57 Mo. App. 566 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— This action is founded on the following bill of exchange alleged to have been accepted by the defendant:
“Noyembee 26th, 1892.
“Mr. Fd. Marsh.
“Please pay to J. E. Dickinson eighty'dollars and thirty cents.
“Feed Nichols.”
Plaintiff offered certain evidence tending to prove that Nichols, the drawer, owed the plaintiff, and that defendant, Marsh, prior to the date of the order, informed plaintiff that if he (plaintiff) would procure an order from said Nichols on him (Marsh) for said
The action of the trial court is approved, and its judgment will be affirmed. The statute provides: “No person within this state shall be charged as an acceptor of a bill of exchange, unless his acceptance shall be in writing, signed by himself or his lawful agent.” R. S. 1889, sec. 719. There is no pretense that the defendant ever so accepted this bill of exchange. He can not, therefore, be held thereon.
It is, however, claimed that there was a constructive acceptance under the provisions of section 724 of the same statute. It reads, “Every person upon whom a bill of exchange may be drawn, and to whom the same shall be delivered for acceptance, who shall destroy such bill, or refuse, within twenty-four hours after such delivery, or within such period as the holder may allow, to return the bill, accepted or non-accepted, to the holder, shall be deemed to have accepted the same.” The facts sought to be proved, and as giving ■color to this position, are, that plaintiff delivered the written order or bill of exchange to the defendant on its date and that with the consent of plaintiff, and
We must hold this point against the plaintiff. The mere receipt of the bill of exchange and holding the same without more, does not, in our opinion, constitute the refusal to return that will be deemed a constructive acceptance by force of the statute above referred to. Rousch v. Duff, 35 Mo. 512; Matterson v. Moulton, 11 Hun (N. Y.), 268, and 79 N. Y. 627. In the case last cited the New York court so construed a statute of which ours is an exact copy. The court there said: “The refusal mentioned in the statute, as it seems to us, refers to something of a tortious character implying an unauthorized conversion of the bill by the •drawee.” It can’t be called a tortious or wrongful holding of the bill when, as here, the plaintiff voluntarily left it with the drawee and never demanded its return. Lockhard v. Moss, 53 Mo. App. 633, does not support plaintiff’s contention. Indeed that decision is in harmony with the cases before cited, since it was there admitted that return of the bill was demanded.
We may further say, too, in answer to the claim made on account of the defendant’s alleged promise to pay the order, using the language of the New York ■ease, that “the attempt to charge the defendant with the payment of the bill upon the ground of a promise, is simply an attempt to charge the defendant with a liability on the bill upon a parol acceptance. If an action can be maintained under such circumstances, the provisions of section 719 of the statute before referred to would be rendered wholly nugatory.” See, also, Rousch v. Duff, supra.
Judgment affirmed.