerated in this code and any others of a [613]*613similar character. Article 531 sets out the necessary elements of drafts, bills and promissory notes payable to order, ■which elements are to be found in the promissory note now under consideration. Article 532 provides that drafts payable to order between merchants and bills or promissory notes likewise payable to order, which arise from commercial transactions, shall produce the same obligations and effects as bills of exchange, except with regard to acceptance, which is a quality pertaining to the latter only; and article 490 prescribes that a person paying a bill of exchange before it is due' shall not be exempted from paying the amount of the same if the first payment was not made to the proper person.
In the case of Vázquez v. Laíno, 23 P. R. R. 218, we said that a promissory note payable to order is presumed to be a commercial instrument arising from commercial transactions in the absence of proof to the contrary; and in the case of Hernández v. Muñiz, 10 P. R. R. 16, this court held that a promissory note payable to order is a mercantile paper governed, by the provisions of the Code of Commerce, and referred to the decision of the Supreme Court of Spain of January 25, 1895, holding that promissory notes payable to order and endorsements made thereon should be considered as commercial instruments in accordance with article 2 of the Code of Commerce, as they are expressly defined in the said code.
When a promissory note is made payable to order it is negotiable and no notice of its endorsement or transfer’ need be given to the debtor because such notice is required only in cases of commercial credits which are not negotiable nor payable to the bearer, according to' article 347 of the Code of Commerce.
The promissory note in this case being considered a commercial instrument because it is made payable to order and contains the requisiti.es set forth in article 531, a fact which is not disputed, the provisions of the Code of Commerce are [614]*614applicable, according. to article 2 thereof, and not the provisions of the Civil Code as was erroneously held by the lower court, although it should be shown that the obligation did not arise from a commercial transaction; but this was not shown in the present case, nor that Benito Machado was not a merchant, for such evidence, while proper between the parties to the note for the purpose of destroying the presumption that it is a commercial note, has no force against a person who in good faith purchases a note which is commercial by its terms.
It is true that the defendant exhibited receipts for several payments made to Benito Machado, his original creditor, before the note matured, but they were admitted in evidence over the objection of the plaintiff. The debtor could not prove by such receipts, as against a holder of the note in good faith, that his debt had been reduced to $693. His obligation was to .pay $3,000 on February 10, 1915, and as he had no right or obligation to pay the same before that date, the bona fide purchaser of the note was justified in believing that the debt had not been paid in whole or in part. A person who signs a negotiable promissory note has no right to assume that it has not been endorsed or assigned, and in making payments on the note to the original payee before it matures he would defeat the rights of a purchaser in good faith. It is the duty of one who makes payments on a negotiable instrument before its maturity to take precautions to prevent its circulation, and if- he pays one who is not the owner of the note at the time of payment and merely takes a receipt for such payment, he will not be protected against the rightful holder; nor will he be protected even should he make such payment before the transfer, for the instrument will still be a valid evidence of the whole debt and remain in a condition to be circulated and acquired by a bona fide purchaser at its face value.
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Mr. Justice Audrey
delivered the opinion of the court.
On February 8, 1913, Bemigio Martinez signed a note to the order of Benito Machado for $3,000, which he acknowledged having received and promised to pay on February 10, 1915, with interest at 12 per cent, payable monthly. It was set out in the note that the obligation might be renewed upon maturity if both parties agreed.
Before the maturity of the note the maker, Bemigio Martinez, paid his creditor, Benito Machado, the following amounts on account thereof: One hundred and twelve dollars on October 18, 1913, $910 on May 9, 1914, $180 on November 7, 1914, and $1,105 on March 2, 1915, or a total of $2,307. Beceipts were given for these amounts, but they were not endorsed on the note.
The note having matured, Manuel Bomán brought an action against Bemigio Martinez on April 19, 1915, to recover the full amount of the note, $3,000, and the interest, alleging that Machado had endorsed the1 note to him on D.ecember 31, 1914. The defendant pleaded that he had made the said payments to Machado, reducing his indebtedness to $693, and that the plaintiff had conspired with his creditor, Ma-chado, to defraud him of the’$2,307 which he had paid on account of said obligation. The case went to trial and the lower court rendered judgment ag’ainst the defendant for only $693 and interest thereon at 1 per cent a month, as agreed upon. From that judgment the plaintiff took the present appeal, alleging as grounds therefor that the trial. court erred in not giving judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount claimed with interest, disregarding the rights of [612]*612plaintiff Román as tlie assignee of a promissory note payable to order and endorsed in good faith for value received prior to its maturity.
At tire trial tbe plaintiff exhibited the promissory note with the endorsement thereon dated December 31, 1914,- and as witness for the defendant testified that the note was endorsed to him on the said date, he having purchased the same from Benito-Machado for the sum of $2,700, paying him $2,500 in cash and canceling a debt of $200 which Machado owed him. He also testified that when he purchased the note he was not aware that the debtor had made any payments on account of the obligation and that the defendant had paid him nothing.
We believe that this testimony is sufficient to prove these facts inasmuch as it is not contradicted and there is nothing in the rest of the evidence to impugn its credibility although the endorser of the note did not testify.
The defendant’s defense regarding'a conspiracy between the plaintiff and his endorser to defraud him of the $2,307 which he had paid was not proved, and the trial judge so holds in the opinion on which his judgment is based.
