This Avas a suit by an innocent' holder, for value, of a promissory note executed by the Humphrey Hardivare Company, a copartnership, for $2,500, due 90 days after date, and bearing iuterest at the rate of 10 per cent. The defense interposed Avas that the note had been fraudulently altered by the payee by inserting in the blank spaces the rate and date of interest, and place of payment. It Avas admitted that the note was properly executed and delivered by the defendant, Humphrey Hardware Company, to Francis B. Chapman, the payee named therein. It was admitted that the note Avas AArritten by the payee, and that the blanks were also filled by him, so that the note stood fair on its face at the time it Avas purchased by the plaintiff in the court below. There was a direct conflict in the testimony of Chapman, the payee, and Wheeler, the secretary and treasurer of the defendant company, as to whether the blanks in the note Avere filled before or after the delivery of the note to the payee. It was clearly established, howver, that Avhen the note Avas negotiated the blanks had all been filled, and that the Avritten portion of the note and the blanks for rate of interest, date of interest, and place of payment Avere all in the same handwriting. On issues thus joined, there Avas a trial to a jury in the court below, *880a verdict for plaintiff, and defendant brings error to this court.
The facts clearly proved surrounding the execution and delivery of the note were that Chapman, the payee named in the note, was the business manager of defendant company ; that the company was in need of money, and Chapman offered to advance $2,500 for the use of the company if defendant would give him a note for such sum. The company accepted the proposition, and directed the execution of a note, which was accordingly done by the secretary and treasurer of the company. That on the execution and delivery of the note the payee, Chapman, took the note to the Columbia National Bank and negotiated it as collateral security to his own note for the purpose of procuring the money, which was accordingly done, and the money was thereupon turned over to the defendant company. The only conflict in the testimony is as to when the three blanks in the note were filled, whether before its delivery to Chapman or after; however, there is no conflict in the testimony, which clearly establishes that the blanks had all been filled before the note was negotiated. The trial court, after allowing the witnesses to go fully into the entire transaction leading up to the execution and delivery of the note, submitted the cause to the jury on an instruction which told it, in substance, that, if the jurors believed from the evidence that the alteration in the rate and the time of drawing interest was made after the delivery of the note by the defendant company to the payee, without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, then they should find for the defendant. This instruction, we think, was all if not more than defendant was entitled to under the evidence contained in the record.
• .It seems to be well supported by the authorities that the alteration of a promissory note, after delivery, by filling the blanks left therein, where there is nothing on the face of the note to suggest an alteration, will not invalidate the note in the hands of a bona -fide endorsee, for value, before maturity, and without notice of such alteration. The rea*881son of this rule is that, Avhere the maker of a note signs it and delivers it to the payee, with blank spaces in the note for the rate of interest, the time of maturity, or the place of payment, he will, in a contest with an innocent purchaser of the paper, before maturity, and for value, be held to have authorized the payee to fill in the blank spaces, unless the paper on its face bears evidence of mutilation or alteration. Or, as Avas said by the supreme court of Illinois, in the case of Yocum v. Smith, 63 Ill. 321:
“If the note had been altered, the maker has acted with too gross carelessness to be entitled to protection. The purchaser is entirely innocent, and not even a suspicion of his good faith is created — nothing to shoAV that he had any notice of anything Avrong. The maker placed it in the poAver of another to do an injury, and if any loss results, he must suffer who is the cause of it. If the negligence of one influences and induces an act Avhereby an innocent man is injured, the culpable party must sustain the loss.”
Under this vieAV of the case, no other judgment than that rendered in the court beloAV could have been sustained either under the law, the evidence or the conscience of the transaction, and we therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
Ames and Letton, CC., concur. By the Court:For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.