92 Mo. App. 192 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This is an action to recover the value of a promissory note alleged to have been loaned by the plaintiff to the defendant, an incorporated life insurance company, and wrongfully converted by the latter to its own use.
The petition alleged that'the defendant executed and delivered to plaintiff a certain agreement in writing whereby it
The answer contained a general denial and then alleged that the said note was assigned to and deposited with defendant as collateral security to be by it held for the payment of a certain number of shares of its stock which had been issued to plaintiff; that said stock had not been paid for by plaintiff nor any one for him; that said note was held by it for the payment of the purchase price of said stock,' which said note it was ready and willing and offered to surrender on payment of the purchase price of the stock to it, etc. • -
During the progress of the trial, which was to a jury, the plaintiff offered to read in evidence the written agreement pleaded in his petition and alleged to have been executed by the defendant, to the reading of which the defendant objected, (1) because "it showed on its face not to have been the act of the defendant but that of an individual” and (2) because there was nothing to show that it grew out of any act of Wurdeman “as an officer of the defendant.” It is perhaps proper to state in this connection that the said written agreement concluded in this wise, to-wit: “In witness whereof said •company is hereby bound by these presents. (Signed) Central Life Insurance Company. By G. A. Wurdeman, 2d Vice-President.” The court overruled the defendant’s objections and permitted the said agreement to be read in evidence. And the paramount question raised by the defendant’s appeal, and that most discussed in the briefs of counsel is, whether or not the action of the trial court in permitting the plaintiff to read in evidence said written agreement without any proof of its execution by defendant, or without proof of authority in its second vice-president to execute the same for it.
The Revised Statutes of 1845 and 1855, and the'General Statutes of 1865, provided that “whenever any pleading shali be founded upon any instrument of writing charged to have
As was said by Judge Hall in McGill v. Wallace, 21 Mo. App. 675, the “present statute is materially different from the former.” Under the former the only effect of not pleading non est factum under oath was that the plaintiff could read the instrument in evidence without proof of execution. Klein v. Keyes (1852), 17 Mo. 326; Carpenter v. Lathrop, 51 Mo. 483; McGill v. Wallace, 22 Mo. App. 675; Smith v. Rembaugh, 21 Mo. App. 390. But under the latter if the party charged to have executed the instrument of writing fail in his pleading to deny the execution of such instrument under oath, then the execution thereof shall be adjudged confessed as a binding contract. Smith v. Rembaugh, ante; Thomas v. Life Ass’n, 73 Mo. App. 371. The former of the last two cited cases was an action on a promissory note, where the answer was a general denial unverified. A motion for judgment was therein sustained notwithstanding the answer. This ruling of the trial court was approved. And the latter was an action on a certificate of life insurance where the answer was a general denial
It is thus seen that the contract in the present ease stood confessed and it was wholly unnecessary for the plaintiff to have read it in evidence. And to the same effect as the two last-cited cases are Bates v. Scheik, 47 Mo. App. 642; Saville v. Huffstetter, 63 Mo. App. 273; Zervis v. Unnerstall, 29 Mo. App. 474; Greene Co. v. Wilhite, 29 Mo. App. 459; State v. Chamberlin, 54 Mo. 338.
If the written agreement pleaded stood confessed by the answer as that of defendant, and if it was not required of the plaintiff that he introduce it in evidence, it must inevitably follow that the defendant’s objections to the reading of it in evidence were not well taken. Its execution as a valid obligation then stood confessed before the jury and that was enough, but if the plaintiff chose to read it to the jury in connection with his offerings of evidence, he had a right to do so. It is certain the defendant was not in anyway thereby prejudiced.
But it is suggested, as the written agreement pleaded showed on its face that it was executed for the defendant by one of its officers, that the authority of such officer was required to be proved before the instrument could be read in evidence, notwithstanding its execution stood confessed by the defendant. There are cases cited by defendant which it is contended by him support this view. Swearingen v. Knox, 10 Mo. 31; Pope v. Risley, 23 Mo. 185. These cases were decided prior to the adoption of the amendment of 1868 already cited, and are, in our opinion, inapplicable > to cases arising under the present statute.
The statute itself has in express terms specified the several classes of obligations which are included in the exceptions which it provides, and as that in the present case is not one of these, we are authorized to consider it as excluded. “The expression of one thing is the exclusion of another.” No fault can therefore be imputed to the trial court, for its action in
We are unable to discover any fatal objection to the plaintiffs instruction. It substantially outlined the theory presented by his petition. It was within the limits of the issues made by the pleadings. The defendant, in view of the effect which we have given to the defendant’s answer, was, we think, quite fortunate in securing from the court the instructions which it did. Certainly there is little or no room for. complaint on that ground. The special defense pleaded by the answer was fully covered by the instructions given by the court on its own motion and at the instance of the defendant. While the evidence was glaringly conflicting in some material re> spects, yet it can not be said it was not sufficient to justify the submission of the case on the several theories outlined by the instructions. The credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to evidence was for the determination of the jury, and under the well-recognized rule of appellate practice in this State that determination is conclusive on us, and especially so in a case like this where there appears to be nothing to bring it within any possible exception to the rule.
The defendant in its motion for a new trial, as one of the grounds therefor, alleged that the amendment to the Constitution of this State authorizing a verdict by a jury in civil cases in the circuit court by a less number than the entire panel of twelve, had not been submitted to and passed upon by the voters of the State in the manner required for the submission of constitutional amendments by the Constitution of the State, and that, therefore, the said amendment was no part of the Constitution of this State. Even if the verdict of the jury was by a less number than twelve, as was the case as disclosed by the record, yet we can not discover that there is raised any fairly debatable constitutional question in the case, since the defendant adduced no evidence whatever to support the allegations of its motion. As it appears from the record that no