7 Mo. 443 | Mo. | 1842
Opinion of the Court, delivered, by
Thomas Byrd commenced this action in the circuit court of Jefferson county, on a promissory note for five hundred dollars. Judgment was given in the circuit court for the defendant, and to reverse that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
On the trial of the cause, the defendant offered in evidence, and the court admitted, a deed to the following effect:. “This agreement, made this 13th day of December, 1838, betwixt Thomas Byrd, of the one part, and Ammon Knigh-ton, of the other, witnesseth : that the said Byrd, for and in consideration of two notes of hand, signed by the said Knighton, one due and payable on the 25th day of September, 1839, the olher due and payable in the year following. Reference to said notes of this date, making the sum of one thousand dollars, and upon the express condition, to wit i that the said Knighton. [Byrd,] his heirs, executors, &c„,
This is precisely the language of the instrument of writing. The defendant also gave evidence that the consideration of the deed above mentioned, and the consideration of the two notes sued on in these two actions, was the same. To the admission of all this evidence, the plaintiff in the action excepted ; and the admission of that evidence by the circuit court, is assigned for error.
To sustain the judgment of-the circuit court in this cause, the defendant relies on the case of the Bank of Missouri v. Tisson, decided by this court. See vol. 1, p. 617. From the report of that case, it appears that Tisson owed the Bank three hundred dollars, for which they held his note, and had sued on it. After making the note sued on, Tisson executed to the Bank a mortgage, in which it was acknowledged that he owed the Bank three hundred dollars. Tisson then, in the 'mortgage, expressly covenants to pay the said sum of money. It also appears that the note sued on was renewed in pursuance of the understanding in the covenant..
But such is not the state of the case in .the two causes now before us. The notes sued on by the plaintiff, and the ■deed given in evidence by the defendant, sprang into existence at the same instant, and by the same act. The notes and deed are parts of the same transaction. The defendant evidently gave the notes as collateral security for the payment of the money. Not more than one half of the covenants contained in that deed have been set out here'; and there are now so many set out, that it is evidently a very troublesome business to declare on it. There was no occasion for the defendant to introduce a witness to prove that the notes and the deed related to the same contract; it is evident from their faces, that they are a part of the same transaction. It is also evident that the defendant by giving those two notes intended, or at least pretended, to afford the plaintiff a simpler mode of recovering the money than he would have had by suing on the agreement.
The rules of law are, and ought to be, fixed and permanent. They permit men to contract after their own way, provided their meaning be expressed. ■ It is not at all inconsistent with the rules of law, that the defendant should have given the plaintiff two remedies, either of which he might use to recover this money. He has done so, and he must now abide the consequences of his act.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, because that court suffered the agreement to be given in evidence, to defeat a recovery on the two notes sued on in these actions. The cause is remanded.