Court Opinion

ID: 6906879
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 22:01:50.413336+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:23.107126
License: Public Domain

HARRIS, J.
1. The respondent argues that the note introdiiced in evidence is not the instrument described in the complaint and upon which the action is *588brought. The note recited in the complaint is an exact copy of the instrument received in evidence except that the words “due if ranch is sold or mortgaged” are omitted from the former. The answer denies all the allegations of the complaint but this denial is qualified by the words “except as hereinafter specifically alleged.” Immediately following this qualified denial is paragraph one in which it is affirmatively alleged that on August 9, 1910, R. H. Bradshaw made and delivered to Effie May Terrill his promissory note. This allegation is then followed by an exact copy of the note which was introduced in evidence. In the reply the plaintiff expressly admits the allegations in paragraph 1 of the answer and this admission is then followed by an explanation to the effect that through inadvertence the words “due if ranch is sold or mortgaged” were omitted from “the copy of said promissory note as set out in the complaint of plaintiff herein.” A mere statement of the facts makes it obvious that the complaint and the reply on the one hand and the answer on the other refer to the same note and that the note referred to is the instrument received in evidence. v
2. Assuming that the note became due on August 9, 1915, and not before that date, then in order to make Effie May Terrill liable as an indorser, Belle Nickell, the holder, was obliged to present the note for payment on August 9, 19.15, for Section 5904, L. O. L., provides that:
“Where the instrument is not payable on demand,' presentment must be made on the day it falls due”: 8 C. J. 533, 534, 548, 549.
3, 4. The plaintiff insists that she offered sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that the note was, on August 9, 1915, in the hands of the bank for delivery *589to the maker upon payment being made by him. Effie May Terrill strenuously contends that there is an utter want of evidence to show that the note was in the hands of the bank for collection and that the most that can be claimed for the evidence is that the instrument was in the bank in the plaintiff’s lock-box. It is true that Charles Nickell stated that the note had been “in mine and my wife’s possession since it was received from Charles E. Terrill.” The quoted answer of the witness cannot in fairness be construed alone and by itself, but it must be interpreted in connection with the remainder of the testimony given by the witness and when so construed there was sufficient evidence, if believed by the jury, to sustain a finding that the bank had the note in its actual possession on the date when it became due with authority to receive payment and surrender the note to the maker. The substance of the testimony of Charles Nickell is that he left the note in the bank; that about ten days or two weeks before the note became due he wrote to Bradshaw telling bim that the note was in the bank and “to go and pay it.” The jury could have fairly and reasonably construed the words of Nickell to mean that the bank had actual possession of the note with authority to surrender it upon payment.
However, it is argued that even though it is held that the bank had possession of the note with authority to surrender it upon payment being made, nevertheless no presentment for payment was made. This argument is based upon the language of Section 5905, L. O. L., where it is said:
“Presentment for payment, to be sufficient, must be made * * to the person primarily liable on the instrument, or, if he is absent or inaccessible, to any person found at the place where the presentment is made.”
*590If Belle Nickell had retained actual possession of the note and if she had gone to the bank with it on August 9, 1915, for the purpose of presenting it, then, if Bradshaw was not present, she would have been obliged to have presented the note to some person at the bank for payment. But it must be remembered that the note was payable at the Farmers and Fruit-growers’ Bank of Medford and there was evidence to show that the instrument was in the hands of the bank for collection; and consequently it would have been an. idle, empty and vain ceremony if some person connected with the bank had presented the note for payment to some other person connected with the bank when the person making presentment had as much authority as'an agent of the bank to pay the note as the person to whom presentment was made. The negotiable instruments law (Sections 5905 and 5920, L. O. L.) simply redeclares the rule, which generally prevailed prior to the adoption of the statute, that when a note is made payable at-a bank, a sufficient presentment occurs if the instrument is actually in the bank at maturity, ready to be delivered by the bank to any person who is entitled to it upon payment: De La Vergne v. Globe Printing Co., 27 Colo. App. 308 (148 Pac. 923, 924); Stewart v. Soenksen, 173 Ill. App. 1, 3; Kewanee National Bank v. Ladd, 175 Ill. App. 151, 155; Norwood National Bank v. Piedmont Publishing Co., 106 S. C. 472, 478 (91 S. E. 866); Doherty v. First National Bank of Louisville, 170 Ky. 810, 813 (186 S. W. 937); Crawford’s Ann. Neg. Inst. Law (1916 ed.), 150; Eaton & Gilbert on Com. Paper, 452, 549; 3 R. C. L. 1206. See also: Nelson v. Grondahl, 13 N. D. 363 (100 N. W. 1093); Eaton & Gilbert on Com. Paper, 449; Havlin v. Continental National Bank, 253 Mo. 292, 301 (161 S. W. 741); 8 C. J. 558.
