The sole question here is whether the note in suit was barred by the statute of limitations. The note is in the following form:
“8600. Hillsdale, April 2, 1880.
“On demand, after three months’ notice, for value received, we, or either of us, promise to pay to the order of Tammie S. Spencer the sum of six hundred dollars, with interest from date. And I, Esther E. Greene, do hereby charge my sole and separate estate with the payment thereof.
“Esther E. Greene.
“John E. McAlpine.”
This note was given for $600, which John E. McAlpine borrowed from the plaintiff upon the day it bears date. The defendant signed the note to enable him to borrow the money. Nothing further occurred between the parties until the 24th of September, 1891, when the following notice was served upon the defendant:
“Dated September 24th, 1891.
“To Mrs. Esther E. Greene: You will please take notice that, three months after the service of this notice upon you, you will be required to pay the amount due for principal and interest on the promissory note to my order, and held by me, and made by you and John E. McAlpine. Sarah T. Knapp.”
Upon this state of facts, the learned judge at circuit held that the statute of limitations had run against the note, and the plaintiff’s complaint was accordingly dismissed. We think this disposition of the case was correct. The defendant’s liability, as dis*351tinguished from the plaintiff’s right to sue, did not depend upon the performance of a condition precedent. The money was borrowed, and the note was given to evidence the fact. The words “on demand” have a precise legal meaning. They do not limit the obligation to pay presently, but are used to show that the debt is due (Wenman v. Insurance Co., 13 Wend. 267); and the statute runs against a note payable on demand, whether with or without interest (Wheeler v. Warner, 47 N. Y. 519; Mills v. Davis, 113 N. Y. 243, 21 N. E. 68). The only question here is whether the expression “on demand” is so qualified by the words “after three months’ notice,” which immediately follow, as to take the contract out of the general rule with regard to demand notes. This is a close question, but, upon the whole, we think not. The notice required, as was said in' Dickinson v. Mayor, etc., 92 N. Y. 591, “was a condition of maintaining the action, and not an essential part of it, upon which the inception of a right is based and the cause of action founded.” Such, we think, was the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the peculiar phraseology of the note and the surrounding circumstances. The notice was for the benefit of the debtor, not for the benefit of the creditor. The debtor could at any time waive the notice, and tender the debt and interest. The real object was to give the debtor a reasonable time to pay the debt before the creditor could charge him with the costs of a suit. In other words, the debt was due, but the creditor agreed to limit his right to sue presently.
Let us see where the opposite construction of the instrument would lead. The plaintiff contends that the note should be construed as though it read “three months after demand,” and as though the demand and notice were conditions precedent to the existence of a cause of action. If that be so, then the holder of the note could postpone his right of action indefinitely, while the maker could never stop the running of interest or compel the acceptance of payment. As was said in Palmer v. Palmer, 36 Mich. 490: “If there was any infirmity in the consideration, or any defect in the binding character of the obligation, he might retain it until all testimony was lost, and defeat the defense. This is the "mischief which the statute of limitations was intended to remedy.” In this case of Palmer v. Palmer it was held that, if “a creditor has the means at all times of making his cause of action perfect, it would be unjust and oppressive to hold that he could postpone indefinitely the time for enforcing his claim, by failing to present it.” “He is really and in fact able,” said the learned judge who delivered the opinion of the court, “at any time to bring an action when he can by his own act fix the time of payment. It is no stretch of language to hold that a cause of action accrues for the purpose of setting the statute in motion as soon as the creditor, by his own act, and in spite of the debtor, can make the demand payable.” Substantially the same view was taken in Morrison’s Adm’r v. Mullin, 34 Pa. St. 12; Rhines v. Evans, 66 Pa. St. 194; Bank v. Greene, 64 Iowa, 445, 17 N. W. 86, and 20 N. W. 754; Lower v. Miller, 66 Iowa, 408, 23 N. W. 897; Prescott v. Gonser, 34 Iowa, 175. The illustrations fur*352nished by these cases help us to a reasonable construction of the instrument in question. They indicate with great clearness and force the evil consequences which would result from the construction given to it by' plaintiff,—consequences which the parties could never have foreseen, and which would amount to a practical nullifl-cation of the statute. These parties could not, in our judgment, have intended to permit the holder of the note to postpone its maturity as long as she chose to do so; nor did they intend thus to -evade the statute, or in fact to prevent its running in the ordinary way. The notice was seemingly an afterthought. It was not given for upward of 11 years after the borrowing of the money and the -delivery of the note. If the plaintiff is right in her contention, the notice could just as well have been postponed for 50 years,—in fact, indefinitely, the cause of action accruing only at her pleasure. We cannot agree with this view of the contract. In our judgment, the statute had run against the note when the notice was given. It follows that the exceptions should be overruled, and judgment ordered for the defendant, with costs.
PARKER, J., concurs. VAR BRURT, P. J., concurs in result.