
    Watertown Federal Savings & Loan Association vs. Robert W. Spanks & another.
    Essex.
    October 8, 1963.
    November 1, 1963.
    Present: Spalding, Cutter, Spiegel, & Reardon, JJ.
    
      Bills and Notes, Signature, Indorsement, Holder.
    In an action by the holder against the maker of a promissory note payable to “Greenlaw & Sons Roofing & Siding Co.” and indorsed “Greenlaw & Sons by George M. Greenlaw,” where the regularity of the indorsement was put in issue by the pleadings but no evidence respecting the indorsement was introduced, its regularity was established by the presumption in the Uniform Commercial Code, G. L. c. 106, § 3-307 (1) (b), and, . under § 3-307 (2), the plaintiff was entitled to recover in the absence of a defence to the note. [399-400]
    On the record of an action by a bank as indorsee and holder against the maker of a promissory note given in payment for siding material attached to the maker’s house, there was no error in excluding evidence to .show a breach of warranty respecting the siding material. [400]
    Contract. Writ in the Superior Court dated August 4, 1960.
    The action was heard by Lurie, J.
    The case was submitted on briefs.
    
      Louis Albert for the defendants.
    
      Nathan S. Laven & Irving I. Medoff for the plaintiff.
   Cutter, J.

The plaintiff (the bank) seeks to recover from the defendants, husband and wife, upon a promissory note, dated June 24, 1959, payable to “Greenlaw & Sons Roofing & Siding Co.,” indorsed to Colony Distributors, Inc. (Colony), by an indorsement signed “Greenlaw & Sons by George M. Greenlaw,” and then indorsed by Colony to the bank. The defendants denied the genuineness of their purported signatures and of all indorsements and filed a declaration in set-off to recover their payments to the bank on the note.

At the trial, the defendants admitted signing the note and also a completion certificate which they had given to the bank. This certificate recited that the siding material, paid for by the note, had been attached to the defendants ’ house and that the work was satisfactory. The bank presented evidence of the balance due on the note.

The defendants requested the trial judge to rule that their “demand for proof . . . of their supposed signatures and of the supposed endorsements ... is constructively broad enough to come within” G. L. c. 106, § 3-203 The judge denied this request “not because as an abstract statement of law it may not be correct, but because, upon the facts as found by me . . . it has no bearing.”1 Apart from an offer of proof mentioned later in this opinion, the defendants offered no evidence.

The trial judge found for the bank both as plaintiff and as defendant in set-off. The case is here on the defendants ’ bill of exceptions.

1. The trial judge correctly denied the defendants’ requested ruling as immaterial. It does not appear that Greenlaw & Sons and Greenlaw & Sons Roofing & Siding Co. are not the same company. The indorsement by Green-law was not shown to have been in a name other than his own, nor is it shown that the name of the payee, as stated in the note, was not a name under which Greenlaw individually did business, identifiably repeated in the indorsement. Section 3-203 purports to give only an indorsee for value, and not the maker of a note, the power to require indorsement in both names in the circumstances stated in the section. No evidence was introduced with respect to the indorsement. It comes within G. L. c. 106, § 3-307 (and see the official comments on that section), which reads in part, “(1) . . . When the effectiveness of a signature is put in issue (a) the burden of establishing it is on the party claiming under the signature; but (b) the signature is presumed to be genuine or authorized [with an exception not here pertinent]. (2) When signatures are . . . established, production of the instrument entitles a holder to recover on it unless the defendant establishes a defense.” There was no evidence whatsoever to counter the presumption of the indorsement’s regularity existing under § 3-307 (1) (b). Thus the signature of Greenlaw was established under § 3-307 (2), and the bank, as the holder of the note, see G. L. c. 106, § 1-201 (20), is entitled to recover.

2. The defendants offered evidence tending to show a breach of warranty in the siding material. This evidence was excluded and the defendants made an offer of proof. The bill of exceptions does not establish that an exception was saved and the defendants ’ brief refers to the exception only casually. Even if it be assumed that an exception was saved, the facts stated in the offer of proof did not suffice to charge the bank, as holder of the note for value, with knowledge of any defence (see Gramatan Natl. Bank & Trust Co. v. Moody, 326 Mass. 367, 370-371) based upon breach of warranty, failure of consideration, or fraud, none of which was pleaded. See Indiana Flooring Co. v. Rudnick, 236 Mass. 90, 92-93. See also Dorr v. Fisher, 1 Cush. 271, 275-276; Lander v. Samuel Heller Leather Co. 314 Mass. 592, 596; Stow v. Commissioner of Corps. & Taxn. 336 Mass. 337, 341. There was no error in excluding the evidence.

Exceptions overruled. 
      
       As inserted by St. 1957, e. 765, § 1 (the Uniform Commercial Code), § 3-203 reads, “Where an instrument is made payable to a person under a misspelled name or one other than Ms own he may indorse in that name or Ms own or both; but signature in both names may be required by a person paying or giving value for the instrument.”
     
      
       The judge found that the defendants, in addition to acknowledging their signatures on the note and the completion certificate, had “in writing repeatedly requested permission from the . . . bank for delays in making agreed . . . payments.” He also found that “such payments as were made were made to the . . . bank.”
     