Wear v. Farmers & Merchants Bank of Las Cruces

605 P.2d 27
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 1980
Docket3850
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 605 P.2d 27 (Wear v. Farmers & Merchants Bank of Las Cruces) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wear v. Farmers & Merchants Bank of Las Cruces, 605 P.2d 27 (Ala. 1980).

Opinion

•OPINION

DIMOND, Senior Justice.

This is an action on a promissory note. The note, made in 1968, is held by the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Las Cruc-es, New Mexico; its maker is Gordon Wear. The bank sued Wear in 1974 for the unpaid balance of the note, $65,842.70, plus interest, costs and attorney’s fees. Wear denied liability, but was found liable after a trial by the court without a jury in April, 1977. Judgment was entered for the bank on December 7, 1977, in the amount of $131,-258.80. 1

In 1968, Wear was an agent for the Century Life Insurance Company (hereinafter “Century”), a Texas company, and had been since 1952. He was not paid a regular salary. Instead, Century agents were financed by Century’s advancing to them commissions from sales of policies on which 4the premiums had not yet been paid. In return the agents signed promissory notes to Century, and assigned as collateral for the notes commissions on future premiums. On November 21, 1968, Wear executed the promissory note at issue here to Century for $87,460.73, plus seven per cent interest. Century, on December 26, transferred this note to Century Life Investment Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary, which in turn sold it to the plaintiff bank on the following day. The bank paid Century Life Investment the face value of the note. 2

Wear did not make direct payments to the bank. Rather, Century made lump-sum payments to the bank, and the bank in turn credited the Century agents with the monthly payments due on their notes. The bank’s record of payments shows that Wear’s note was paid in this manner through July, 1969.

In that month Century was placed in receivership under the Texas Department of Insurance. On October 1 the receiver sold Century’s assets, including the insurance policies in force, to National Old Line Life Insurance Company of Arkansas. Century’s agents were paid or credited for deferred commissions and service fees due them through September, 1969, but not for any commissions or fees becoming due after the sale to Old Line. Century agents who signed on with Old Line continued to receive their commissions and fees, but Old Line did not attempt to hire Wear, nor did Wear approach Old Line. At the time of Century’s sale to Old Line, the value of the deferred'commissions and service fees that Wear would have been owed in the future was about double his indebtedness on the note.

The bank received no payments after July from Wear, the receiver or anyone else. Therefore, on January 22, 1970, the bank notified Wear for the first time that it was the owner of his note, that he was behind in his payments almost $14,700, and that the note would be accelerated if he did not at once remit that sum. Six months later, on July 20, the bank credited Wear with one final payment of $10,382. 3 It has formally considered the note to be in default, and hence subject to ten per cent interest, since that date. After this final payment, the balance due on the note was $65,842.70. In September, 1970, a Texas court approved an agreement between the bank and the receiver wherein the bank agreed to pursue the agents personally on their notes and not go against Century’s assets. 4

*29 In defending the bank’s suit against him, Wear argued that he had the right to set off against the bank’s claim the value of deferred commissions which he had earned from the sale of Century policies and which would have been used to make the monthly payments on his note. The superior court rejected this defense, ruling that Wear’s personal liability on the note precluded it. We find that the defense was valid, and hence reverse.

Before we can examine the validity of Wear’s defense, however, we must examine the bank’s contention that, under Texas law, it was a holder in due course of Wear’s note. If the bank occupied that status, it must prevail here, since a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument, such as a promissory note “takes the instrument free from ... all defenses of any party to the instrument with whom the holder has not dealt . . . .” 5

One must first become a holder of an instrument, such as a promissory note, before one may occupy the status of a holder in due course. 6 One does not become a holder, within the meaning of the Uniform Commercial Code, unless there has been an effective negotiation of the instrument. 7 In order to have effective negotiation, it is necessary, if the instrument is payable to order as Wear’s note is, 8 that there be the necessary endorsement. 9 In this case that would be the endorsement of Century Life Insurance Company, since Wear’s note was made payable to the order of Century. Finally, in order for Century’s endorsement to be effective, it “must be written . on the instrument [the promissory note here] or on a paper so firmly affixed . thereto as to become a part of the instrument.” 10

In this case there was a transfer, assignment and conveyance of Wear’s note from Century to its wholly-owned subsidiary, Century Life Investment Corporation. But this assignment purported to transfer to Century Life Investment only the “certain note or notes described in Exhibit A attached hereto.” (Emphasis added.) Exhibit A (Plaintiff's Exhibit 3) described Wear’s note, but the actual note was not endorsed to Century Life Investment, nor was it so firmly affixed to the assignment that the assignment became a part of the note. In fact, the actual note was not attached to *30 the assignment at all. What was attached was merely a description of the note and a statement that Wear had collaterally assigned to Century his deferred commissions on insurance policies that he had written to apply to the monthly payment due on the note. In these circumstances, Century Life Investment did not become either a holder or a holder in due course of Wear’s promissory note made payable to the order of Century Life Insurance.

On the day following the transfer and assignment from Century Life Insurance Company to Century Life Investment Corporation, the latter executed an instrument transferring and delivering to the Farmers and Merchants Bank of Las Cruces, New Mexico:

those 27 certain promissory notes described in Exhibit I attached hereto and made a part hereof, and all of the right, title and interest of the undersigned in each respective collateral agreement to which reference is made in the description of each note contained in said Exhibit I.

Wear’s note was included with the 27 notes thus transferred and delivered to the bank. In this instance, although the record is not entirely clear on this part, it appears that the notes themselves were so firmly affixed to the written transfer that the latter instrument could be characterized as a proper endorsement of the notes. But this did not make the bank a holder in due course of Wear’s note.

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Bluebook (online)
605 P.2d 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wear-v-farmers-merchants-bank-of-las-cruces-alaska-1980.