Court Opinion

ID: 7111262
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:26:39.573353+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:45.120400
License: Public Domain

Deemeb, C. J. — ■
Boylan was principal and the Milners were sureties upon the note in suit. It was in fact given to Thompson Bros., although Anderson and Bly furnished the consideration therefor by meeting a shortage of Boylan as postmaster. The exact amount of money furnished .by Anderson and Bly was something over $600. After the note was taken, it remained with Thompson Bros., the ostensible payees, who were also in fact the Hubbard State Bank, until about August 28, 1901, when it was sent to Bly, with a statement that they (Thompson Bros.) would assign it at any time to the real owners in proportion to their respective interests. Just where this note was from August 28th until August 31st is not shown, but on this last-named date Anderson and Bly separately sold and assigned their interests therein to the plaintiff, stating to him that no interest had been paid thereon. Plaintiff sent the note to a banker at Iowa Falls, who notified some of the defendants, that the entire amount called for by the note had matured, and that he wanted the same paid. August 80, 1901, the Thompsons notified one of the Milners of the amount paid to the government on account of the shortage, and directed him to remit interest to Bly or to him (Thompson), and to notify Bly, at Iowa Falls, that he had sent it. Pursuant to this notice either the Milners or Boylan immediately, and on August 31st, sent a check for the interest to W. J. Thompson, Hubbard State Bank. In April of the next year the makers, or some of them, sent the interest for the second year to the Thompson Bros, or to the bank. These checks were cashed, and none of the money received thereon has ever been re*165turned to the defendants. The note was never indorsed by Thompson Bros., the payees named therein, but was delivered by them, without any form of indorsement or transfer, to Anderson and Bly, the real owners, not later than August 31, 1901. Anderson and Bly did not indorse it in the regular way, but sold and assigned the same to Hecker, the plaintiff, so that the rules applicable to ordinary commercial paper will not solve this controversy. When Anderson went to the bank, the latter part, of August or the first part of September, 1901, to see about the note, he asked the Thomp-sons if the interest had been paid, and one of them said that it had not been. Anderson then declared that “ then the note is due, and I will sue on it.” Instead of doing this, he conferred with his joint owner, and concluded to sell the same to the plaintiff. Plaintiff purchased the same, and took an assignment, as before stated, and, upon defendants’ refusal to pay the note in full, brought suit on July 29, 1902, to collect the whole amount called for by the note. Defendants had no notice of plaintiff’s ownership, or the interest that Anderson and Bly had in the note, until July of the year 1902, after all the interest payments had been made, as before stated. When Anderson went to the Thompsons to see if the interest had been paid, and was informed that it had not been, he [one of the Thompsons] said, however, that “'we [meaning Thompson Bros.] could pay it at any time, and would pay it then if he [Anderson] wanted it.” Anderson responded by saying: “ If you should pay me the interest, I could not sell it. So I will sell it.” Thompson then again offered him the interest. It seems that one of the Milners had an account current with Thompson Bros, or the bank, and had directed them to pay any of his bills or obligations that might be presented. They had not charged Tip this interest, as we understand it, because it was a surety debt, and he did not feel authorized to do so, although they expressed a willingness when Anderson called for the interest on the obligation. . The Thompsons were never the *166agents for Bly, save as they held the note for him and Anderson, but they were Anderson’s agents down to the time he took the note away. Hecker had no notice, so far as shown, of any interest payments being made; and Bly was not informed thereof at any time until after he had taken the note, when he was told by one of the Thompsons that they would pay him the interest on it.
1. Bills and notes: transfer; defenses. If the note had been properly indorsed by Thompson Bros, to Anderson and Bly, and by them to the plaintiff, we should have no hesitancy in finding that the trial court was in error, under the conceded facts, in dil'ecting1 a verdict for the defendants. But the » note, while negotiable in form, was not transferable by delivery, so as to bring the transfer within the rules of the law merchant. It was transferred by delivery from Thompson Bros, to Anderson and Bly, and they assigned their respective interests therein to the plaintiff. Tinder such a showing the holder is nothing more than an assignee of a chose in action, and, as such, took the instrument subject to any defense existing in favor of the makers and against the assignors before notice of the assignment by them. Code, sections 3043, 3461; Younker v. Martin, 18 Iowa, 143; Franklin v. Twogood, 18 Iowa, 515; Johnson v. Walter, 60 Iowa, 315.
2. Default interest payments: waiver. Defendants made payments of interest to the assignors of the note, Thompson Bros., which were accepted and retained by them down to the- present. Had they remained the holders thereof, this would have constituted a waiver of their right to enforce the entire note by reason of default in the payment of interest. These payments were made and accepted before they (defendants) had any notice that the payees were not in fact the real owners, and before they had any notice of the assignment to the plaintiff. Hnder the statutes referred to, and under the law generally, this was a defense of which *167they could have availed themselves in a suit brought by the assignee of the note.
There were some erroneous rulings on evidence, but, in view of the undisputed evidence, these rulings were without prejudice.
The motion to strike appellees’ abstract and argument is overruled.
No prejudicial error appears, and the judgment is affirmed.