158 Mo. App. 338 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This was an action to collect from defendant, fire insurance company of this state, the amount of a certain draft drawn by it under date August 11, 1909, in favor of one Blockburger and of one Taylor, the latter as trustee, the draft for the sum of five thousand dollars and expressed on its face to be in payment and settlement of a certain fire loss covered by a policy issued by defendant.
The second count of the petition, on which the case went to the jury, the first count being abandoned* avers that for value received defendant drew an inland bill of exchange upon itself, payable to the order of Blockburger and Taylor, trustee, for five thousand dollars, payable on demand, and that Blockburger and Taylor, trustee, before presentation of the inland bill of exchange, for value, indorsed and delivered it to plaintiff, who, after he became the owner and holder thereof, deposited it with the National Bank of Commerce for collection, and defendant, though having promised to pay the same and though the inland bill of exchange was a promissory note within the meaning of the law, refused to pay it and arbitrarily demanded that the bank should withhold the note from plaintiff, the lawful owner and holder thereof, thereby converting it to the use of defendant; that plaintiff is an innocent holder- of the promissory note, having acquired it before maturity and for value. Judgment is demanded as before, a certified copy of the note or bill and receipt being attached as an exhibit, the protest indorsed upon it, the originals averred to be in pos-, session of defendant.
The answer, admitting the incorporation of defendant and the issue of the policy, which was attached as an exhibit to the answer, admits that plaintiff and Blockburger and Taylor -claimed and represented to defendant that the property so insured by the policy had been wholly destroyed by fire and that defendant had become liable to pay them on account of the policy
“Wherefore, the premises considered, the defendant prays, first, that the said policy of insurance issued by it to George O. Blockbnrger, a copy of which is attached hereto and identified as ‘Exhibit A,’ be by the decree of this court cancelled and annulled; second, that said certain order or draft drawn by it upon itself, and a copy of which is attached to plaintiff’s petition, identified as ‘Exhibit A,’ be by the order and decree of this court cancelled and annulled; and, third, for such other and further relief in the premises as to the court may seem meet and just. ’ ’
The reply was a general denial of the affirmative averments of the answer. The case was tried as in law by the court and a jury.
The court gave several instructions at the instance of the parties, refusing most of those asked by plaintiff, which, in effect, were peremptory instructions to find for plaintiff. Among the instructions given at the instance of defendant was the usual general instruction, to the effect that the jury were the judges of the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given to the testimony of each witness. It also gave this, marked “defendant’s instruction IV:”
“The court instructs the jury that while the law permits the plaintiff to testify in his own behalf, nevertheless the jury have a right in weighing his testimony and in considering how much credence is to be given it, to take into consideration the fact that he is the plaintiff, and his interest in the result of the suit. ’ ’
Exception was duly saved by plaintiff to the giving and refusal of the instructions.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant “on both counts of the petition.” A motion for new trial was duly filed, which being overruled, the plaintiff excepting, duly perfected his appeal to .this court.
In State v. Maguire, 69 Mo. 197, l. c. 202, and State v. Dower, 134 Mo. App. 352, l. c. 358, 114 S. W. 1104, it is held that under what is now section 5242, Revised Statutes 1909, such an instruction is proper in a criminal case. But in Stetzler v. Metropolitan St. R. Co., 210 Mo. 704, l. c. 713, 109 S. W. 666, and in Huff v. St. Joseph Ry., Light, Heat & Power Co., 213 Mo. 495, l. c. 515, 111 S. W. 1145, it is held that giving an instruction of that kind in a civil case is reversible error. In fact the judgment was reversed in the latter case solely for error in giving a similar instruction. As the case will he remanded, we refrain from any comment on any other rulings at the trial, as on a new trial the matters now presented and here complained of, may not again rise.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded.