Windsor Sav. Bank v. McMahon

38 F. 283, 3 L.R.A. 192, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedApril 6, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 F. 283 (Windsor Sav. Bank v. McMahon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Windsor Sav. Bank v. McMahon, 38 F. 283, 3 L.R.A. 192, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128 (circtsdia 1889).

Opinion

Shikas, J.

This suit was brought for the purpose of foreclosing a mortgage executed by S. A. McMahon, given to'secure the payment of a promissory note for §14,000. The note bears date at Council Bluffs, Iowa, and provides that “both principal and interest payable at the office of J. W. and E. L. Squire, Council Bluffs, Iowa, with exchange on New York.” The jurisdiction of the court is now questioned by a suggestion on behalf of the defendant that the note is payable to the order of William B. Somers, and it is admitted by the parties that at the date of the bringing the suit the mortgagor and payee of the note were citizens of the state of Iowa. Under the provisions of the act of 1875, in force when the suit was commenced, this court has not jurisdiction of a suit founded on a contract in favor of an assignee, unless the assignor could have prosecuted the same in this court in case no assignment had been made, “except in cases of promissory notes negotiable by the law-merchant, and [284]*284bills of exchange.” Under the agreed facts this court has not jurisdiction, unless the note sued on is negotiable, according to the principles of the law-merchant, for it is admitted that when the suit was brought the payee and assignor of the note and the principal defendant were citizens of the same state. The point is whether the provision that the principal and interest are payable with exchange destroys the negotiable character of the note, according to the principles of the law-merchant. The question is not whether the note may be negotiable under the provisions of the state statute. The state legislature may declare that all instruments or contracts for the payment of money are negotiable, and shall possess the incidents pertaining to negotiable paper; but that would not change the test of negotiability fixed by the act of congress of 1875. That test is negotiability according to the principles of the law-merchant, not according to the provisions of the state statute. It is not a question of the true intent and meaning of the contract as defining the rights of the parties thereunder, in which case the rule of the state statute would be obligatory upon this court, as well as the courts of the state, in all matters wherein the state statute controls or defines such rights, and thus forms part of the contract of the parties. AVhen the act of 1875 was passed it denied jurisdiction to the courts of the United States in all cases wherein the cause of action had been assigned, unless the assignor could have instituted suit in the federal court, except in cases based upon promissory notes, negotiable by the law-merchant and bills of exchange.

As already stated, the question is whether a note which provides that the several installments of interest as they come due, and also the principal sum, shall be paid at Council Bluffs, Iowa, with exchange on New York, is or is not negotiable according to the rules of the law-merchant. Upon this question, the authorities are not in accord. The general rule has long been established that certainty in the sum to be paid is one of the elements essential to render notes negotiable. Many cases hold that the spirit of the rule is observed if the principal sum to be paid is made certain, even though there may be some slight addition by way of interest or exchange to be made thereto. While the argument in support of the conclusion is certainly plausible, yet the difficulty with it is that it opens the way to introducing too many uncertainties; that it may ultimately obviate the rule'itself; and that is not advisable. If we adhere to the principle that, to render a note negotiable, the amount to be paid at maturity must be ascertainable from the face of the note, without resort to evidence dehors the instrument, we have a fixed and certain rule for guidance; but, if we depart from this principle, doubt and uncertainty will arise as to the true character of notes and other like instruments for the payment of sums depending on contingencies. If there was a fixed rate of exchange established by law, or if the note provided the rate to be paid, so that from the face of the note it could be computed what the exchange would be, then the note itself would contain all the facts necessary to be known in order to ascertain the sum necessary to be paid at maturity in discharge of the obligation of the maker, and in that case there would not be any uncertainty in the amount of the note. When, [285]*285however, the provision is that, as each payment of interest comes due, the amount thereof is to be paid at Council Bluffs, Iowa, with exchange on Hew York, and the like provision as to the principal sum, it is evident that every payment of interest and principal is uncertain in amount, in that it depends upon the rate of exchange charged at the time the payments come due, and this rate cannot be determined from the face of the note, nor by reference to any law or fixed rule, but is dependent upon what may be the rate current at the several times the installments of the interest and the principal are payable, and this rate cannot be known until the time of payment arrive, and then only by evidence to be gathered from banks or other dealers in exchange. In ascertaining the amount now due upon this note and the unpaid coupons, it is necessary that evidence be introduced showing the rate of exchange current in Council Bluffs, Iowa, at the several dates of the maturity thereof. Thus we find that the element of certainty in the amount to be paid is wanting, and unless the court adopts the principle that it is not the fact of uncertainty, but the amount thereof, that controls the question of negotiability, it must- be held that the note sued on lacks an essential requisite of negotiability.

The contract evidenced by the note hinds the maker thereof to pay the installments of interest and the principal, with exchange on Now York, and the latter provision is just as much a part of the contract as are the provisions touching the principal sum and the interest. Resolving the contract into its several parts, we find it to be a contract for the payment of the principal sum of $14,000 in five years from date, for the payment of $490 every six months as interest, and for the payment on each installment of interest, and also on the principal sum when paid, of the current rate of exchange between Council Bluffs, Iowa, and New York. The party is bound to pay this current rate of exchange, as a part of the contract. The amount thereof is left wholly dependent on what the rates may be when the several payments come due, and there is no legal or business rule by which the amounts can be ascertained until the day of payment arrive. It is difficult to conceive of any other provisions that could have been incorporated into this note that would have rendered the amounts to be paid more uncertain than this one touching the payment of exchange. True, the fluctuations in the rate of exchange may not have been very great, yet this could not have been foreseen with certainty when the note was executed. When the note was signed it was impossible to know whether the rate of exchange to-be paid upon the principal sum when it matured five years thereafter would be one-tenth of one per cent, or one per cent. Therefore it is clear that, unless we abandon the rule of requiring certainty in the amount to be paid at maturity as an essential element in negotiable paper, this note cannot be held negotiable under the principles of the law-merchant.

Counsel cite a number of cases wherein it has been held that provisions waiving the benefit of appraisement or exemption laws, or for the payment of attorney’s fee and the like, do not destroy the negotiability of the note containing them.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. 283, 3 L.R.A. 192, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/windsor-sav-bank-v-mcmahon-circtsdia-1889.