164 Mo. App. 195 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
Action upon a promissory note executed by .defendants to A.. H. Willard and by him assigned to plaintiff. The defense was fraud in procuring the note and against that defense plaintiff asserted that he was an innocent holder for value without notice. The note was given in payment for an interest in a stallion by defendant Jackson and the fraud alleged in procuring the note consisted in representations that the horse was a sure foal getter, which defendants alleged was false, and that for the purpose of inducing
The errors assigned relate to giving and refusing instructions. The refused instructions asked by plaintiff amounted to a peremptory direction to find for plaintiff and were based upon the premise that the proof did not show fraud in procuring the note or if there was fraud in the first instance there was no evidence that plaintiff had any knowledge thereof when he purchased the note. These were properly refused as to the first proposition because there was abundant evidence of fraud in procuring the note. They were also properly refused as to the second proposition because not properly declaring the law, for the reason that they impliedly placed the burden upon defendant to prove notice of the fraud on the part of plaintiff at the time he purchased the note. If the note was procured by fraud,,the burden was then upon plaintiff to show that he purchased it for value before maturity and without notice of the fraud as we held in this case on the former appeal.
The instructions given on behalf of defendant to which plaintiff objects are as follows:
No. 2. “The court instructs the jury that the words ‘actual knowledge’ as used in these instructions do not mean that the plaintiff must have known the truth of the fraud, if any, in procuring of the note in question from the defendant Jackson, in the sense which would enable him to testify to the facts of said fraud, if any, in this trial; but do mean that the plaintiff Link had such knowledge of said fraud, if any, as satisfies you that the said Link acted in the purchasing of said note in the belief, and not merely the suspicion, that said note, at the time he purchased the same, was procured by fraud.”
No. 1 is assailed because the word fraud is not defined; that is, that the court should have told the jury what facts they would be required to find in order to find that the note was procured by fraud and not have left it to the jury to say what would constitute fraud. Generally spealdng, plaintiffs’ contention on this question is correct. A party basing an action or defense upon fraud cannot plead it in general terms but must allege the facts upon which he relies as constituting the fraud. He must then prove his case- as he has pleaded it and the instructions should follow the proof. In this case, however, the evidence of fraud
The objection to instruction No. 2 for defendants is that “belief” and “knowledge” are not synonymous and no matter what plaintiff may have “believed” as to whether or not the note was procured by fraud, yet, if he did not have actual knowledge of it, he was not bound by it. If a fact exists and a party has such knowledge of it as to cause him to believe that it exists and he acts upon that belief, the result is the same as if he had actual knowledge of the fact and acted upon that. If the note in suit was procured by fraud and the plaintiff had such knowledge bearing upon that question as to cause him to believe that it was procured by fraud, then as far as his action in purchasing the note is concerned he knew ’that the note was procured by fraud. Belief is the conviction that arises in the mind as a result of knowledge of facts calculated to produce that conviction. If, as a matter of fact, the note was procured by fraud, then knowledge of facts bearing on that question which go no farther than to arouse suspicion are not sufficient, but when the impression made upon the mind by knowledge of facts relating to such fraud passes from the realm of suspicion and grows to belief, it then becomes knowledge. Knowledge of fraud to bind a party is knowledge of such facts as would cause a reasonably