113 Mo. App. 711 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— Suit upon a promissory note begun before a justice of the peace against W. C. Bishop and defendant. The judgment in the circuit court was for plaintiff against both defendants but Kaiser alone appealed. Both Bishop and Kaiser signed the note as makers but the latter was in fact a surety. Some time after maturity, Bishop gave plaintiff his check upon a bank for the full amount due and plaintiff, believing the check to be good, thereupon delivered the note to Bishop who retained possession thereof. The check was dishonored by the bank for lack of funds to the credit of the drawer. In the statement filed plaintiff alleged that the note had been lost or destroyed, and supported the allegation with the following affidavit:
“This affiant, the plaintiff in the foregoing cause, being duly sworn on his oath says that said note sued on has become lost or destroyed, and plaintiff does not know whether it is one or the other, but believes it to be one or the other.”
We do not entertain the view advanced by defendant that this verification fails to meet the requirements of section 3854, Revised Statutes 1899. The words employed contain a positive and unqualified affirmation of the essential fact — plaintiff’s inability to produce the
Finally, we are asked to reverse the case because •of the failure of plaintiff to give an indemnifying bond ns required by section 745, Revised Statutes 1899. Plaintiff answers to this that such bonds are not required in suits begun before a justice of the peace, [R. 'S., sec. 3854-55.] In actions upon lost instruments the filing and approval of an indemnifying bond to the defendant is not jurisdictional to the institution and maintenance of the suit but is a condition precedent to recovery which must be performed before judgment is entered. [Sauter v. Leveridge, 103 Mo. 615; Eans v. Bank, 79 Mo. 182; Barrows v. Million, 43 Mo. App. 79.] In actions originating before a justice of the peace the circuit- court upon appeal derives the jurisdiction vested in the inferior court over subject matter and parties and, proceeds with the cause anew, following the rules of practice and procedure which govern causes begun in the circuit court. Evidently, it was the legislative pur-' pose, as expressed in section 745, to apply to all cases falling under the jurisdiction of the circuit court, without regard to the origin of the case, the rule followed by courts of equity of requiring a plaintiff to< furnish indemnity as a condition to the granting of relief in suits upon, lost instruments.
There is always a possibility that an instrument al
Under the views expressed, it was error to enter judgment without the giving of the statutory bond; but as the bond would have been in time had it been filed and approved before the ruling of the trial court upon the motion for new trial (Aylor v. McMunigal, 66 Mo. App. 657). and the error is without effect upon the issues involved, on reason appears for a retrial of the case.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to enter judgment for plaintiff under the verdict upon the filing and approval of a bond, as required by section 745, Revised Statutes; and should plaintiff fail to give the bond in a time to be fixed by the court, the action shall be dismissed.