104 Mo. App. 272 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
This case is on a note presented by the appellant Jennie L. Dawson against the estate of Jas. R. Palmer, deceased. The note was given July 2, 1887, to Nancy E. Palmer, the mother of the maker, for $515.50, due one day after date and drew interest at-eight per cent. It was indorsed by the payee to Jennie L. Palmer December 10,1888, and was credited with a payment of $22 on the fifth day of September, 1893. Respondent’s
An objection was raised to the affidavit to the demand filed in the probate court on the score that it was made by R. L. Dawson, instead of the claimant himself, and contains no statement that Dawson was the agent of claimant, or that he had had the management of the business out of which the demand originated, or had means of knowing personally the facts necessary to be stated in the affidavit. The statutes require an affidavit to a demand against an estate which is made by an agent, to contain a statement of the fact. R. S. 1899, sec. 196. It does not require the affidavit to contain a statement that the agent had had the management of the business out of which the demand grew, or had means of knowing the verified facts. Those things, we apprehend, may he shown by evidence aliunde. The affidavit was defective in not disclosing that it was made by the agent of the claimant, but that defect may he cured by an amendment. Woerner, Administration Law,' p. *808; Walker v. Wiggington’s Adm., 50 Ala. 579; Chadwell v. Chadwell, 98 Ky. 643.
As to when the payment was credited on the note was a question for the triers of the facts to determine.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.