61 Mo. 403 | Mo. | 1875
delivered the opinion of the court;
This was an action of ejectment brought in the Franklin circuit court to recover a tract or tracts-of laud in the petition described. The petition was in the usual form. The answer was a denial of the facts stated in the petition.
The trial was by the court., a jury having been waived by the parties. It was admitted by both parties that William
The plaintiff next offered in evidence a deed, commonly called a deed of trust, bearing the same date of the deed previously read in evidence, by which the land in controversy was conveyed by the defendant and his wife to William Kelso in trust to secure the payment of a promissory note, executed by the defendant, by which he promised to pay to the order of J. IF. Koehring the sum of three thousand three hundred dollars. The promissory note secured by the deed of trust is copied in the deed and reads as follows :
“$3,300. Washington, Mo., June 14, 1871.
Five years after date I promise to pay to the orderofJ.il. Koehring, thirty-three hundred dollars, for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount, with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent per annum.
Gerhard Muemminghoff.”
After setting forth the note as above copied, the deed of trust proceeded to set forth the following condition upon which the conveyance was made, to-wit: “Now, if the said note be well and truly paid when the same shall become due and payable, according to the tenor and effect thereof, then this deed shall be void, and the property hereinbefore conveyed shall be released at the cost of the said parties of the first part; but should default be made in the paj'ment of the said note, or any part thereof, or the interest that may accrue thereon or any part thereof, as the same shall become due and payable, then this deed shall remain in force, and the party of the second part,” etc. The deed then proceeds to give the trustee power to sell by giving twenty days’ notice, in form that is unobjectionable, and concludes in the usual form.
The plaintiff next offered in evidenee a deed dated the 10th day of August, 1S72, from Kelso, the trustee in the deed of trust read in evidence, to J. H. Koehring, plaintiff’, as trustee for Maria E. Koehring, attempting to convey the land in question to said Koehring, under the power in the deed of trust. This deed was also objected to by the defendant, because it appeared that no breach had been made of the conditions in the deed of trust, and that the trustee in the deed of trust, therefore, had no power to sell the land named. This objection was also overruled, and the deed read, to which the defendant again excepted.
The plaintiff then introduced one Wilhelmi as a witness, who testified that he drew the deed of trust, and the note described therein; that the parties at the time informed him that interest was to be paid annually ; that he understood that the words per annum,” used in the note, meant that the interest was to be paid every year; that he had so informed the parties to the note, and that they had assented to the drawing of the note in that language. The witness further stated that the words “ per annum ” mean every year, and that he had.told the defendant at the time, that by the terms of the note the interest was payable every year; that he said it was all right.
The defendant, at the time objected to this oral evidence, on the ground that parol evidence was not admissible to vary or add to the note and mortgage read in evidence. This objection being also overruled, objections were again saved. The defendant introduced no evidence. There were several declarations of law given and several refused by the court, to which objection is made, but as they raised no questions of law not raised by the evidenee, they will not be noticed. The court rendered a judgment for the plaintiff for the pos
It will be seen from the foregoing statement of this case that the only questions to be considered by this court are, first, as to the proper construction to be given to the note secured by the deed of trust read i.n evidence; and second, whether oral evidence was properly received by the court, to assist in its'proper construction?
The language of the note, so far as it is material to its proper construction as it affects this ease, is: “Five years after date, I promise to pay to the order of J. II. Koehring, thirty-three hundred dollars, * * * with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent, per annum.”
It is contended by the plaintiff that the language used is properly construed to be a promise by the defendant to pay the interest, on the sum secured by the note, annually, or if this is not the proper construction of the language of the note, then oral evidence was admissible to show that that was the understanding of the parties at the time, by the use of said language.
We do not agree with the plaintiff in either view of the question as taken by him. Whether the interest accruing on a promissory note should be paid annually, monthly, or at any other specified period, depends in each case upon the contract or agreement of the parties. There is no rule of law independent of any contract to that effect, requiring interest on promissory notes to be paid annually. (Bander vs. Bander, 7 Barb., 560, and cases cited.) In the note under consideration, the promise in the note was to pay the sum of money named, “with interest from date at the rate of eight per cent, per annum,” five years after the date of the note. No different time is fixed for the payment of the interest from that fixed for the payment of the principal secured to become due by the note. In such a case both principal and interest become due at the same time; in fact the promise plainly is to pay the principal, with the interest, five years
It almost necessarily follows, from what has already been said, that the second question raised in the case must also be settled in favor of the defendant. The rule of law, in reference to the admission of oral evidence to explain a promissory note or other written contract is, that the instrument should be construed according to the intention of the parties. To ascertain this intention, resort is first had to the language of the instrument, and if the language of the contract appears to be perfectly plain and capable of a legal construction, nothing dubious appearing upon the face of the contract, then the force and effect to be given to the contract must be determined by its terms, and oral evidence cannot, in such case, be heard to give the contract a different construction from that imported by its terms. To illustrate this rule, Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on Evidence, uses this language: “It is to be observed that the rule is directed only against the admission of any other evidence of the language employed by the parties in making the contract, than that which is furnished by the writing itself. The writing, it is true, may be read by the light of surrounding circumstances, in order more perfectly to understand the intent and meaning of the parties; but as they have constituted the writing to be the only outward and visible expression of their meaning, no other words are to be added to it, or substituted in its stead. The duty of the court in such ease, is to ascertain, not what the parties may have secretly intended, as contradistinguished from what their words express, but what is the meaning of words they have used. It is merely a duty of interpretation: that, is. to find out the true sense of the written words, as the parties used them ; and of construction ; that is, when the true sense is ascertained, to subject the instrument in its operation to
The admission of the parol evidence upon the trial of this case would seem to be plainly in conflict with the rule above stated by Green leaf. The only object of the parol evidence in this case must have been to contradict the writing, as it appears in the promissory note. The plain and legal interpretation of the note as the parties made it, is to make both principal and interest of the note due five years after its date. The oral evidence received by the court would make the promise of the defendant, one to pay the interest annually, and thus import new and additional words into the note, which is not permissible. (7 Barb.. 560, above referred to; Murdock vs. Ganahl, 47 Mo., 135; Massman vs. Halscher, 49 Mo., 87; Thornton vs. McGangh, 8 Mo., 161; Huse vs. McQuade, 52 Mo., 388.)
It follows that as the note named in the deed of trust was not due until five years after its date, and the sale having been made by the trustee named in the deed of trust a little more than one year after the execution of the note, and long before any default was or could be made by the defendant in the payment of the debt secured by the deed of trust, said sale and the deed made in pursuance thereof were without authority and void, at least so far as it pretended to foreclose the defendant’s right to redeem upon the payment of the debt and interest when it became due, and the defendant could not be dispossessed of bis land until default bad been made.
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded.