40 Mo. App. 333 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
The settlement of the real controversy in this action depends on very simple propositions of law,® there being no substantial controversy about the facts, which are as follows: The defendant, being indebted to the plaintiff upon a promissory note in the sum of ninety-five dollars and fifty-five cents, gave to him, on July 17, 1887, his check for that amount on the Fifth National Bank in St. Louis, where the defendant kept an account. The plaintiff had confidence in the defendant, and in the bank, and took the check in payment of the note, surrendering the note. The bank, at that date, was solvent, and so continued until November, 1887, when-it failed ;
The plaintiff’s petition contained two counts, one upon the original note, and the other upon the check. The first count may.be laid out of view, because it states no cause of action. It admits that the check was taken in payment of the note, and the. note surrendered; hence the plaintiff’s action, if any, was upon-the-check. The defendant answered, setting up the facts of the non-presentment of the check until February, 1888, after the bank had failed, and claiming that he was damaged thereby in the sum of two hundred dollars, and praying judgment. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff for one hundred and one dollars and ninety-five cents, Avhich amount, as a computation thereof shows, is equal to the face of the check with interest thereon from the date of the institution of the suit at the rate of six per centum per annum.
The errors assigned are that the court excluded proper evidence offered by the defendant, and erred in its declarations of law
The evidence offered by the defendant, and excluded by the court, was evidence tending to show that, if the plaintiff had made timely presentation of the check, the defendant would have sold one or more of his shares
As there is no controversy of facts, instructions or declarations of law had no office to perform, and hence we need not examine declarations given or refused. It being admitted that the check was given for value, the defendant was a principal promisor and was not discharged by any laches of the holder in not making due presentment thereof, unless he had suffered loss and injury in consequence, and then only pro tardo. Morrison v. McCartney, 30 Mo. 183, overruling St. John v. Homans, 8 Mo. 382. Here it is shown that the defendant drawer of the check had ten cents to his credit in the bank when it failed ; to that extent he was entitled to credit. On the other hand the judgment of the court was only for the amount of the check with interest from the date of the institution of the suit, whereas plaintiff, under the conceded facts, was entitled to interest from the date of demand in February, 1888, and the interest between date of demand and date of the institution of the suit was for more than ten cents ; hence the defendant has no reason to complain even on that score.
The check was not filed with the petition, but was produced upon the trial. When offered in evidence, it was objected to on the ground that it had not been filed. The statute requires that, when a suit is brought upon an instrument of writing, executed by the adverse party, and not lost or destroyed, it must be filed with
' There is no error in the record, and, with the concurrence of all the judges, the judgment is affirmed.