Court Opinion

ID: 7932498
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:05:57.389716+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:24.210228
License: Public Domain

Sherwood, ,T.
This case originated in justice’s court, where a trial was had without a jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $200, besides costs.
The defendant took an appeal to the circuit court for the county of St. Clair, where the cause was again tided before the court without a jury, and the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant for $234 damages, with its costs to be taxed, and the defendant now brings error. The facts were found by the circuit judge, and are substantially as follow’s, viz:
*4341. The plaintiff is a duly-organized national bank, doing business in the city of Port Huron.
2. That L. & N. Phenix, in 1883, were a firm engaged in the sale of agricultural implements and musical instruments.
3. That on the twentieth day of October, 1883, said firm sold to the defendant a Weber piano, for the sum of $465, to be paid, $65 in cash, and the $400 in four notes of $100 each, ■and to become due in three, six, nine, and twelve months from date, respectively. The notes were all alike, except as to date of payment. The following is a copy of the second note:
“ $100. Sanilac, Mich., October 26, 1883.
“On or before the twentieth day of April, 1884, for value received in one Weber piano, No. 2,148, I promise to pay to the order of L. & N. Phenix, at the First National Bank, Port Huron, one hundred dollars, with interest at the rate of 7 peí' cent. per. annum, payable annually until maturity; and if not then paid, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, payable annually from date.
“It is expressly understood, and I hereby, agree, that the ■above-mentioned piano shall remain the property of L. & N. Phenix until fully paid for; and that they or their authorized agent or attorney may take possession of the same at anytime; and for that purpose may enter upon whatever premises it may be on at any time thereafter, sell at public ■or private sale, and apply the proceeds, after deducting all their expenses in taking possession of and selling the same, towards the payment of this note.
“1 further agree that in case of any removal from the ■county of Sanilac, or the sale or removal of the above-mentioned property, then this note shall become due.
“Sanilac County, Mich. Jane Carson.”
Indorsed on the note is—
“ For value received we guaranty the payment of the within at maturity. L. & N. Phenix.”
“ Dated October £9,1883.
4. That the notes when made and delivered to the said L. & N. Phenix did not have the blank space after the words “ the rate of ” and before the words “ per cent.” filled with anything, and that the figure “ 7 ” was inserted therein after the making and delivery of the notes, by some third person.
5. That said L. & N. Phenix, in the usual course of business, discounted the four notes, before any of them became due, to the plaintiff, and received of the plaintiff their full *435face value, without notice of any change in them in any particular, and that there was no indication upon their face of any such change having been made.
6. That the defendant paid the first note when due, without seeing the notes; but on being notified that the notes drew interest at 7 per cent, from date, paid the accumulated interest thereon, but claimed the notes did not draw interest when made and executed.
7. That when the other notes became due she refused to pay them because they had been altered in the respect stated; that the defendant has never paid anything on the last three notes, or for the piano; and that the plaintiff has never offered to surrender the notes to the defendant.
8. That before the commencement of this suit the Phenixes, without any further consideration, made and ■executed the following assignment to the plaintiff, viz.:
“For value received, we hereby sell, assign, transfer, and •set over unto the First National Bank of Port Huron all our right and cause of action against Jane Carson, of Carson-ville, Sanilac county, for the purchase price of one Weber piano, sold her on or about October 26,1883, the purchase price of which was four hundred and fifty dollars, — $100 and interest payable in three months after October 26, 1883; $100 and interest payable in six months after October 26, 1883; $100 and interest payable in nine months after October 26,1883 ; and $100 and interest payable in twelve months after October 26, 1883.
“ And we do hereby authorize the said First National Bank of the city of Port Huron to demand, recover, and collect of said Jane Carson the price of said piano as agreed to be paid, and to bring any action or actions that may be necessary to ■collect the same, in our name or otherwise, at its own costs and expense.
“We also hereby assign and transfer to said bank the four notes given by Jane Carson for said purchase price, dated October 26, 1883, and all our right, title, or claim to the piano aforesaid.”
[Signed by the payees in notes.]
“ Dated JuT/y, 1881pP
Ifis further found that no further agreement was entered into between the parties; and that by the stipulation the note should be received for no, other purpose than is stated therein; and that the payees named in the note have not *436been in Port Huron since February, 1884, they having left 'the city.
