66 Mo. App. 102 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This is a suit which was brought against the defendant as guarantor of three promissory notes described in the petition. The defendant pleaded that he had been released from his liability as guarantor, by reason of a contract of settlement between him and plaintiff, wherein it was recited that in consideration of the surrender by him to plaintiff of certain property, plaintiff would release him from allhis indebtedness to it. He also pleaded in his answer a counterclaim or set-off against plaintiff’s demand.
Under the evidence and instructions the jury found a verdict for plaintiff for the amount of the guaranteed notes, after deducting the amount of defendant’s set-off testified to by him, and submitted in his instructions, upon which verdict there was judgment accordingly. From the latter defendant has appealed.
The defendant’s sole ground of appeal is that the trial court erred in permitting the plaintiff, over his objections, to introduce evidence tending to show negotiations between defendant and plaintiff’s officers,
But there are other considerations which we can not overlook in our consideration of the action of the court in the matter. They are these: It appears that the defendant, on whom the burden was cast by the pleadings, had, previous to the time of the introduction by plaintiff of the testimony objected to, himself testified to the various negotiations between the plaintiff’s officers and himself, which had taken place anterior to, and contemporaneously with, the entering into the written contract. If it was error for the plaintiff to introduce evidence' of the kind just referred to, the defendant invited it by first introducing like evidence himself, so that he thereby disabled himself to make objections thereto, otherwise available to him.
The contract pleaded provided that in consideration of the conveyance by defendant to plaintiff of certain real and personal property, the plaintiff agreed “to release said Cushman (defendant) from all indebtedness to (it) the bank, the bank' retaining all notes and accounts heretofore sold or deposited with the bank.” The issue was whether the notes sued on were included in the release. As.a matter of law, we should be inclined to think that by the expression “all indebt
The judgment must be affirmed.