74 Mo. App. 385 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
— This action is by an indorsee of two negotiable promissory notes. The judgment in the trial court was for defendant.
It was held by us in Bank v. Stanley, 46 Mo. App. 440, that before an indorsee’s title to a negotiable promissory note could be impeached on account of his knowledge of the fraud practiced upon the payor at its inception he must have had actual notice of such fraud; and that notice of facts which would put a prudent man on inquiry or arouse suspicion will not suffice. We regard that case as correctly announcing the rule which obtains in this state and under that case, in which is gathered together the authorities on. this question, as well as others to be found in the brief of counsel for plaintiff, we must reject the proposition advanced by defendant that one must not at his peril fail to follow out to.the end facts or information which, though not sufficient of themselves' to produce knowledge, would, if followed out, lead to knowledge.
But, as we understand the position assumed in defendant’s brief in connection with counsel’s oral
We believe the position to be sound. One is apt to be misled in reading the cases of Bank v. Stanley, supra, and Hamilton v. Marks, 63 Mo. 167. Those cases assert in explicit terms the broad proposition that knowledge of facts which would put a prudent man on inquiry is not actual knowledge or notice. And other-cases, such as Johnson v. McMurray, 72 Mo. 282, and Mayes v. Robinson, 93 Mo. 122, state the proposition that the purchaser must have had actual knowledge of the facts relied upon to invalidate the note. There are many instances, especially in equity, when knowledge or information sufficient to put a man on inquiry is held to charge him with whatever knowledge he would have obtained if he had pursued such inquiry. That is to say, it is held in such cases to be his duty to make the inquiry which his information suggests and if he fails to do so he is chargeable as though he had performed the duty and learned the fact. But this rule does not apply to commercial paper. Jennings v.
Applying this rule of evidence to the case in hand .we are of the Opinion that any evidence which had a direct tendency to show that plaintiff • knew that Wallace was engaged in going about the country swindling-farmers and others by inducing them to sign negotiable notes by fraudulent and deceptive practices was competent evidence to submit to the jury on the question of plaintiff’s actual notice of fraud in procuring the notes in suit. In Ganz v. Weisenberger, 66 Mo. App. 110, we held that evidence tending to show the payor and his agent or accomplice and the indorsee Were in collusion, that the two former made the latter’s, saloon their headquarters while going about the country getting negotiable notes for lightning rods and that, the indorsee went with them on a trip to the country to attempt to enforce a lightning rod contract over which a difficulty occurred, was sufficient to sustain a.
But in order to make evidence of plaintiffs having sufficient knowledge to put him, as a prudent man, on inquiry, admissible as evidence tending to show actual notice at the time he purchased the notes, it must, of course, be shown that he had such knowledge or information at the time he made the purchase. To show this, as we have before stated, defendant introduced over the objection of plaintiff’s counsel, the testimony of the witnesses Yolmer and Metzker before referred to. To render the testimony of these witnesses competent defendant should have shown that, they gave their information to plaintiff or his agent, before he bought the notes in controversy. This important qualification was not made to appear.
The contrary seems to be the fact. One of the notes is dated September 20 and the other September 21. They were purchased by plaintiff .September 22 or 23. The time of his information from Yolmer and Metzker was not definitely fixed, though, one of them stated that it was “in two weeks after I got the letter,” referring to a letter received from plaintiff dated September 11. _ At another place the witness used the expression “within” two weeks after he got the letter. If it was in two weeks after he received the letter which at the earliest would be the twelfth, it would be the twenty-sixth of September that he had the conversation with plaintiff or his agent, which would be three or four days after plaintiff’s purchase. It not appearing that the conversation occurred prior to plaintiff’s purchase, the testimony should have been excluded as altogether immaterial. The judgment yvill be reversed and the cause remanded.