Therefore the plaintiff being a bona, fide holder of the note by purchase before its maturity and having no knowledge of the payments made by his debtor to the original creditor before the obligation was due, has the plaintiff the right to recover the whole amount of the note with the interest stipulated?' Such is the question raised by the appellant and to be decided by this court.
The note on which the action is brought is made payable to the order of Benito Machado. The fact that the maker stated at the foot of the note that it was payable to order is immaterial. Being payable to order, the said note is negotiable by endorsement and it is not necessary to give the maker notice of the transfer. According to article 2 of the Code of Commerce, commercial, transactions shall be considered those enumerated in this code and any others of a [613]*613similar character. Article 531 sets out the necessary elements of drafts, bills and promissory notes payable to order, ■which elements are to be found in the promissory note now under consideration. Article 532 provides that drafts payable to order between merchants and bills or promissory notes likewise payable to order, which arise from commercial transactions, shall produce the same obligations and effects as bills of exchange, except with regard to acceptance, which is a quality pertaining to the latter only; and article 490 prescribes that a person paying a bill of exchange before it is due' shall not be exempted from paying the amount of the same if the first payment was not made to the proper person.
In the case of Vázquez v. Laíno, 23 P. R. R. 218, we said that a promissory note payable to order is presumed to be a commercial instrument arising from commercial transactions in the absence of proof to the contrary; and in the case of Hernández v. Muñiz, 10 P. R. R. 16, this court held that a promissory note payable to order is a mercantile paper governed, by the provisions of the Code of Commerce, and referred to the decision of the Supreme Court of Spain of January 25, 1895, holding that promissory notes payable to order and endorsements made thereon should be considered as commercial instruments in accordance with article 2 of the Code of Commerce, as they are expressly defined in the said code.
When a promissory note is made payable to order it is negotiable and no notice of its endorsement or transfer’ need be given to the debtor because such notice is required only in cases of commercial credits which are not negotiable nor payable to the bearer, according to' article 347 of the Code of Commerce.
The promissory note in this case being considered a commercial instrument because it is made payable to order and contains the requisiti.es set forth in article 531, a fact which is not disputed, the provisions of the Code of Commerce are [614]*614applicable, according. to article 2 thereof, and not the provisions of the Civil Code as was erroneously held by the lower court, although it should be shown that the obligation did not arise from a commercial transaction; but this was not shown in the present case, nor that Benito Machado was not a merchant, for such evidence, while proper between the parties to the note for the purpose of destroying the presumption that it is a commercial note, has no force against a person who in good faith purchases a note which is commercial by its terms.
It is true that the defendant exhibited receipts for several payments made to Benito Machado, his original creditor, before the note matured, but they were admitted in evidence over the objection of the plaintiff. The debtor could not prove by such receipts, as against a holder of the note in good faith, that his debt had been reduced to $693. His obligation was to .pay $3,000 on February 10, 1915, and as he had no right or obligation to pay the same before that date, the bona fide purchaser of the note was justified in believing that the debt had not been paid in whole or in part. A person who signs a negotiable promissory note has no right to assume that it has not been endorsed or assigned, and in making payments on the note to the original payee before it matures he would defeat the rights of a purchaser in good faith. It is the duty of one who makes payments on a negotiable instrument before its maturity to take precautions to prevent its circulation, and if- he pays one who is not the owner of the note at the time of payment and merely takes a receipt for such payment, he will not be protected against the rightful holder; nor will he be protected even should he make such payment before the transfer, for the instrument will still be a valid evidence of the whole debt and remain in a condition to be circulated and acquired by a bona fide purchaser at its face value. Partial payments on a note should be endorsed on the instrument itself so that a person purchasing it may know to what extent it has been reduced. [615]*615In the case of Mobley v. Ryan, 14 Ill. 51, 56 Am. Dec. 490, it was said:
“The assignee is not affected by any subsequent transactions between the original parties to the instrument. He is not bound to give the maker notice of the assignment. The latter must ascertain who is the holder of the note, and make payment accordingly. He can fully protect himself against a .demand of payment from the payee, by refusing to pay unless the note is surrendered. If the defendant had pursued such a course, no ‘difficulty would have arisen. The payment in question was made in his own wrong, and he must abide the eonsequepces of his negligence.”
In the note to this case the case of Harrison v. Edwards, 36 Am. Dec. 364, is cited.
It is not unfair, although it may appear so, to overrule the defense of payments made before maturity; for, while the creditor in collusion with another may assign the instrument in order that the assignee may claim the amount already paid — which has not been proved in the present case- — ■ the debtor may -conspire also with, the creditor to simulate payments which have not been made. If the debtor is obliged to pay again what he has already paid, it is because he did not cause the payments to be endorsed on the instrument which, being a commercial paper, is passed from hand to hand at its face value, and because he confided in the honesty and responsibility of the creditor to 'whom the payments were made. ■
The judgment appealed from should Ije reversed and another rendered requiring the defendant to pay the $3,000 for which his promissory note was made, together with in terest at 1 per cent a month from December 31, 1914, as agreed on, without special imposition of costs.
Reversed and substituted.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Wolf, del Toro and Hutchison concurred.