*591Section 5905, L. O. L., declares that presentment “must he made by the holder, or by some person authorized to receive payment on his behalf”; and the defendant contends that even though "it be assumed that the note was in the actual possession of the bank, yet there was no evidence that any officer of the bank had authority to receive payment. In addition to the testimony of Charles Nickell there is the circumstance of the signature of the defendant on the back of the note. Possession at the time and place of payment, when indorsed as this note was, is prima facie evidence of authority to receive payment: 8 C. J. 565; Selover on Neg. Inst. (2 ed.), 246.
5. It is contended that the note sued upon is a nonnegotiable instrument. This contention proceeds upon the theory that the words “due if ranch is sold or mortgaged” made the time of payment so uncertain that it cannot be said that the note was payable “at a fixed or determinable future time.” Section 6017, L. O. L., defines a negotiable promissory note as “an unconditional promise in writing made by one person to another, signed by the maker, engaging to pay on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time, a sum certain in money to order or to bearer.” Speaking of instruments generally, Section 5834, L. O. L., declares that an instrument to be negotiable must, among other things, ‘ ‘ be payable on demand, or at a fixed or deter- ’ minable future time.” The meaning of “fixed future time” is expressed in Section 5837, L. O. L., thus:
“An instrument is payable at a determinable future time, within the meaning of this act, which is expressed to be payable (1) at a fixed period after date or sight; or, (2) on or before a fixed or determinable future time specified therein; or, (3) on or at a fixed period after the occurrence of a specified event, which is certain to happen, though the time of happening be uncertain. *592An instrument payable upon a contingency is not negotiable, and the happening of the event does not cure the defect.”
The three sections of our Code to which attention has been directed correspond with Sections 184,1 and 4 of the uniform negotiable instruments law which has been adopted by all the states of the Union except Georgia and Texas: Utah State Nat. Bank v. Smith (Cal.), 179 Pac. 160, 161. The chief object of the uniform negotiable instruments law was, as its name implies, to accomplish uniformity, so that a citizen of one state could know the law of every state by acquiring a knowledge of the law of his own státe. Although in some of the states slight differences in phraseology may occasionally be observed, or sometimes, but rarely, omissions may be noted, or a small number of material changes might be specified, yet for the most part not only the subject matter but also the phraseology and the sections of the original draft are exactly the same in the states which have adopted the'uniform negotiable instruments law. In the main, the uniform negotiable instruments law is only a legislative declaration of the rules of the law-merchant; and, indeed, the concluding section of the statute provides that:
“In any case not provided for in this act the rules of the law merchant shall govern”: Section 6025, L. O. L.
While most of the rules of the law-merchant were thoroughly established and were the same in all American jurisdictions, still the subject of negotiable instruments presented many phases upon which appellate courts differed; and generally, but not always, the uniform negotiable instruments law solved these differences by adopting whatever rule was supported by the weight of authority; and hence it is accurate to say *593that the uniform negotiable instruments law for the most part redeclares all the uniformly accepted rules of the law-merchant and, in most instances where there was a difference of judicial opinion, adopts whatever rule was supported by the weight of authority: 8 C. J. 47. Legislation has succeeded in establishing a substantially uniform code of rules governing negotiable instruments. Uniformity in legislation upon the subject of negotiable instruments may be said to be an accomplished fact, but perfect and exact uniformity in the construction and application of all those same rules is only an iridescent dream. Courts sometimes differ now, just as they sometimes differed before the adoption of the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act, in the application of a given rule governing negotiable instruments although the rule itself may be accepted and agreed upon by all. An examination of reported decisions dealing with instruments analogous to the one presented here and rendered after as well as before the adoption of the uniform negotiable instruments law affords concrete illustration of the variant views sometimes expressed in the application of a given rule.
