Jobes v. Wilson

140 Mo. App. 281 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910

GRAY, J.

Tbis is a suit on a promissory note, dated April 2, 1906, for $1,067, due July 1, 1907, payable to A. J. Ream & Company, at tbe Bank of Nixa, Mo., and with interest at six per cent per annum before maturity, and eight per cent after maturity, payable annually, and signed by tbe respondents. .On tbe note are tbe following endorsements: “April 2, 1906, paid $230.00. Without recourse, A. J. Ream & Co.”

Tbe appellant sued on the note in tbe Christian Circuit Court, and claimed that be bought tbe same in June, 1906, with two other notes of tbe same amounts, with tbe same credits endorsed thereon, and signed by tbe same parties. Tbe answer of tbe defendants allege that tbe payees, through their agent, a Mr. Guggie, agreed to sell a standard-bred stallion for $3,200, to be represented by sixteen shares of stock of $200 per share, and if any of tbe said shares of stock remained unsold, *285tbe payees would take tbe same; that it was further agreed in case said stallion died within one year from tbe date of delivery, tbe purchasers should have tbe option of choosing another horse, or receiving $1,000 of insurance which the sellers carried on each of their horses in a “blanket” policy; that it was further agreed that the contract should be reduced to writing and delivered to said purchasers; that ten and one-half shares of said stock were sold by the payees, through said agent, to parties other than these defendants, for which the said agent received for the payees, the sum of $2,100; that one and one-half shares of said stock were not sold and were retained by the sellers; that the remaining four shares of stock, aggregating $800 were subscribed for by the defendants; that on the 2nd day of April, 1906, and after the said Guggle had received the sum of $2,100 for the said payees, and after the said agent had taken over the one and one-half shares of stock, amounting to the sum of $300, he falsely and fraudulently represented to the said defendants that it was necessary for them to sign promissory notes for the full amount of the purchase price of said stallion; that the said notes would be sent to A. J. Ream & Co. and that the note sued on in plaintiffs petition, would be cancelled and returned to defendants; that the second note for a like amount would be cancelled and returned to the defendants and that a credit of $466 would be placed upon the third note; and that relying upon the false and fraudulent representations of said agent, they were induced to sign the notes herein referred to.

They further alleged that the credits of $2,600 were never placed on said note; that the said two notes were not cancelled; that the written contract was never delivered; that the stallion so purchased died within twelve months, and that the payees refused to furnish another or pay the $1,000, and alleging that the said notes were wholly without consideration and void, and specially denying that plaintiff, before maturity of said *286note, purchased the same in good faith for a valuable consideration. The reply was a general denial.

At the trial, the plaintiff, J obes, testified in his own behalf, to the effect that he bought the notes for about $1,750 to $1,850; that he knew in a general way how the business of the payees was conducted; that is, that a horse would be sold in the neighborhood, and notes given for the purchase price; that he made no effort to ascertain the solvency of the signers, but relied upon his experience as a bank examiner, in buying that class of paper, but further stated he had some information from the result of an- inquiry one of the payees had made. When he was asked if it did not strike him as a little peculiar, if the payees thought the note was good, to sign it without recourse, he answered, “No, it did not, especially in view of the facts in connection with the business.” That he purchased the paper after the partnership between Ream & Co. had dissolved, and each had taken his part of the paper, and that the note was endorsed without recourse, for the reason that the partner who had surrendered his interest to the other, would not be liable.

The plaintiff resided in Kansas City, Mo., where the payees resided and had been in business. The makers of the paper were farmers in Christian county.

The defendant, Wilson, testified that Guggie told him that in the event the horse died, another horse would be furnished, or $1,000 would be paid; that he only agreed to take one-fourth of a share, which would be $50, and that one of the other payees, Mr. Beverage, took one-fourth of a share with him, and Guggie agreed 'to take their note for $100. But when the sale was put through, Guggie came round with notes for $3,200 and he told him he would not sign them, and he would have to make $100 note, but Guggie said: “You sign these notes and I will send them on to the office and have a $8,100 credit placed on them,” but after he got their signatures, he took the three notes and had them *287signed by the other párties, and when the horse died, the payees were notified that no horse would be furnished. On cross-examination, he testified that Guggie said he could not credit the notes and that he did not have the power to do that, but he would explain it to Reams and they would credit the notes.

The defendant, Brown, testified that he took one-half share, and when he did, he was told by Guggie that the horse was insured for $1,000, and if he died within three breeding seasons, another horse, or $1,000, just as he wished, would be furnished; that when he signed the notes, Guggie told him that when the notes were sent to Kansas City, the company would credit the notes for all that was paid, and that he (Brown) was not standing good for anybody else, because he had certificates showing how much each had.

