84 Mo. App. 214 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
The suit is on the following promissory note:
“$1,000.00. Springfield, Mo., August 1, 1896.
“Eive months after date we promise to pay to A. Canaday, or bearer, One Thousand Dollars, for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount; with interest from date at the rate of 8 per cent per annum; and*216 if interest be not paid annually to become as principal and bear tbe same rate of interest.
“(Signed)
“J. E. Mellette,
“E. L. Link,
“Ivan Link,
“J. W. Hogg.”
Tbe defense relied on was. payment. Trial by jury; verdict and judgments for defendants.
No objections were saved to the admission or rejection of testimony. 'The court on its own motion gave tbe following instruction to tbe jury:
“On tbe evidence before you, you are to render a verdict in this cause, that is to say cause number 18 on tbe court’s docket. This is a suit upon a note for one thousand ($1,000) dollars, dated August 1, 1896, with interest from date at tbe rate of eight per cent per annum, signed by J. E. Mellette, E. L. Link, Ivan Link and J. ~W. Hogg.
“Tbe execution and delivery of this note is admitted by tbe pleadings and tbe only matter for your determination is whether or not this note has been paid.
“Tbe burden of proving that it has been paid is upon tbe defendant, and be must show its payment by a preponderance or greater weight of evidence, and you are to find tbe issues for tbe plaintiff if tbe defendant has failed to establish payment by such preponderance.
“If you find from tbe evidence that in August, 1896, when tbe $2,000 note was executed, that it was intended by both Mellette and Canaday that it should include tbe $1,000 note, signed by Mellette, Hogg and tbe Links; in other words, if tbe $2,000 note and mortgage was to be simply a further security of that debt, with other debts, all included in tbe $2,000 note, then said $1,000 note was paid, on tbe*217 payment of the $2,000 note, and yonr verdict should be for the defendant in this suit.
“There is not evidence in this case sufficient to establish an extension of time of payment of the $1,000 note, so as to discharge the sureties in case you find the note has never been paid.
“You are instructed that the payment of usurious interest on other indebtedness can not be credited on these notes, which were executed after the dates of the execution of the notes on which usurious interest was paid. If the $1,000 note signed by Mellette, Hogg, Link and Link was not included in the $2,000 note,- then there is no other evidence of payment thereof, and your verdict should be for plaintiff in this suit for $1,000, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from August 1, 1896.”
To the giving of which instruction appellant objected and excepted. No other instructions were asked or given.
The evidence of Mellette, the principal maker of the note, tends to prove that in November, 1893, he borrowed $132 of appellant, and after this from time to time he borrowed sums of money of appellant, and that on June 13, 1896, he borrowed $1,000 of .appellant, for which he gave his note, and that on April 1, 1896, -he gave his other note to appellant for $837, the consideration for which was partly for money borrowed, but mostly for another note he had given,, and which he took up at the time; that he made payments and paid usurious interest on all the sums he borrowed, and agreed to pay usurious interest on the $1,000 note; that on August 1, 1896, he owed appellant the $1,000 note and a note for $600; that appellant was not satisfied with the security he had, and to satisfy him he renewed the $1,000 note by giving the note in suit, and gave another note for $2,000, and secured the latter by a tract of land he owned in the state of Indiana; that the note sued on and
Appellant’s testimony tended to prove that the $1,000 note and $2,000 represent separate and distinct transactions,- and are for separate sums of money loaned by him to Mellette, and that, on August 1, 1896, Mellette owed him $3,000; that the $2,000 note was paid, but that the $1,000 was yet due and unpaid. Mellette and appellant were the only witnesses on the trial.
The testimony is conflicting. If Mellette’s story is true, the note was paid. If appellant is to be believed, every dollar of it is yet due. The jury found that the note had been paid. They were the sole judges of the weight of testimony and of the credibility of the two witnesses. All there is in the case is a question of fact. The jury has settled that by their .verdict. The instruction given by the court is full, fair, and not open to criticism. No error is shown by the record, and we affirm the judgment.