The provisions of the negotiable instruments law (Sections 6017, 5834 and 5837, L. O. L.) are only declaratory of the law-merchant as it existed in most jurisdictions ; and, hence judicial opinions expressed before the enactment of the statute are not without weight in the solution of the problem confronting us: Rossville State Bank v. Heslet, 84 Kan. 315 (113 Pac. 1052, 33 L. R. A. (N. S.) 738); 3 R. C. L. 907; 8 C. J. 135; Eaton & Gilbert on Com. Paper, 213. If the words “due if ranch is sold or mortgaged” are omitted from the instrument it concededly becomes a negotiable promissory note within the meaning of Section 6017, L. O. L., because it contains a promise to pay “five years from date,” which *594is, speaking as of the date of the note, a fixed future time. If, on the other hand, the words “five years from date” are erased, the paper is admittedly transformed into a non-negotiable instrument, because it then becomes payable “if ranch is sold or mortgaged,” which, if standing alone and viewed by itself, was at the time of the execution of the instrument a “contingency” within the meaning of Section 5837, L. O. L. We are not permitted, however, to cancel any word found in the instrument, and hence the whole of the paper must be considered in determining whether the instrument is or is not negotiable; Finley v. Smith, 165 Ky. 445 (177 S. W. 262, L. R. A. 1915F, 777, 780). It will be observed that the writing does not in express terms say that the debt becomes due if the ranch is sold or mortgaged before “five years from date” and yet such is the obvious intent and meaning of the whole writing. . The debt becomes due at all events “five years from date,” and the debt cannot extend beyond that fixed, certain and definite period, because the moment the five-year period ends the debt is due, and any other interpretation of the writing would completely nullify the words “five years from date”; but if the ranch is sold or mortgaged prior to the expiration of that fixed future time, then the promiser agrees to pay the debt at the time of such sale or mortgage: Dobbins v. Oberman, 17 Neb. 163 (22 N. W. 356). The words “due if ranch is sold or mortgaged” do not extend the date of payment, but upon the contrary they serve only to accelerate the maturity of the debt. Stated broadly, the overwhelming weight of authority is to the effect that where a note is made payable on a definite day and also contains a conditional promise to pay at an earlier time, the instrument is not rendered non-negotiable by the acceleration clause; Kiskadden v. Allen, 7 Colo. 206 *595(3 Pac. 221); Walker v. Woolen, 54 Ind. 164 (23 Am. Rep. 639); Charlton v. Reed, 61 Iowa, 166 (16 N. W. 64, 47 Am. Rep. 808; Dobbins v. Oberman, 17 Neb. 163 (22 N. W. 356); Ernst v. Steckman, 74 Pa. St. 13 (15 Am. Rep. 542); Joergenson v. Joergenson, 28 Wash. 477 (68 Pac. 913, 92 Am. St. Rep. 888); Chicago Ry. Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 136 U. S. 268 (34 L. Ed. 349, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 99, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes); Smith v. Nelson Land & Cattle Co., 212 Fed. 56 (128 C. C. A. 512); White v. Hatcher, 135 Tenn. 609 (188 S. W. 61); Bright v. Offield, 81 Wash. 442 (143 Pac. 159); Utah State Nat. Bank v. Smith (Cal.), 179 Pac. 160; First Nat. Bank v. Barrett, 52 Mont. 359 (157 Pac. 951); Siegel v. Chicago Trust & Sav. Bank, 131 Ill. 569 (23 N. E. 417, 19 Am. St. Rep. 51, 7 L. R. A. 537); 3 R. C. L. 908; Selover on Neg. Inst. (2 ed.), 70; Eaton & Gilbert on Com. Paper, 220. See, also, Page v. Ford, 65 Or. 450, 469 (131 Pac. 1013, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 1048, 45 L. R. A. (N. S.) 247). The books contain a variety of cases involving acceleration clauses. More common illustrations are found in instruments which provide that a default in the payment of interest or in the payment of an installment shall mature the debt, Other familiar examples are furnished by adjudications where a series of notes have been given for a single