Amonett v. Montague

63 Mo. 201 | Mo. | 1876

Hough, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 12th day of August, 1861, Robert Y. Montague sold and transferred to M. L. Montague, Reuben V. Montague and the defendants, C. R. and E. D. Montague, a large amount of real and personal property, situate in the State of Louisiana, for and in consideration of the sum of about $80,000, for which the said grantees gave their promissory notes and their promise to pay the amount of a certain legacy, and- in further consideration of the promise and agreement of said grantees to pay off and discharge certain enumerated debts of the' said Robert Y. Montague, amounting in the aggregate to $62,100;

In the list of obligations so assumed to be paid, appears the following statement of indebtedness -..“And due to B. E. Hinds and J. I. Amonett, amounting, principal and interest, to about $12,000.”

Upon the foregoing undertaking of defendants’ the plaintiff seeks to recover the full amount of two promissory notes, for the sum of $1,153 % each, made and delivered to the plaintiff by the said Robert V. Montague on the 23d day of July, 1860, and payable respectively on the 10th day of June, 1862, and on the 10th day of June, 1863, with interest at eight per cent. Plaintiff alleged in substance that said notes represented part of the indebtedness of the said Robert Y. Montague provided for in said contract, and that the said indebtedness of the said Robert V. Montague to him, provided for in the contract aforesaid, arose solely out of the notes aforesaid; that they were payable to him alone, and that B. E. Hinds had no interest whatever in them.

*204Numerous defenses were interposed which were adjudged insufficient on demurrer, and the only question submitted to the jury was, whether the promise of the defendants applied to the claim presented by the plaintiff.

To ascertain that fact both parties agreed that parol testimony was admissible, and testimony was adduced upon that point without objection. This testimony tended to show that the indebtedness of Robert Y. Montague to Ilinds and Amonett was several and not joint. The deposition of the plaintiff was offered, and excluded on the ground that Robert V. Montague, who was a party to the contract sued on, was dead. Reuben Y. Montague, one of the parties to the contract sued on, but not a party to the suit, was sworn as a witness and testified in relation thereto, against the objections of the plaintiff.

The following instruction given by the court at the request of the defendants, was objected to by the plaintiff: “ The jury are instructed that the presumption of law is, that the debts intended to be paid by the defendants by said written agreement, were debts due and owing by R. Y. Montague, or M. L. Montague, to Hinds and Amonett jointly, and it devolves, upon the plaintiff to prove to the satisfaction of the jury, that the notes of R. Y. Montague to plaintiff were intended to be paid by virtue of said agreement, and unless the jury so believe from the evidence, they must find for the defendants.”

There was a verdict and judgment for the defendants, from which plaintiff has appealed to this court.

The exceptions taken by the defendants to the action of the court on the pleadings and at the trial cannot be noticed, as the case is before us only on the appeal of the plaintiff. There is no cross appeal.

The testimony of the plaintiff, which was offered and rejected, was material to the issue submitted to the jury, and if the plaintiff was a competent witness, it should have been received.

The statute allowing parties to testify, contains the following proviso : “ Provided, that where one of the original parties to the contract or cause of action in issue and on trial is dead, or is *205shown to the court to be insane, the’ other party shall not be admitted to testify in his own favor.” (Wagn. Stat. p. 1372, § 1.)

This proviso has been considered by this,court in several cases, in none of which, however, were the, relations of the parties precisely what they are in the case at bar.

In the case of Looker vs. Davis (47 Mo. 140), the conclusion was reached by Judge Wagner, after some hesitation, that the proviso was only intended to apply to cases where the litigation was between the party offered as a witness., and the representatives of the deceased, in reference to some contract or other matter, to which the deceased and the party offered as a witness were parties. Whether the reason of this rule would extend it to a case where a co-obligor of the deceased was the only party to the suit, it is not necessary to inquire.

Robert Y. Montague could not, if liting, have been a party defendant to this suit, because the promise sued upon was made to him and not by him. Moreover, the plaintiff in this suit never was a party to the contract sued on. This action is not founded upon the idea that the plaintiff was, or at any time became, a party to the contract, either in fact or by faction of law; but upon the ground that the law entitles him to acquire a privity with respect thereto, by reason of his interest. (Throop on the validity of Verbal Agreements, vol. 1, § 39a.)

We think, therefore, that the eourt erred in ruling that the plaintiff was not a competent witness under the statute, and for the same reasons we think the court committed no error in permitting Reuben V. Montague to testify. In regard to the instruction complained of, while we recognize the rule that written instruments are ordinarily to be construed by the court, we are not prepared to say that the law presumes from the language employed in the contract under consideration, that R. V. Montague was indebted to B. F. Hinds and J. I. Amonett jointly. The character of the debt to be paid was not ascertained by the contract ; it was not stated whether it was by bond, note, account, or by judgment; whether the obligation of Montague was as *206principal or surety; neither date nor amount of the principal debt was stated.

The identity of the subject matter of the contract not being definitely ascertained by its terms, parol testimony was admissible to make it certain. The language employed might with equal propriety be interpreted to mean, that there was due to B. F. Hinds and J. I. Amonett jointly the sum of $12,000, or that there was due to B. F. Hinds and J. I. Amonett severally, but in the aggregate the sum of $12,000.

They were designated by their respective names in full, and not in the style usually employed to denote a firm or co-partnership. When the indebtedness provided for is fully ascertained in all its details, whether such indebtedness was joint or several, may be made to appear. It devolved upon the plaintiff, when claiming the benefit of .the defendants’ promise, to show that the debt for which he asked judgment was provided for by the contract ; and, under the circumstances of this case, we cannot say that there is any presumption of law that such debt was joint, and not several. If, in this case, the legal effect of the clause designating the debt is to be declared by the court, we do not see why the defendants may not with equal propriety claim to be absolved from all liability, if the indebtedness of Montague to Hinds and Amonett should appear from the testimony to be several and not joint; that, having contracted to pay a joint indebtedness, they should not be held bound for a several indebtedness. Whether the-debt was joint or several was one of the facts to be determined by the jury from the evidence offered to identify the indebtedness.

The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

The other judges concur.-
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