Everyone here now knows I have an absolute black-hole in my brain re cpn's.
Found something, however, that seems to answer my lingering dilemma, which has been/is/continues to be, this:
A CPN, by definition, is a "promise" to pay. Understood.
Question/dilemma: What happens if/when the other party accepts your "promise" to pay? After all, a "promise to pay" is NOT "payment."
So, here's a bit I found that hints, I think, at "an" answer, if not "the" answer:<FONT size=2>
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<FONT size=2>http://www.lawguru.com/cgi/bbs/mesg.cgi?i=601684480</FONT><FONT size=2>
Thinking of promissory notes as a method for financing a business is akin to thinking about using a trust deed to buy a house. Sure, a trust deed will be used, but first you need to find a lender that believes you're qualified and is willing to make the loan the trust deed will secure. Your
first job is to find the lender who will loan you cash in exchange for your note.
So, is it that the cpn is offered, in good faith, but it's the other party's responsibility to find an entity which will honor it? Lacking that (which isn't my/our problem, right?), one then continues with "Look, I tried to pay the thing, etc."
Thanks.
Okay. Off to Appomatox...Time to get Madison her own copy of Constitution, Bill of Rights, and other historical stuff.....
Randy</FONT>