debt with a provision in each note that default in the payment of any one shall mature all the unpaid notes. While nearly all the courts have decided that a default in the payment of interest or in the payment of an installment or a failure to pay one of a series of notes is such an acceleration clause as does not destroy the negotiability of an instrument, yet there are recorded instances where courts have held that acceleration clauses of the kind mentioned impair the negotiability of instruments otherwise negotiable. As already *596stated, the general principle has been firmly established, in despite of óccasional dissenting voices, that an acceleration clause does not necessarily destroy the negotiability of an instrument. The chief difficulty, however, is encountered whenever an attempt is made to formulate a rule by which to determine the validity of all acceleration provisions; and it is probably impossible to formulate, even in the most general language, any rule which will include all acceleration provisions that have been held sufficient, and at the same time serve as a safe and certain guide in all jurisdictions. This difficulty is neither greater nor less now than it was previous to the adoption of the negotiable instruments law. For example, there is a class of cases dealing with instruments having provisions to the effect that if at any timé the holder of the note deems himself insecure, he may declare the debt due; or to the effect that the holder may, if he deems himself insecure, call upon the maker for additional security when the value of the security given at the time of the execution of the writing becomes impaired, and if the maker fails to respond with additional security, the holder may declare the debt due. The adjudications assignable to this class are divided in their views; but the majority of the cases decided under the provisions of the negotiable instruments law as well as the majority of those decided in jurisdictions where the negotiable instruments law had not yet been adopted, have ruled that this kind of a condition in an acceleration clause renders the instrument nonnegotiable; Reynolds v. Vint, 73 Or. 528 (144 Pac. 526); Western Farquhar Mach. Co. v. Burnett, 82 Or. 174, 178 (161 Pac. 384); Holliday State Bank v. Hoffman, 85 Kan. 71 (116 Pac. 239, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 1, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 390); Puget Sound State Bank v. *597Washington Paving Co., 94 Wash. 504 162 Pac. 870); First Nat. Bank v. Bynum, 84 N. C. 24 (37 Am. Rep. 604); Carroll County Savings Bank v. Strother, 28 S. C. 504 (6 S. E. 313); Kimpton v. Studebaker Bros. Co., 14 Idaho, 552 (94 Pac. 1039, 125 Am. St. Rep. 185, 14 Ann. Cas. 1126); Bright v. Offield, 81 Wash. 442 (143 Pac. 159); First Nat. Bank v. Russell, 124 Tenn. 618 (139 S. W. 734, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 203). Contra: Empire Nat. Bank v. High Grade Oil Refining Co., 260 Pa. 255 (103 Atl. 602); Finley v. Smith, 165 Ky. 445 (177 S. W. 262, L. R. A. 1915F, 777); Kennedy v. Broderick, 132 C. C. A. 381 (216 Fed. 137, L. R. A. 1915B, 472). The cases holding that an instrument is not negotiable if it contains a clause giving the holder the right to declare the debt due if he deems himself insecure are based primarily upon the objection that the date of maturity is placed wholly under the control of the holder, is completely dependent upon his whiin or caprice, and is independent of any act done or omitted by the maker; and if there is the further stipulation that the maker will furnish added security when called upon, then there is of course an affirmative promise of the maker to do an act in addition to his promise to pay money: Puget Sound State Bank v. Washington Paving Co., 94 Wash. 504 (162 Pac. 870, 874); Holliday State Bank v. Hoffman, 85 Kan. 71 (116 Pac. 239, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 1, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 390); White v. Hatcher, 135 Tenn. 609, 612 (188 S. W. 61).