The foregoing facts and findings by the court were all' stipulated in, and constitute all the testimony offered, except that the notes were submitted to the court for inspection. Upon- these findings the circuit judge says that,
“The court concludes from the facts so agreed upon, and from an inspection of the notes therein referred to and filed in the cause, that the insertion of the figure ‘7’ in the interest clause contained in the body of said notes, although admitted to have been done after said notes had been made and delivered by said defendant to the payee therein named, was not such a material alteration as to render said notes-void in the hands of the plaintiff, and that, therefore, the said defendant did undertake and promise in manner and form as the plaintiff hath in its declaration complained against her.”
The exception to this conclusion of law raises the only question presented in the case.
The declaration in the case was a verbal one, put in before the justice, and contained the common .counts in assumpsit; also a count upon the second and third notes, and still another for the purchase price of the piano; also averring an assignment of the purchase price to the plaintiff. Defendants contest the right of the plaintiff to recover because,
1. The notes are not negotiable, and no recovery can be had under the common counts.
2. There is no proper indorsement of the notes to the plaintiff sufficient to enable it to maintain an action thereon-.
3. The notes have been materially changed since they were made and executed, and are therefore void.
4. The plaintiff cannot abandon the notes and sue for the purchase price.
The first question presented of importance is as to the true character of the instrument sued upon.
I do not think the contract is a negotiable promissory note.. A promissory note must be certain as to- the sum to- be paid, and the time of payment. In this ease the sum is sufficiently certain, but the time of payment is not. It is made- dependent, until the contract matures, upon the fact of whether the *437defendant shall sell or remove the property for which the contract was made. Such a degree of uncertainty is not allowable in a promissory note: Story Bills & Notes, § 20; Bailey Bills, 1; Fralick v. Norton, 2 Mich. 130; Beardslee v. Horton, 3 Mich. 560-6; Smith v. Kendall, 9 Mich. 243; Cayuga Co. Nat. Bank v. Purdy, 22 N. W. Rep. 93. The instruments, however, not being notes, may, if valid, be proved as contracts, and, if duly assigned, plaintiff may recover thereon, though under these circumstances the plaintiff can claim nothing that the payees in the instrument could not, the title so transferred being only an equitable one.
The next question of importance is, what was the effect of the alleged alteration of the notes by inserting the figure ■“ 7 ? ” It does not appear from the record that it was inserted by either of the parties to the instrument, or by the plaintiff; but there seems to be no question but that the figure “ 7 ” was inserted after the note was made and delivered.
Was the alteration a material one? because if it was not, under the circumstances appearing in the findings, it could not affect the validity of the contract as between the parties to this suit: 2 Pars. Cont. (2d ed.) 223-231, and cases cited; Goodenow v. Curtis, 33 Mich. 508; Vogle v. Ripper, 34 Ill. 100; Elliott v. Blair, 47 Ill. 342.
The filling the blanks in the notes with the figure “7” in no way affected the legal meaning or construction, of the instruments. It neither increased nor lessened the amount the contracts were for the payment of. The notes drew interest by their terms at 7 per cent, before the change was made. The legal effect of the notes was the same before as after the change, and their payment cannot, therefore, be avoided by reason of the alteration claimed; it was an immaterial one: Fisher v. Dennis, 6 Cal. 577; Visher v. Webster, 8 Cal. 109; Holmes v. Trumper, 22 Mich. 429.
As to the point made that the indorsement is insufficient to transfer the notes to the plaintiff, we need not now determine that question. It seems very clear, however, that the ■assignment made, not only of these notes, but of the claim ■upon which they were founded, to the plaintiff, was entirely *438sufficient to enable the plaintiff to maintain this suit; and! the declaration, though informal, under the liberal rule of construction adopted in the courts where it originated, was-all that was needed to cover the plaintiff’s case, so long as it was not demurred to: Hartford v. Holmes, 3 Mich. 460.
The findings upon the facts were sufficient to support the judgment, even though there had been a material alteration of the notes, the plaintiff having obtained a transfer to it of the claim for which the notes were given.
In no' view that I have been able to take can I discover how the defense made in the case can be sustained, and the judgment must be affirmed.
The other Justices concurred.