107 S.W.2d 962 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1937
The respondent, Virginia Finch, will be referred to as plaintiff and the appellants, Heeb, Bisplinghoff and Wylie, as defendants.
The testimony shows that Chaffee Lodge No. 735, I.O.O.F. was duly incorporated by pro forma decree of the Circuit Court of Scott County, August 16, 1920; that defendants Heeb, Bisplinghoff, and Wylie were the trustees of said lodge; the proper officers to sign notes on behalf of the corporation and regularly signed notes for it; that the lodge had purchased certain real estate and had taken title in the name of the trustees; that it had thereafter borrowed $1000 from Tom Belk for the purpose of improving the lodge building; that subsequent to securing this loan Tom Belk died; and that in settling his estate the lodge was requested to subdivide the note for $1000 given by it as aforesaid and execute new notes for the purpose of making distribution of the estate of the said Tom Belk, deceased. Pursuant thereto the lodge made and executed nine notes for $100 each and one for $300, the last mentioned note including $200 interest. These notes took the place of the original $1000 note and interest that had accumulated thereon. The notes thus given were distributed among the heirs of Tom Belk, deceased. The $300 note is the one in suit.
Defendants contend that they are not personally liable on this note but that they executed it in a representative capacity as officers of the Chaffee lodge, a corporation; that they were the proper persons to sign notes for the lodge; that the note showed on its face that they were acting only in a representative or official capacity in signing said note; that they were not intended to be personally liable for said obligation; and that the note was a regularly printed form of note such as was used by the First National Bank of Chaffee.
The note was introduced in evidence. It was signed by Chaffee Lodge No. 735, I.O.O.F., which the proof in this case shows to be a corporation. Immediately following the corporate name appears the word "Trustees," then follows the signatures of the three defendants grouped together with a bracket made with a pen to the left of the names, and to the left of the bracket the word "Trustees," *593 written with a pen. In other words, the signatures appear as follows:
"Chaffee Lodge No. 735 I.O.O.F. "Trustees "(J.W. Heeb "( "Trustees (L.C. Bisplinghoff "( "(J.W. Wylie."
At the close of the evidence the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff and this is the first assignment of error urged by the defendants.
We have carefully examined the cases cited by plaintiff and defendants, as well as other authorities. The vital question at issue, as we view the case, is whether or not defendants signed the note as individual makers, or in their representative capacities as agents or officers of the corporation, Chaffee Lodge No. 735, I.O.O.F. The suit was instituted and tried on the theory that the note was executed by defendants as principals. The plaintiff and the trial court took the position that there was no ambiguity on the face of the note; that defendants were conclusively bound as principals; that the instrument sued on was definite and certain; and that parol evidence was inadmissible to explain the signatures thereto.
The case of Myers v. Chesley,
"The plaintiff contends that the note by its terms purports to and does bind all the parties signing it as principals and that it is not competent to vary, explain, or contradict the written contract by parol evidence to the effect that defendant did not sign individually as a maker. The doctrine is invoked that one who signs and expressly contracts as a principal in the note cannot prove by parol evidence that he signed and is bound in some other capacity, as for instance a surety. [Stephenson v. Bank,
"That this case falls within the class of cases where parol evidence is admissible to show that defendant signed as an agent of the corporation, if indeed, the note does not conclusively show that fact, and is not bound individually is supported by the weight of authority in this and other jurisdictions. Thus, in Smith v. Alexander,
In some jurisdictions it would be held that signatures such as appear in the instant case would constitute personal obligations, and that parol evidence could not be heard to show to the contrary. However, a great number of the courts announce the rule that adding an official or a representative capacity to the signature, makes an ambiguity which may be explained, and this is the rule adopted by the courts of our State. [Smith v. Alexander,supra; Musser v. Johnson,
"The rule is, that when the allegations of the petition are denied, and evidence is submitted to sustain the issues joined, the defendant is entitled to have the jury pass upon the evidence, though the defendant offers no evidence on his own part." [Milliken v. Commission Co.,
The trial court erred in giving the peremptory instruction directing a verdict for plaintiff. We deem it unnecessary to pass upon other issues raised.
For the reasons above stated, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for retrial. Allen, P.J., and Smith, J., concur.