It. is apparent from what has already been said that some jurisdictions go further than others in their approval of acceleration clauses; and consequently a rule containing language as broad as the rule in some jurisdictions would be too broad for others, and a formula which is only broad enough for the latter would not be broad enough for the former. *598In this jurisdiction the holding in Reynolds v. Vint, 73 Or. 528 (144 Pac. 526), and in Western Farquhar Mach. Co. v. Burnett, 82 Or. 174 (161 Pac. 384), condemns acceleration clauses which are entirely under the control of the holder and completely dependent upon his whim or caprice independent of any act of the maker; but since neither of those decisions condemns all acceleration clauses, we have no hesitancy in declaring that we prefer to keep company with the majority of the other jurisdictions by giving approval to certain kinds of acceleration clauses. What we deem to be the better rule is best expressed by language found in Ernst v. Steckman, 74 Pa. St. 13 (15 Am. Rep. 542), where a note, payable “Twelve months after date (or before, if made out of the sale of W. S. Coffman’s Improved Broadcast Seeding Machine),” was held to be negotiable. In concluding the opinion the court there said:
“The principle to be deduced from the authorities is this: To constitute a negotiable promissory note, the time, or the event, for its ultimate payment, must be fixed and certain; yet it may be made subject to contingencies, upon the happening' of which,-prior to the time of its absolute payment, it shall become due. The contingency depends upon some act done or omitted to be done by the maker, or upon the occurrence of some event indicated in the note; and not upon any act of the payee or holder, whereby the note may become due at an earlier day. ’ ’
The principle which was expressed in Ernst v. Steckman was subsequently reiterated and applied by the supreme court of the United States in the leading and oft-cited case of Chicago Ry. Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 136 U. S. 268 (34 L. Ed. 349, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 999, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes). Further exemplification of this principle may be found in the fol*599lowing precedents where the facts in some instances were exactly like and in all instances were analogous to the facts presented here: Kiskadden v. Allen, 7 Colo. 206 (3 Pac. 221); Elliott v. Beech, 3 Manitoba, 213; Walker v. Woolen, 54 Ind. 164 (23 Am. Rep. 639); Charlton v. Reed, 61 Iowa, 166 (16 N. W. 64, 47 Am. Rep. 808); Dobbins v. Oberman, 17 Neb. 163 (22 N. W. 356); Joergenson v. Joergenson, 28 Wash. 477 (68 Pac. 913, 92 Am. St. Rep. 888). The ruling in Reynolds v. Vint, 73 Or. 528 (144 Pac. 526), is not inconsistent with the adoption of the principle stated in Ernst v. Steckman, 74 Pa. St. 13 (15 Am. Rep. 542) ; White v. Hatcher, 135 Tenn. 609, 612 (188 S. W. 61); First Nat. Bank v. Russell, 124 Tenn. 618 (139 S. W. 734, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 203); Bright v. Offield, 81 Wash. 442 (143 Pac. 159, 161); Joergenson v. Joergenson, 28 Wash. 477, 481 (68 Pac. 913, 92 Am. St. Rep. 888); Holliday State Bank v. Hoffman, 85 Kan. 71 (116 Pac. 239, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 1, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 390, 395); Clark v. Skeen, 61 Kan. 526 (60 Pac. 327, 78 Am. St. Rep. 337, 49 L. R. A. 190). The note signed by Bradshaw conforms with the requirements of Section 5837, L. O. L., and is a negotiable promissory note; Utah State Nat. Bank v. Smith (Cal.), 179 Pac. 160; Bright v. Offield, 81 Wash. 442 (143 Pac. 159).
6. The respondent has argued that the debt represented by the note automatically became due when the conveyance was made to Frederick T. Lewis on January 18, 1913; but the answer is that the thoroughly established and indeed almost universal, if not the universal, rule is that the acceleration clause is not self-executing, but it merely confers an option upon the holder to treat the debt as due: Belloc v. Davis, 38 Cal. 243, 251; White v. Hatcher, 135 Tenn. 609, 616 (188 S. W. 61); Clark v. Skeen, 61 Kan. 526 (60 Pac. *600327, 78 Am. St. Rep. 337, 49 L. R. A. 190); First Nat. Bank v. Parker, 28 Wash. 234, 237 (68 Pac. 756, 92 Am. St. Rep. 828); Keene Five Cent Savings Bank v. Reid, 123 Fed. 221 (59 C. C. A. 225); Gillette v. Hodge, 170 Fed. 313, 314 (95 C. C. A. 205); Chicago Ry. Co. v. Merchants’ Bank, 136 U. S. 268, 284 (34 L. Ed; 349, 10 Sup. Ct. Rep. 999, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes).
