This action is brought to recover on a promissory note. The note is dated at Bonesteel, February 16, 1905. It is payable to “Emmetsburg' Importing Company,” at the Palo • Alto 'County Bank at Emmetsburg, Iowa, on the 2d day of October, 1906, with, interest at 6 per cent, per annum, payable annually. The Emmetsburg Importing Company was a copartnership, doing business at Emmetsburg, Iowa. On the 18th day of April, 1905, the Emmetsburg Importing Company indorsed and transferred said note to McLaughlin Bros., a co-partnership, doing business at St Paul, Minn. This transfer was an absolute sale of the note for its full face value, and it was taken by McLaug'hlin Bros, without knowledge of any de*352fects or’ defenses as ágáinst the original payee of "’the note. McLaughlin Bros, retained the note' until 'the 6th day'of July, 1906, 'when this note and two others — amounting in all to $2,400— were indorsed by them and delivered to plaintiff' as* collateral security for a loan of $2,400 that day made b'y plaintiff to 'McLaughlin Bros.' For how long a time this' loan was to ’ run does not appear from the evidence,' neither does it appear when it was paid; but the evidence shows that it -was-paid soihe time 'after October, 1906 — “probably in the spring "or summer of ¿g07.” At the time this loan of $2,400 was made to McLaughlin Bros, by plaintiff, McLaughlin Bros, were already indebted to ■ plaintiff to the extent of several thousand ■ dollars, and it is also a fact that, from-some time prior to the 6th day of July, 1906, down to the time of the trial, McLaughlin- Bros, had been indebted to the plaintiff in ah amount greatly in excess of said 'loan. These advances were evidenced by the'promissory notes of -said firm and secured by promissoi'y notes that were owned by said firm which they put up as' collateral 'security' for súch 'advances. The note 'involved in this' case was' not returned to McLaughlin Bros, when the debt it had been pledged to secure was paid, but was held by plaintiff as a part'of the' security for •all other debts owned by McLaughlin Bros, to plaintiff. ■ This, it is claimed, was done pursuant to an understanding,'or agreement, between them' that any collateral that came into its hands should be held as security "for any and ¿11 debts owing from McLaughlin Bros, to plaintiff. ' ■'
Defendants pleaded, and undertook to prove, that the note sued on was obtained from ’them by fraud and misrepresentation, and that the consideration therefor had failed. Plaintiff; to 'save the -time of the court, admitted the facts pleaded as constituting a defense, and' admitted that such facts' would have ■constituted a valid defense to the action' as against the original ■payee of the note, and stood strictly'upon'its rights as a “holder in due course.” Upon this state of the" case, the'trial court'took -the case from the jury, made findings of'fact and conclusions of •law favorable to plaintiff, and entered judgment .accordingly. ■ Front this judgment and an order overruling'their' motion for a -new trial, defendants ¿ppéal. ‘
*353[1] At the trial, a question of practice arose over a request to permit plaintiff to file an amended complaint. The trial court allowed the amendment, and appellants assign error. Under the circumstances, we believe the trial court was warranted in allowing the amendment. Trial courts are vested with a broad discretion in the matter of amending pleadings, both before and during the trial, and, when no prejudice has been shown to result from such amendment, this discretion will not be disturbed by this court. The amendment in this case was only a correction in the description of the note, and did not prejudice the appellants in any manner.
[2] It is next contended by appellants that the note was “dishonored” when it came into plaintiff’s hands; and was therefore subject to all the defenses that were set up in the answer. This contention is based upon the fact that, when plaintiff took the note in July, there was a year’s interest unpaid that had been due since the previous April. But no default had taken place when the note came into the hands of Mc'Laughlin Brots., and they, having taken it in “due course,” could reindorse it and pass the same title to their indorsee that they themselves had, and, under the law' as it existed at that time, it was immaterial whether such reindorsement was made before or after maturity. Therefore, when plaintiff took the note, it acquired all the rights that it would have acquired had it been the original indorsee before maturity and before default had taken place in the payment of interest. This rule is well settled by a practically unbroken line of authorities. In the headnote to Koehler v. Dodge et al., 31 Neb. 328, 47 N. W. 913 (28 Am. St. Rep. 518), the rule is stated as follows:
“When a negotiable note is purchased after maturity from an innocent holder for value, the purchaser takes it free from all equities and defenses that existed between the original parties to the paper.”- Joyce on Defenses to Com. Paper, §§ 433 and 489.
See, also, Comstock v. Hannah, 76 111. 535, and Matson v. Alley, 141 Ill., 284, 31 N. E 419, and cases cited.
*354[3] It is further contended that the $2,400 loan that the note in question, with others, was transferred to secure, was paid after the maturity of the note involved in this case, and that, if said note was taken or retained after maturity as security for any .other debt, this would consttute a new contract, and the note then, being past-due paper, was subject to the defenses of dishonored paper. It was shown that this loan was paid in full, “some time after October, 1906 — probably in the spring or summer of 1907.” But this is immaterial. The evidence showed that plaintiff had a general agreement with the McLaughlin Bros, that all collateral put up by their firm was to be held by plaintiff as security for any and all indebtedness that might be 'Owing from McLaughlin Bros, to plaintiff. Plaintiff, having acquired the note free from defects or defenses that may have existed against the original payee, had a right to hold the same as security for any indebtedness agreed upon, whether the same existed at the time the note was transferred to plaintiff or was created at some subsequent time. And this would be equally true, even though the note had been past diue when it cam into plaintiff’s hands. McLaughlin Bros., being innocent purchasers/ for value, could indorse the note after maturity and give plaintiff as good title as they themselves had.
In Newell v. Gregg, 51 Barb. (N. Y.) 263, and Bank v. Commissioners, 14 Minn. 77 (Gil. 59), 100 Am. Dec. 194, relied .upon by appellants, default was made in the ‘ payment o£ an installment of interest prior to the first endorsement, so that under the rule contended for by appellants there never was an indorsee in “due course” in either of those cases.
All the transactions involved in this case took place prior to the enactments of our so-called Uniform Negotiable Instruments Act (Laws 1913, c. 279), and the ca^e must be disposed of without reference to the provisions of that act.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.