Townsend v. Adams

222 N.W. 878, 207 Iowa 326
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 8, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 N.W. 878 (Townsend v. Adams) 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
Townsend v. Adams, 222 N.W. 878, 207 Iowa 326 (iowa 1929).

Opinions

Kindig, J.

— The negotiability or non'negotiability of a note is the only question presented for determination. In words and figures, that instrument is as follows:

“$2000.00 Jamaica, Iowa, Mch. 1, 1920.
“On the 1st day of March, 1925, for value received we promise to pay to the order of F. E. Smith, at the Peoples Trust & Savings Bank of Perry, Iowa, two thousand and no/100 dollars with six per cent interest from Mch. 1st, 1920, interest payable annually and interest and principal to draw eight per cent after becoming due, and we consent and agree that after this obligation shall become due the time of payment thereof may be extended from time to time by any one or more of us, and in case of such extension and notwithstanding the smne, we shall a/nd mil continue Viable thereon as if no such extension had been so made'[ the italics .are ours], we agree that if action should be brought for the collection of this note, a reasonable amount shall be allowed as attorney’s fees and taxed with costs in cáse: If this note is left with the justice of the peace or other collector for collection, we agree to pay cost of same. And the endorsers and guarantors waive presentment, protest and notice thereof, and all parties hereto consent and agree that a justice' of the peace may have jurisdiction on this noté to the payment of three hundred dollars.”

This document was signed by defendants-appellees on the first day of March, 1920,' and on that date delivered to F. E. Smith, the payee named therein. Afterwards, but before maturity, said paper was transferred, through in- . ’ -° dorsement and delivery, by Smith to the Peo- , • pies Trust « Savings Bank. That transferee, , . ’ then, before maturity, again indorsed and delivered the note to plaintiff-appellant. By its terms, the written obligation provided for payment on March 1, 1925.

Appellant brought suit thereon November 13,1926, claiming *328 to be a holder in due course for a valuable consideration, without notice of any outstanding defenses to which the same was subject. As an answer to such cause of action, appellees, as defendants, contend that the instrument is nonnegotiable, and therefore subject to their claim that, in March, 1925, they executed, made payable, and delivered to the Peoples Trust & Savings Bank aforesaid a new note for $6,000 in full payment of the one in controversy..

If the instrument on which suit is brought is negotiable, appellees’ defense must fail; if, on the other hand, the note is nonnegotiable, it may prevail.- Appellees predicate nonnegotiability upon that part of the above-named note which reads to this effect: •

“And w;e consent and agree that after this obligation shall become due the time of payment thereof may be extended from time to time by any one or more of us, and in case of such extension and notwithstanding the same, we shall and will continue liable thereon as if no such extension had been so made.”

Does that language produce nonnegotiability? We think not.

I. ■ Statutes in effect at that time contained- the .following provisions: Supplement 1913, Section 3060-al (Section 9461, 1924 Code) : ;

“An instrument to be negotiable must conform to the following requirements: * * *
“3. Must be payable on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time. * * *”

“Determinable future time,” according to Section 3060-a4 of the same Supplement (Section 9464, Code of 1924), includes: “ * * * On or before a fixed or determinable future time specified [in the note], * * *” Regarding this, the instrument in the case at bar embodies the succeeding phraseology: “ On the 1st day of March, 1925, for yalue received, we promise to pay to the order of F. E. Smith,” etc. Such “future time” is thereby definitely and determinably fixed. So, unless, subsequent words or phrases contained in the instrument nullify that result, negotiability is established.

II. It is said, however, that the specific provision for ex *329 tension above quoted does nullify and overcome the otherwise “fixed and determinable” future date for maturity, because, it is asserted, the permissive extension makes uncertain when payment can be made or demanded..

Well may the theory thus be formulated, for therein the criterion is to be found. Solution for this problem will have been discovered when it is determined on which side of that demarcation line is the language of this particular note. Those words authorizing the extension must be such in their meaning as to. make it impossible either, first, for the makers or other obligors to pay on March 1, 1925, or, second, for the holder to require payment at maturity. Hence, if on that date payment can be made by the maker or. obligor, on the one hand, and, on the other,- required by the holder, without an intervening extension, then certainty exists concerning the “fixed or determinable future time.” Navajo County Bank v. Dolson, 163 Cal. 485 (126 Pac. 153) ; Stitzel v. Miller, 250 Ill. 72 (95 N. E. 53), See, also, First Nat. Bank v. Stover, 21 N. M. 453 (155 Pac. 905); Longmont Nat. Bank v. Loukonen, 53 Colo. 489 (127 Pac. 947); First Nat. Bank v. Buttery, 17 N. D. 326 (116 N. W. 341).

III. What, then, is meant by the stipulation for the extension, so far as it controls the maker’s or obligor’s rigvht to satisfy the debt on March 1, 1925? At this juncture, some light is thrown upon the subject by the rule in this state to so interpret as to bring about negotiability, if possible. Apt language in Williamson v. Craig, 204 Iowa 555, is:

“Since the adoption of the Uniform Negotiable Instrument Law, and since negotiable instruments have taken such a prominent part in the business of the commercial world, the tendency of the courts is to hold instruments negotiable where they can reasonably be so held. It is ápparent from the citation of authorities [in the Williamson cáse] above that this is the drift of the modern holdings.”

Within the bounds of reason, then, liberality of construction must be exercised in favor of negotiability. Consequently, it is to be found in the instant case that the maker or other debtor could pay the note and bring its existence to an end if reasonable construction will permit.

*330 ' IV. To elucidate here, it is recognized that in this state an agreement permitting the holder to arbitrarily extend the time of payment before maturity, results in nonnegotiability. Precedents to that effect may be found in Cedar Rapids Nat. Bank v. Weber, 180 Iowa 966; Quinn v. Bane, 182 Iowa 843; Farmers Nat. Bank v. Stanton, 191 Iowa 433; Security Sav. Bank v. Capp, 193 Iowa 278; First Nat. Bank v. McCartan, 206 Iowa 1036.

Other state courts have reached a similar conclusion. Sykes v. Citizens’ Nat. Bank, 69 Kan. 134 (76 Pac. 393); Wayne County Nat. Bank v. Cook, 73 Ind. App.

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222 N.W. 878, 207 Iowa 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/townsend-v-adams-iowa-1929.