Practice — Negotiable Note — Days of Grace. If the writing upon which this suit is brought were to be regarded as a negotiable promissory note, and so entitled to days of *Page 309 grace, I should think the verdict must be set aside for the reason that there is nothing in the case to show that the action was properly commenced on the last day of grace. It is doubtless somewhat anomalous to hold that the maker of a note has the whole of the last day of grace in which to pay it, and at the same time that a suit may be commenced against him on that day at any time after a demand and refusal. The preponderance of authority, however, seems to be quite strong that way. See UPHAM, J., in Dennie v. Walker, 7 N.H. 201, and also a careful examination of the cases by SHAW, C. J., in Staples v. Franklin Bank, 1 Met. 43, where the rule is fully held to be so. The same may also be true in reference to the commencement of a suit after the close of business hours on that day, when there has been no demand. See authorities cited in the plaintiff's brief:
Assuming the law to be so, it is argued that inasmuch as the plaintiff obtained a verdict, under instructions which were not excepted to, it is to be taken that there was evidence upon which the verdict could legally rest, and that the motion for a nonsuit is to be regarded as waived. I think this position cannot be sustained. It has been repeatedly held in this state that where the plaintiff moves for a nonsuit, or either party that a verdict be ordered in his favor by reason of a deficiency of evidence to make a case against him, and the motion is erroneously overruled, if the party against whom the ruling is, instead of stopping the trial and relying on his exception, goes on and introduces evidence which supplies the deficiency, he waives or overrules the objection. Clough v. Bowman,15 N.H. 415; Bowman v. Sanborn, 25 N.H. 108; Oakes v. Thornton, 28 N.H. 44; Prescott v. Hayes, 43 N.H. 598. But I have found no case which goes so far as to hold that the objection is waived, unless the deficiency is supplied by evidence coming from one side or the other, before the case goes to the jury; and I think it cannot be so held. In Oakes v. Thornton, where the matter appears to have been quite carefully examined, WOODS, J., does not fail to guard against any such result, and against any misapprehension or misapplication of that case as an authority. He says (p. 47), — "The distinct ground upon which the exception in this case is overruled is, that when all the proof was in the case, there was no ground of exception for the reason of its insufficiency to sustain the verdict, and that it is wholly indifferent by which party it was introduced."
Now, admitting the law to be that a suit may, under certain circumstances, — e. g., after a demand and refusal, or after the close of business hours — be commenced on the last day of grace against the maker of a promissory note, I think the plaintiff, before he can recover in a suit thus begun, must show these extraneous circumstances upon which his right to maintain the action depends. It would follow that, regarding this as a negotiable promissory note, the motion for a nonsuit ought to have been granted when it was made; and, inasmuch as there is nothing in the case to show that the deficiency was supplied before the cause went to the jury, I think the defendant would still be fairly entitled to his exception on that ground. *Page 310
But my opinion is, that this writing is not to be regarded as a negotiable promissory note, and therefore that the maker was not entitled to days of grace.
The paper reads, — "For value received, I promise to pay Henry Fletcher, or order, twenty-five dollars in one year from date, for the rent of five rooms; and the said Henry Fletcher is to build a barnyard fence; and the said Thompson is to have all the land back of the house." To be sure, the first line contains an unconditional promise, in the usual form of a promissory note, to pay the plaintiff, or order, twenty-five dollars in one year, for the rent of five rooms. But the whole must be looked at together. It is certainly consistent with the terms of the instrument, that the year for which the defendant was to have the five rooms was the same year embraced between the date and maturity of the note, — that is, from April 1, 1872, to April 1, 1873. No part of it, therefore, forbids the conclusion that it was intended to be an agreement to pay twenty-five dollars a year for the rooms at the end of the year; and the absence of any provision for interest does not weaken this construction. But when we look further, we find two substantial stipulations on the part of the lessor incorporated into the same instrument. He is to build a barnyard fence, and also to allow the lessee the use of all the land back of the house. Could these stipulations against the lessor in favor of the lessee, incorporated into the contract for the payment of rent, and forming on the very face of the paper a part of that contract, be stricken out or separated from it, and the paper, thus mutilated and changed in very material respects, be put in circulation as a negotiable promissory note? I think not. It seems to me the whole writing together resembles a lease as much as it does a negotiable promissory note, and that the only admissible construction of it is, that it is an agreement whereby the plaintiff undertakes that the defendant shall have the use of certain premises for one year, and that he will build a barnyard fence, and the defendant that she will pay him, or his order, the sum of twenty-five dollars therefor at the end of the year. Davies v. Wilkins, 10 A. E. 98; Robbins v. May, 11 A. E. 213; Leeds v. Lancashire, 2 Camp. 205. This being so, the defendant was not entitled to days of grace, the action was not prematurely brought, and there must be judgment on the verdict.