91 Mo. App. 412 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
— This is an action which was brought by plaintiff against the defendants on a promissory note executed by the defendants to one Erancis and by him indorsed to the plaintiff. The defendants pleaded the defense of non est factum. The note sued on was as follows:
“$230.00 Chillicothe, Mo., Sept. 28, 1895.
“Ten months after date we promise to pay to Charles IT. Erancis or order two hundred and thirty dollars, for value received with eight per cent interest per annum thereon from date.
“Due — Witnessed by “Mes. IeeNe GibboNS,
bis
“No — R. Barney, Jr. “Washington J. (x) Gibbons,
mark
Witness only.”
The vital question is, whether or not, under the circumstances just referred to, the erasure by the witness of his attestation at one place and then writing the words “Witnessed by R. Barney, Jr.” at another oh the note is an alteration, or at least such an alteration as had the effect to discharge the makers? We may say at the outset that we are not unmindful of the fact that the consideration of this question carries us upon exceedingly dangerous ground. In Haskell v. Champion, 30 Mo. 136, Judge Scott, in delivering the opinion of the court, remarked: “The law in dealing with the subject of the alteration of written instruments looks further than to the materiality or immateriality of the alteration. Aware of the danger of countenancing the most trifling change it has not permitted those intrusted with such instruments to alter them and afterwards defend their conduct by alleging the immateriality of the alteration.” And the application of this rule has, since its announcement in the case just referred to,
In Kelly v. Thuey, 143 Mo. loc. cit. 434, it is said that “it is not permitted to a payee or obligee to make a change in a paper which he holds and then having made it assert, when caught, that he meant no harm by it and that it is immaterial. Hitherto we have tolerated no alteration in the contract, and we have always regarded and still regard any change in the face of the contract as a nullifying alterationAnd this rule in its application to commercial paper is more stringent than that in respect to the alteration of deeds and other written instruments. Burnett v. McCluey, 78 Mo. 676.
Fraud is the foundation of the rule that an alteration avoids the enforcement of a written instrument. The question then recurring is, whether the striking the name of an attesting witness from a note and writing the same name or another name at a different place thereon is a change in the face of the note. "Where a promissory note is signed by aj mark, a witness is unnecessary unless required by statute. There is no such statute in this State as there is in some of the other States, as for instance, Maine, Massachusetts and Vermont. In some of the States the distinction is made by statute between attested and unattested promissory notes, the former being excepted from the six-year statute of limitation and made actionable for a longer period. Randolph on Commercial Paper, sec. 68. When, however, a signature is made by mark or by initials, it is advisable to have an attesting witness, and when there is such witness the execution of the paper can only be proved by his testimony unless he (the witness) can not be produced at the trial on account of his death, absence from the country or other inability to appear. If he can not be produced, the execution may and should be pro red by proof of his signature. And if he can not prove his own signature when he appears, it may also be proved by secondary evidence. Tiedeman on Com’l Paper, sec. 33; G-reenleaf’s
In Adams v. Frye, 3 Met. 107, where the obligee of a bond procured a person not present, nor authorized to attest it, to sign as a witness, it was held a material alteration. It was said by the court in deciding the case: “By adding to the bond the name of an attesting witness the obligee became entitled to show the due execution of the same by proving the handwriting of the supposed attesting witness if the witness was out of the jurisdiction of the court. It is quite obvious, therefore, that the fraudulent party might by means of such an alteration of a contract furnish the legal proof of the due execution thereof by honest witnesses swearing truly to the genuineness of the handwriting of the supposed attesting witness, and yet the attestation might be wholly unauthorized and fraudulent. It seems to us that we ought not to sanction a principle which would permit the holder of an obligation thus to tamper with it with entire impunity.” And in Fisher v. King, 153 Pa. St. 3, it was said that “where an alteration is willfully made with the consent of the obligee, even though no additional liability is thereby imposed on the obligor, it avoids the instrument, and that the application of this rule does not in case of willful alteration depend upon the injury done in a particular case; but as said in Neff v. Homer, 63 Pa. St.
The foregoing authorities have been referred to for the purpose of showing that the name of an attesting witness appearing on the face of a note is not only a component but a material part thereof, and that therefore the adding of the name of an attesting witness or the erasing the same therefrom after delivery and without the consent of the obligor is a change in the face of the note and therefore a “nullifying' alteration.” It results therefrom that if, as appears by the undisputed evidence, the alteration of the note in suit was willfully made by the attesting witness, Barney, with the approbation of the obligee and without the consent of the obligors, the latter must be held to have been thereby discharged.
It is perhaps proper to add as a qualification of the foregoing rule that if the payee or holder can show that the alteration was made honestly, if it can be reasonably accounted fox as done under some misapprehension or mistake, or with the supposed assent of the obligor, it should not operate to avoid the note. Adams v. Frye, supra; 2 Parsons on.Bills and Notes, 556; 2 Daniels’ Neg. Inst. sec. 1393. As the evidence disclosed the alteration of the note by the attesting witness was made with the approbation of the obligee and without that of the obligors and without more, the latter were thereby discharged. There was no evidence offered, the tendency of which was to show that the alteration was honestly made through misapprehension or mistake.
As the ease stood before the court on the evidence, the
The judgment must be affirmed.
Italicised words erased with red ink.