7. There is ho evidence indicating or even intimating that the plaintiff exercised or attempted to exercise the option which the note conferred upon the holder to declare the note due in the event of a sale or mortgage of the ranch. Inasmuch as the plaintiff is relying upon the “general” date of maturity specified in the instrument and since the acceleration clause was not self-executing, it was unnecessary for the plaintiff to affirm a negative by pleading or proving it: Dobbins v. Oberman, 17 Neb. 163, 165 (22 N. W. 356); Walker v. Woolen, 54 Ind. 164, 165 (23 Am. Rep. 639).
8. One of the further and separate defenses interposed by Effie May Terrill is based upon the allegation that the note was delivered to and accepted by the appellant upon an agreement “to look entirely to” Bradshaw for payment without any claim upon the respondent “for liability for any portion of said note.” Through cross-examination of witnesses for the appellant the respondent succeeded in introducing parol evidence in support of the defense last mentioned. The direct examination justified the cross-examination which was conducted by the respondent and permitted by the court (Speer v. Smith, 83 Or. 571, 575 (163 Pac. 979); and consequently the only remaining question arising out of the cross-examination is whether this testimony was competent for any purpose. The appellant insists that the testimony *601was incompetent because it varied the terms of a written contract. The respondent relies upon an ingenious argument. The respondent endeavors to apply a principle discussed in Colvin v. Goff, 82 Or. 314 (161 Pac. 568, L. R. A. 1917C, 300). The argument of the respondent is, in substance, that the note on its face contained two contracts: One between the maker and the payee, and the other between the indorser and indorsee ; that while there was a manual transfer of the paper for the purpose of effecting a delivery of the contract between the maker and payee, nevertheless the seeming contract between the indorser and indorsee “was never delivered .except in the sense of a physical delivery”; and that therefore the respondent is “not seeking to vary, the terms of a written contract, to wit: the contract of the indorser, but to show that this written contract was never delivered.”
There is a divergence of judicial opinion as to whether or not the implications and intendments which the law attaches to a blank indorsement of negotiable commercial paper maké such blank indorsement the equivalent of a complete written contract which cannot be varied by parol evidence: 8 Cyc. 264; 3 R. C. L. 974; 8 C. J. 1033; Crawford’s Ann. Neg. Inst. Law (Rev. Uniform ed.), 133. In this jurisdiction, however, it has been the settled rule for nearly forty years that parol evidence cannot be received to vary or contradict the contract which the law writes over a blank indorsement when made after the delivery of a promissory note to the payee: Smith v. Caro, 9 Or. 278; Carroll v. Nodine, 41 Or. 412, 415 (69 Pac. 51, 93 Am. St. Rep. 743); Smith v. Bayer, 46 Or. 143, 147 (79 Pac. 497,114 Am. St. Rep. 858). To this general rule there are certain exceptions which are specified in Dale *602v. Gear, 38 Conn. 15 (9 Am. Rep. 353). See also: Smith v. Caro, 9 Or. 278, 287; Moll v. Roth Company, 77 Or. 593, 599 (152 Pac. 235); Jones v. Albee, 70 Ill. 34. The rule relied upon by the respondent is not available to her. The facts which she herself admits effectively prevent her from shielding herself with that rule. The manual transfer of the note was in no sense executory, but upon the contrary it was a completed and wholly executed act. There was no stipulation preventing the manual transfer from becoming a completed delivery with all the attending rights and obligations. When placed in the hands of the appellant the note bore the blank indorsement of the respondent. It is conceded by the respondent that she intended to transfer her ownership in the note. The transfer of ownership was not made contingent upon the happening of some event. The transfer was a finality. The contract of transfer, whatever the contract may have beqn, was executed and completed. The appellant says that the terms of the-contract are to be found in the signature written on the back of the note; while the respondent argues that when the ownership of the note was transferred to the appellant the latter accepted the instrument upon an agreement different from that which the law writes into the blank indorsement of the respondent. In the last analysis the contention of the respondent is only an effort to vary and contradict the written contract of indorsement; and, hence, the parol testimony relating to any oral contemporaneous agreement was incompetent. The respondent has not brought herself within either of the first three exceptions noted in Dale v. Gear, 38 Conn. 15 (9 Am. Rep. 353, 355); and if there was an equity bringing the respondent in the fourth class of exceptions, “it must be set up as an equity provable *603in equity, to bar an apparent legal liability.” The defense urged by the respondent does not involve the question of waiver as did the ease of Moll v. Roth Company, 77 Or. 593, 600 (152 Pac. 235).
