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Gordon v. Oberle

Supreme Court of Minnesota
Apr 2, 1931
235 N.W. 875 (Minn. 1931)

Opinion

No. 28,351.

April 2, 1931.

When payment to payee is not payment of promissory note.

Payment by the maker of a negotiable promissory note to the payee named therein, after the note has been transferred to a holder in due course, where the one to whom payment is made has neither possession of the note nor any authority from the holder to receive payment and the maker does not require the production or return of the note, does not of itself operate as payment thereof, although the maker had no notice of the transfer.

Action in the district court for Steele county to recover on a promissory note for $140 executed by defendant to plaintiff. This amount represented the balance paid by defendant on a former note for $241 given by him to John Manthey Son in 1926, such payments having been made to Manthey Son, after it had sold the note to plaintiff, without authority on its part to receive them and without knowledge on defendant's part that the note had been sold. The court, Senn, J. directed a verdict for plaintiff for $140 and interest, and defendant appealed from an order denying his motion for a new trial. Affirmed.

W.T. Hanzal, for appellant.

Moonan Moonan, for respondent.



Defendant appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Defendant, on February 12, 1926, gave his promissory note for $241 to John Manthey Son in part payment for a Ford car. Shortly after the note was given John Manthey Son sold and duly negotiated the note to the plaintiff by proper indorsement and delivered the same to plaintiff. Defendant thereafter, without notice of the transfer of the note to plaintiff, made several payments to Manthey Son of interest and principal of the note, the last payment being $66.97 to cover the balance due thereon. Manthey Son did not have possession of the note or any authority to collect thereon at the time these payments were made. They did transmit to plaintiff interest and principal on the note reducing the amount due thereon to $140 and some interest. Plaintiff made demand on defendant for payment of this balance. Defendant then informed plaintiff that he had paid Manthey Son. Negotiations were had as to a settlement of the matter. Plaintiff and defendant went together to see John Manthey, who was then in the county jail. Manthey admitted that he had received the money and had not turned it over to the plaintiff. Plaintiff and defendant then went to see a banker and consulted with him as to whether defendant was liable to plaintiff and as to what should be done. The banker held that defendant would have to pay. Plaintiff threw off the interest on the note. Defendant did not have cash to pay the $140 principal remaining on the note. It was agreed that defendant should give plaintiff a new note for $140, due in six months. The banker prepared the note, and defendant signed and delivered it to plaintiff. Plaintiff then surrendered the prior note to defendant, who has since retained it. This action is on the new note. On these facts the court directed a verdict in favor of plaintiff. We conclude that the court was right in so doing.

The court held that the original note was a negotiable instrument. Plaintiff was prima facie a holder in due course under G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 7102, and there is no evidence of defective title thereto. Defendant paid his money to Manthey Son without requiring the production or surrender of the note and without inquiry as to any transfer thereof. One of two innocent persons will suffer loss unless Manthey Son are financially responsible so that recourse can be had against them. No decision we could make would prevent such loss to one or the other. In that situation the holder in due course of a valid note has the better legal position and should prevail. The general rule is that:

"Payment made to the payee of a negotiable bill or note, where he has transferred the instrument before maturity, without requiring the production and surrender of the instrument, is ordinarily insufficient as against the transferee." 8 C. J. p. 598, § 835; Blumenthal v. Jassoy, 29 Minn. 177, 12 N.W. 517.

The defendant contends that the payment to Manthey Son paid the original note and therefore there was no consideration for the new note. Having concluded that the payment to Manthey Son did not operate as payment of the original note, the surrender of that note was valid consideration for the new note. What the effect was of the giving of the new note and the surrender of the original note to defendant, after he was fully informed that Manthey Son had misapplied the money, we need not here determine. There is no evidence of fraud or deceit in obtaining the new note.

Order affirmed.


Summaries of

Gordon v. Oberle

Supreme Court of Minnesota
Apr 2, 1931
235 N.W. 875 (Minn. 1931)
Case details for

Gordon v. Oberle

Case Details

Full title:R. N. GORDON v. FRANCIS M. OBERLE

Court:Supreme Court of Minnesota

Date published: Apr 2, 1931

Citations

235 N.W. 875 (Minn. 1931)
235 N.W. 875

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