111 Mo. 291 | Mo. | 1892
This action is based upon the indorsements of defendants upon the following promissory note filed with the petition:
“$6,000. St. Louis, Mo., March 28, 1889.
“Sixty days after date I promise to pay to Robért H. Payne or order $6,000. Value received, with interest at the rate of-per centum per annum. Negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount.
“Robert H. Payne.”
Upon which were the following indorsements:
“May 30, 1889. Protest is hereby waived by the undersigned indorsers:
“Robert H. Payne,
“Eannie E. Payne,
“Rochester Eord.”
The signatures of the parties on the note were admitted.
The evidence tended to prove that the waiver of protest of May 30, 1889, indorsed on the back of the note was written on that day by Robert H. Payne, and no authority from defendants to him, so to do, being shown, the only possible ground of recovery in the case was to charge the defendants as makers.
The court, at the request of the plaintiff, declared the law of the case, by way of instruction, to be that “if the evidence shows that the defendants indorsed their names on the back of the note in suit, while in the hands .of the payee, and that the payee negotiated •and delivered the same to the plaintiff without indorsing his name on the back thereof, the plaintiff is entitled to recover of the defendants as makers,” found the issue for the defendants, and from the judgment in their favor the plaintiff appeals.
On the trial the plaintiff introduced the oral evidence of its clerk or bookkeeper, tending to prove that the note in question, with other securities, was on the day of its date delivered to plaintiff’s cashier by Robert H. Payne, the maker, as collateral security for two other notes of the same date executed by him .aggregating the same amount, payable to his own order sixty days after date, and by him indorsed in blank, delivered to and discounted by the bank for him on that day. And that, at that time, the name of Robert TL Payne was not indorsed on the note in suit, but was afterwards written on the back thereof on the thirtieth of May, 1889.
The admission of this evidence, the plaintiff complains of as error, for which the judgment should be-reversed; and for support of its contention relies upon a line of decisions of this court, maintaining the doctrine that the death of the contracting agent of a surviving party to a contract excludes the evidence of the other contracting party. Stanton v. Ryan, 41 Mo. 510; Butts v. Phelps, 79 Mo. 302; Williams v. Edwards, 94 Mo. 447, to which may be added Leach v. McFadden, 110 Mo. 584. We do not understand the rule in these cases, however, to extend further than to transactions-had by a party to the action with the deceased agent of the other party acting in behalf of his antagonist.
The defendants in this case did not undertake, nor were they permitted, to testify in regard to any contract or transaction they had either with Robert H. Payne, the maker of the note, or with the cashier of the bank, or any other of its officers, dead or alive. They were-permitted to testify merely to a physical fact, the existence of which was independent of any and all contracts-between the parties, a fact not peculiarly within the-knowledge of jthe defendants and any agent of the bank,, arising from a transaction between them and such agent, but of which they obtained cognizance by their sense of sight, and which was open to the cognizance of'
How can the plaintiff then claim that the defendants should be excluded from testifying in rebuttal of a ease made out alone by the evidence of its living agent, on the ground that it had another agent dead,, by whom it could have made out the same case, and nothing more. Upon the face of the indorsements upon this note the defendants were indorsers, and chargeable only as such. As wé have seen, the plaintiff failed to mate out a case against them as indorsers; it then sought to charge them as makers. In order to do so, it had to resort to the extrinsic parol evidence of its clerk, whose evidence alone made for it all the case it had. To exclude the evidence of the defendants in rebuttal of the evidence of this living and testifying agent of the plaintiff, as to a fact coming to their knowledge in exactly the same way as it did to him— by their sense of sight — is not within the letter or spirit of the statute; nor within any of the rulings of this court on the subject.
While we think the court committed no error in admitting this evidence, yet, conceding that it did, and that the court ought to have decided the issue upon the uncontradicted evidence of the plaintiff, tending to prove that it was indorsed by Robert H. Payne after it was indorsed by the defendants, and after it was delivered to the bank,- it does not follow that this, judgment ought to be reversed.
II. He was both the drawer and payee of the note. Now, while in a long line of decisions in this state following Powell v. Thomas, 7 Mo. 440, it has been con
Such a note was an incomplete and void contract at common law, but by the custom of merchants after it had been negotiated, that is, after the drawer, as payee, had indorsed his name upon the note and delivered it to a third person, it was treated as a valid, negotiable, promissory note, payable to bearer, and has been so held in England since the statute of 3 and 4 Anne, cap. 9 (Temp. 1704).
Our statute, Revised Statutes, 1889, section 735, is declaratory of the law merchant upon the subject.
The character of such an instrument before it is indorsed by the maker is clearly stated by Parke, B., in Hooper v. Williams, 2 Exch. Rep. 20, in the following language: “No right to sue could exist in anyone, in the case of a note payable to the maker’s order, until the order was made in the shape of an indorsement; until that indorsement was made, it was an imperfect instrument, and, in truth, not a promissory note at all, and consequently not transferable under the statute. What, then, is the Effect of the indorsement to another person? We think it was to perfect the incomplete instrument, so that the original writing and indorsement taken together became a binding contract, though an informal one, between the maker
The language of the learned judge in Smalley v. Wight, supra, is that the note “is no better than blank paper, so long as it remains in the hands of the maker; and, although it has the form, it has not the legal vitality of a contract. It becomes a contract only by being negotiated. * * * We cannot doubt, for the reasons already stated, that such paper is invalid as a contract until it is indorsed. It is the indorsement alone •which gives it efficacy.”
Now when one indorses such an incomplete instrument before it is made perfect, by the indorsement of the maker as payee, and delivers it to such maker, what is his contract? What can his contract be other than to authorize the maker to make it a complete and binding contract on him as an indorser, by writing over his name the maker and payee’s name, on the back of the note as first indorser? This would seem to follow with as much or more force than the assumption that one who indorses a completed note, having one person for its maker and another person for its payee, but to which he is a stranger, before it is indorsed by the payee, intended to contract as a maker. In the one case by indorsing the note, in itself a complete contract on which he is neither payee or indorsee, he must be presumed to have intended to charge himself in some relation, and as he could not on this completed contract charge himself as indorser he must be presumed tó have intended to charge himself as maker. In the other, by indorsing a note which in itself is not a complete contract, he must be presumed to have intended to charge himself only in the manner in which
The doctrine that when a person, not a party to a note, puts his name upon it before it is delivered as a valid contract, thereby makes himself an original promisor, so long maintained in this state, was taken •from Massachusetts. The ease of Powell v. Thomas, supra, being bottomed on Moies v. Bird, 11 Mass. 440, and while the doctrine was maintained there in a long line of decisions with the same persistency as here, until set aside by legislative enactment in 1874 (Public Statutes, Massachusetts, ch. 77, sec. 15), yet in 1859, long before such legislative interference, the supreme court of that state refused to extend the principle to the case of a note payable by the drawer to himself and indorsed by a stranger to the note before negotiation by the drawer. That court saying in Clapp v. Rice, 13 Gray, 403, that “the correctness of these •decisions, however' much they may be obnoxious to •criticism upon principle, it is too late to question. They have formed an established rule for the construction of that class of contracts in Massachusetts, which cannot now be disturbed without manifest injustice. But the doctrine is somewhat anomalous, ■and is not to be extended beyond the line of adjudged cases.”
This is precisely the situation with us, and, as we have' seen, the ease in hand does not come within the line of the decisions in this state sustaining this doctrine, and, if our reasoning be correct, is not within the principle upon which they are based, and ought
It follows that on the uncontradicted evidence of "the plaintiff the finding and judgment ought to have been for the defendants; the judgment of the circuit •court is, therefore, affirmed.