Smith v. Peters
Smith v. Peters
Opinion of the Court
Appeal by defendant from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiff.
This action was brought to recover upon a promissory note dated January 8, 1916, and signed by the defendant Peters. The payee in the note was A. Vitagliano. The note provided that interest should be paid at the rate of seven per cent per annum, and further contained the following clause: “Should the interest not be paid monthly then the whole sum of principal and interest shall immediately become due and payable, and interest shall be compounded monthly thereafter at the same rate.” The defendant in his answer asserted that the note was given without consideration, and in conformity with the defense pleaded the court made the following finding: “The court finds that on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1916, A. Vitagliano, the payee of the promissory note involved in this action, and the defendant occupied an office together at 619 H. W. Heilman Building, Los Angeles, California. That on said date the defendant, at the instance and request of said A. Vitagliano, executed and delivered to him the certain promissory note involved in this action, in words and figures as set forth in paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint. That said promissory note was so executed and delivered for the purpose of enabling said A. Vitagliano to exhibit the same as evidence of his financial worth and that no consideration passed to the defendant in connection therewith. That said note was expressly dated as of January 8, 1916, in order that the same should appear as past due at the time of its execution and ■ delivery. ” The court further found that on February 29, 1916, for a valuable consideration, the payee indorsed the promissory note and deposited it with a bank as collateral security for the payment of an indebtedness due to the bank from him, and that the said bank had no *49 notice of the equities existing between the parties to the note; that no demand was made upon the defendant for the payment of the principal or interest until July 2, 1917, when such demand was made by the indorsee bank. There was a further finding that upon Vitagliano failing to discharge his indebtedness to the bank, a pledgee sale was had and the note in question was sold to the plaintiff. Among the conclusions of law, the following recitation occurs: “That the promissory note involved in this action was past due, according to its terms, at the time of the delivery thereof and'was therefore a note payable upon demand”; that the bank “became an innocent holder of said note before the apparent maturity thereof, and no prior demand having been made, took the same free from the defenses and equities existing between the parties thereto.”
The principal argument of appellant is that as the note,, considering the date shown upon its face, was transferred after maturity, it was subject, as against the claims of the indorsees, to the equitable defenses pleaded. The respondent answers this contention by authorities to the effect that, as the fact was determined to be that the note was not delivered until its apparent maturity date, it became in the hands of the holder a demand note and therefore would
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not mature until the demand for payment was made, which the court finds to have been done at a later time and after the indorsee bank received the note in pledge. The following cases, which seem to support respondent’s contention in this regard, are cited:
Bank of Sonoma County
v.
Gove,
63 Cal. 355, [49 Am. Rep. 92];
Eames
v.
Crosier,
101 Cal. 260, [35 Pac. 873],
The judgment is vacated and set aside, and the superior court is directed to amend its conclusions of law to conform to the views expressed in this opinion and, upon the findings of fact as made and such amended conclusions, enter judgment in favor of defendant.
Conrey, P. J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- B. K. SMITH, Respondent, v. J. T. PETERS, Appellant
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published