W. A. Boyts, a defendant, testified that when he made inquiry as to why the parties were asked to sign a $3,200 note, that Guggie said he could not credit them, and that the company would credit them when they were sent in.

All the testimony showed that the parties were to have shares of stock at the rate of $200 per share for the interest they had in the animal, and there was abundant testimony to prove that Guggie represented to them that he did not have the power to credit the notes with the payments made, but the same would have to be done at Kansas City, and that he also agreed that in case the animal died within three breeding seasons, a new horse would be delivered, or $1,000 paid, at the option of the makers. There were eleven names signed to the note. The testimony is uncontradicted that $2,100 had been paid by the makers on the notes previous to the time Guggie took them to Kansas City, and that in addition thereto, certain shares of stock were unsold and that the payees were to take the same, and to that amount the purchase price of the stallion, which the makers of the note were to pay, was thereby *288reduced. The horse died and the payees refused to furnish another animal or pay the $1,000. The agent took the notes to Kansas City and had a credit of $233 placed upon each one, but what was done with the balance of the cash paid on the notes at the time of their execution, the evidence does not disclose.

It is claimed that the makers had no right to rely upon the statement of the agent that, it was necessary for him to send the notes to Kansas City to have the full amounts credited thereon by the payees, and that the notes would be cancelled to the amounts of the payments.

In passing upon the question, whether or not persons were justified in relying upon the statement of agents, all surrounding facts and circumstances should be taken into consideration. ■ According to the evidence, Mr. Guggie went into this community where these defendants' were residing, and stayed for about three weeks. He interested them in the proposition of getting a standard bred stallion in their neighborhood, and informed them that the sellers of the animal would take an interest with them in the enterprise. The proposition was a fair one, and the payees were to become part owners with the purchasers, and therefore, it is not to be wondered that these honest and unsuspecting citizens accepted his statements as the truth, and relied upon them.

It may be admitted that his statement that he did not have authority to credit the $2,100 on the back of the notes, would not have deceived men accustomed to handling commercial paper, or men accustomed to dealing with and knowing the authority of agents, but the court decisions are full of cases where statements no more unreasonable than this, have been relied upon by people in the rural districts. When a man has gone into a farming community and obtained the confidence of citizens thereof, and obtained their hard earned money for nothing', the courts should not listen with *289too willing ears to the cry, “they ought to have known better.”

While there was abundant proof that certain statements were made by the agent of the payees and relied on by the defendants, there was no evidence that the statements were false. The respondents could not rest by proving that statements were made and that they relied on them, but it was necessary for them to prove that the statements were false.

The court, at the request of defendants, gave an instruction submitting to the jury the question of ■ the falsity of the said representations, and as there was no evidence that the representations were false, the action of the court in giving this instruction was error, for which a new trial must be ordered. This instruction is wrong in another important particular. It entirely ignored the question whether the defendants believed the representations to be true and relied on them.

The answer, after alleging that the representations were made and that they were false, and that defendants relied on them and were deceived thereby, and that on account thereof, the note was fraudulently obtained, closes by stating, “the note was obtained without consideration.” If the defendants should not be able to prove that the representations were false, yet according to the answer, the note was obtained without consideration, as the agent of the payees and the money to pay the same at the time it was executed.

What we have just said does not, under the evidence, apply to all the defendants. The defendant, Wilson, testified that the agent of the payees told him that when the notes reached the office of the payees, $3,100 would be credited on them, and there only would be left unpaid $100, and that this unpaid amount would be applied so that thirty-three and one-third dollars would be left unpaid on each note.

The defendant, Wade, testified that the said agent *290told him that the money paid would be credited on the three notes, but he did not claim any one of the notes was to be paid in full and returned to the maker, but the notes would have credits on them showing who had paid for the stock subscribed.

No one of the defendants testified that out of the money paid to the agent of the payees, was the note sued on to be paid in full and returned to them, and therefore, under this evidence, the court could not submit the question of total failure of consideration at the time the notes were given.

■When the suit is instituted by the payee against the maker, the right to plead a partial failure of consideration is not to be questioned. But when the suit is brought by a third person who has acquired the notes before maturity, the question whether the defense of a partial failure of consideration can be made, although the purchaser of the note, at the time he purchased the same, knew that the maker did not receive full consideration for its execution, is not so easily answered. The note sued on herein was executed after the negotiable instrument law of 1905 had taken effect, and we believe the provisions of that act settle the question in this State.

