i. promissory Safaltera-6" auee'of eon-tract. This court has held that where a negotiable promissory note passes into the hands of a Iona fide holder for value before maturity the maker cannot escape liability upon the ground that he was induced to execute the note by fraud, even though , , , . he was not intending to execute a promissory note, but a contract of a different character. Douglass v. Matting, 29 Iowa, 498. That case is relied upon by the plaintiff. But the case at bar differs from that case in this, *372that the instrument signed was altered .by cutting off a part of it. It is true, what now constitutes the instrument sued on contains the same words and figures that it did before it was signed, but the claim of the defendant is that the instrument as a whole, embracing what now constitutes the instrument sued on, had a different meaning, and contained no promise to pay money except upon certain conditions.
Oases have not unfrequently arisen where a paper was exe- • cuted which was by itself a negotiable promissory note, but with which a memorandum or contract was connected which qualified the terms of the note. Afterwards, the memorandum or contract having been cut off and the note transferred to a tona fide holder for value before maturity, the question has arisen as to whether the mater could be held. In Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, 2 Vol., 366, it is said: “ If the memorandum were so written upon the margin of the instrument that it could be readily separated without giving it a mutilated appearance, a tona fide holder taking it without notice we should consider unaffected by its being so severed and destroyed. See also Zimmerman v. Rote, 75 Pa. St., 198, and Brown v. Reed, 79 Id., 370.
In Wait v. Pomeroy, 20 Mich., 425, a negotiable promissory note was given by the maker for a machine, and below the note a memorandum was written in these words: “ If the machine should not be delivered this note not to be paid.” The machine was not delivered, but the memorandum was cut off and the note transferred to an innocent purchaser for value before maturity. The court held that a recovery could not be had. It was considered that the memorandum formed a part of the contract, and after it was severed the remainder was no more the contract of the maker than if the very words of the note had been materially changed.
The true rule, stated in a general way, we think, is that where a negotiable note is materially altered it is not valid even in the hands of an innocent purchaser for value before maturity; and that where there is a memorandum or con*373tract written upon the same paper qualifying the terms of the •note, and such memorandum or contract is severed, the note is thereby materially altered.
While this is so, we are not prepared to say that under some circumstances the note thus altered by the severance of written qualifying provisions should not be deemed valid. If the maker were guilty of gross carelessness it may be that he ought to be precluded from setting up the invalidity of the note as against a bona fide holder for value. This point we do not determine. If a liability in such a case could be declared the general rule would still hold, that a contract cannot be enforced against a person who is not properly a party to it. Where, therefore, an action is brought to enforce a contract against such person we think it incumbent upon the plaintiff to show facts which would take the case out of the general rule. This we think the plaintiff has failed to do. The abstract contains no evidence whatever. There was the fact, to be sure, disclosed by the defendant’s answer, that the defendant attached his signature to a paper which contained words and figures constituting 'a negotiable note, and while the terms of the note were qualified by a contract con-' nected with it upon the same paper, yet that contract was capable of severance. The plaintiff relies upon this fact as showing carelessness. But in our opinion it does not necessarily have that effect. We can conceive that the paj>er might have presented such an appearance, or that the defendant’s signature might have been obtained fin such a way, that the mere fact of signing the paper could not be declared to be carelessness.
It is possible that the note and severed contract, or one of 1 them, was introduced in evidence, but the abstract does not so show. The genuineness of the defendant’s signature was admitted, which rendered it unnecessary to introduce the note in evidence for any purpose except to show its appearance.
The note is shown to us, and in connection with the note a stipulation is filed to the effect that we may regard the note *374as evidence. Possibly it may be thought that the stipulation would justify us in presuming that the note was introduced below, but we could not entertain such presumption if it should require a reversal, because there is a presumption in favor of the court’s ruling, and that presumption is as binding upon us as any other. No evidence of carelessness having been introduced below it appears to us that instruction No. 2, above set out, must be held to be correct.
The case comes within the general rule above enunciated. A very similar case is Benedict v. Cowden, 49 N. Y., 396, which was decided upon a full citation of authorities to which we desire to make reference. See, also, as having some bearing, Kellogg v. Steiner, 29 Wis., 627, and Knoxville National Bank v. Clark, 51 Iowa, 264. We see no error, and the judgment is
Affirmed.