9, 10. Both Brownsboro and Medford are in Jackson County. The letter which Charles Nickell wrote for the purpose of giving notice of dishonor was deposited in the postoffice at Medford and addressed to the respondent at Brownsboro, where she lived. The postmark on the envelope in which the letter was mailed indicates .that it was postmarked at the Med-ford postoffice at 3:30 p. m. on August 10, 1915. Charles Nickell testified that he deposited the letter in the Medford postoffice but he did not state the time of the deposit further than to explain that he deposited the letter on the date shown by the envelope. The respondent was called as a witness for the plaintiff and stated that she received the letter, but she did not remember the date of its receipt. There is not a word of evidence showing the distance between Medford and Brownsboro. There is not a syllable of testimony telling about the mail service between the two postoffices. The record is utterly barren of any evidence showing whether there were one or more mails or any mail leaving Medford for Brownsboro on August 10th, or if there was any mail for Brownsboro on that day, whether it was before or after 3:30 p. m. The most that we can say from the record is that the letter was deposited at some time in the Med-ford postoffice on August 10th and postmarked at 3:30 p. m. and that afterwards the respondent received the letter in due course of mail. For aught that we can ascertain from the record there was a mail leaving Medford for Brownsboro at noon on August 10th; and if there was a mail leaving at that *604hour and no other mail leaving on that day, then, in the absence of some excuse sanctioned by the law, the notice of dishonor was not mailed in time. The statute which governs this phase of the controversy provides that:
“Where the person giving and the person to receive notice reside in different places, the notice must be given within the following times: (1) if sent by mail, it must be deposited in the postoffice in time to go by mail the day following the day of dishonor, or if there be no mail at a convenient hour on that day, by the next mail thereafter; * * ”: Section 5937, L. O. L.
The negotiable instruments law prescribes a definite time for mailing notice of dishonor. If there was only one mail on August 10th and if that mail left at ,a convenient hour prior to 3:30 p. m., the notice mailed by the appellant was too late. If there was no outgoing mail at all for Brownsboro on that day, then, of course, the letter was deposited in timé. The liability of an indorser of a negotiable promissory note is contingent and, among other things, the liability is conditioned upon giving notice of dishonor within the time specified by the statute. The burden is upon the holder to prove that the notice was mailed within the time prescribed by law; it is not enough merely to show that the notice was deposited in the postoffice on the day following the day of dishonor, but it must also be shown that the notice was deposited “in time to go by mail the day following the day of dishonor,” if there was a mail at a convenient hour on that day. Strict proof is required. There is an utter want of evidence concerning out-going mails and consequently the judgment of .involuntary nonsuit was properly rendered: United States v. Barker, 24 Fed. Cas. No. 14,519; First Nat. Bank v. Miller, 139 Wis. 126 (120 *605N. W. 821, 131 Am. St. Rep. 1040); Downs v. Planters’ Bank, 1 Smedes & M. (Miss.) 261 (40 Am. Dec. 92); Marks v. Boone, 24 Fla. 177 (4 South. 532); Richardson v. Kulp, 81 N. J. L. 123 (78 Atl. 1062); Commonwealth Bank v. Strong, 28 Vt. 316 (67 Am. Dec. 714); Corbin v. Planters’ Nat. Bank, 87 Va. 661 (13 S. E. 98, 24 Am. St. Rep. 673); 8 C. J. 655, 1016, 1055; Eaton & Gilbert on Com. Paper, 507.
The judgment is affirmed. Affirmed.
McBride, C. J., and Benson and Burnett, JJ., concur.