Section 28 of that act reads: “Absence or failure of consideration is a matter of defense as against any person not a holder in due course; and partial failure of consideration is a defense pro tanto, whether the failure is an ascertained and liquidated amount or otherwise.” This section permits the defense of a total or partial failure of consideration against all persons, but a holder in due course.

Section 52 defines a holder in due course to be a person who has taken an instrument upon the following conditions: “1. That it is complete and regular upon its face. 2. That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact. 3. That he *291took it in good faith, and for yalue. 4. That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating it. 5. That he took it in the usual course of business.”

Under the laws of this State as they existed prior to the act of 1905, there was a difference as to the burden of evidence in cases where it was claimed the note was obtained by fraud, and where it was claimed it was given without consideration. In the first case, when the defendant showed that the note was obtained by fraud, the burden of evidence was then on the holder to show that he acquired it in due course, but when the failure of consideration merely was proven, the burden of evidence did not shift, but remained with the defendant to show that the plaintiff was not a holder in due course. [Hahn v. Bradley, 92 Mo. App. 399; Bank v. Rominee, 136 Mo. App. 57, 117 S. W. 105; Hamilton v. Marks, 63 Mo. l. c. 178.] But by the act of 1905, we believe that the burden is the same in each case. Section 59 of that act reads: “Every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course; but when it is shown that the title of any person who has negotiated the instrument is defective, the burden is on the holder to prove that he or some person under whom he claims acquired the title as holder in due course.”

It will be noticed that in fill cases where the title of the person negotiating an instrument is defective, the burden is on the holder then to prove he acquired it in due course. Section 55 defines a defective title as follows: “The title of a person who negotiates an instrument is defective within the meaning of this act when he obtained the instrument or any signature thereto, by fraud, duress or force and fear, or other unlawful means, or for an illegal consideration, or when he negotiates it in breach of faith, or under such circumstances as amount to a fraud.”

If the allegations of the answer are true, or if the *292statements of the defendants as to wbat was to be done with tbe notes, are to be believed, then it was an act of bad faith, amounting to a fraud, on these defendants, as the term is defined in section 55, to negotiate these notes without placing the credits upon them, and therefore, the burden in this case will remain with the plaintiff, if on another trial, the defendants prove to the satisfaction of the jury their statements as to the circumstances under which they executed the notes. In our construction of the act of 1905, we are supported by the courts of other states. [Hodge v. Smith (Wis.), 110 N. W. 192; McKnight v. Parsons, 136 Ia. 390, 113 N. W. 858, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 718.]

In this case, the defendants all joined in one answer. The evidence shows that the statements made to them and relied upon by them, were not the same in all cases, and it seems to us if the cause is retried that separate answers should be filed according to the true facts relied upon.

The appellant insists, however, that notwithstanding the ability of the defendants to prove the allegations of their answer, that under all the evidence the plaintiff is a holder in due course as the term is now defined under the laws of this State. If we are right in our interpretation of the -act of 1905, the burden will be upon him, if the defendants show the note was obtained by fraud, or that the consideration partly failed before he purchased it, to prove that he is an innocent purchaser without notice, or as the term is now used, “a holder in due course.” And this will be a question for the jury. [Investment Co. v. Bruce, 136 Mo. App. 257, 111 S. W. 888; Bank of Rominee, 132 Mo. App. 57, 117 S. W. 105.]

As this case must be retried, we do not want to comment on the facts further than to say that the fact that the plaintiff purchased the note without recourse and at the time did not know any of the defendants, and made no inquiry as to their financial condition except such as the statements made to him by the *293seller of the note, and with the further undisputed fact that he purchased $2,500 worth of notes bearing six per cent interest for $1,600, are questions which the jury have a right to consider. The payment of value for negotiable paper is a circumstance which should he taken into account with other facts in determining the question of the bona -fide of the transaction, and when full value is paid, is entitled to great weight.] Bank of Die-fendorf, 123 N. Y. 191.] But the amount of discount on the purchase of a note and the inadequacy or unreasonableness of the price paid therefor, is evidence of bad faith to be submitted to the jury. [Hugumin & Co. v. Hinds v. Weissgerber, 97 Mo. App. l. c. 353, 71 S. W. 479; Leavitt v. Taylor, 163 Mo. l. c. 171, 63 S. W. 385; Lay v. Wiseman, 36 la. 305; Dewit v. Perkins, 26 Wis. 451; Puller v. Goodnow, 64 N. W. 161; Mec v. Carlson, 117 N. W. 1033; Jordan v. Grover, 33 Pac. 869.]

For the errors above specified, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.

All concur.
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