57 Mo. App. 639 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1894
— This is a'suit on a promissory note made by John E. Rucker, principal, and the defendant as surety, for $200 payable one day after the date thereof, to the order of the Sturgeon Lodge A. E. &. A. M. , No. 174, which said note was alleged in the petition to have been assigned by said Lodge to D. A. Mayer & Bro., for value received and by the latter sold and delivered to plaintiff, the present legal owner and holder thereof. The answer admitted the execution of the note but put in issue the assignment. It further pleaded that said lodge was an unincorporated association of which plaintiff and defendant were, at the time of the execution of the note and still were, members; that said lodge by an order of record ordered the said note so owing to it to be collected; that under said order the records of said lodge showed that said note had been paid and that plaintiff was fully advised of th¿ fact by such entries of record; that defendant being likewise so advised and replying upon the same as true, took no legal steps to save himself harmless as surety as he otherwise could and would have done, the principal of
The replication interposed a denial of the allegations of new matter. There was a trial resulting in judgment for plaintiff, from which defendant has appealed.
The defendant objects that the payee of said note being an unincorporated society was without capacity to assign the same. This objection is not well taken for the reason that the rule of law is, that the execution of a negotiable note estops the maker to deny the existing capacity of the payee to indorse the same. This is upon the principal that by making such note he intimates to all persons that he considers the payee capable of making an order sufficient to transfer the property in the note. To permit the maker to dispute the power of the payee to indorse such an instrument under such circumstances, would be an intolerable fraud upon the public. Daniels on Neg. Inst. secs. 93, 536; Bigelow on Estop., 495-499; Young v. Chew, 9 Mo. App. 387; Knaus v. Givens, 110 Mo. 58; Insurance Co. v. Bowman, 60 Mo. 252; Insurance Co. v. Needles, 52 Mo. 17; St. Louis v. Shields, 62 Mo. 247. It follows, therefore, that the defendant is estopped to make the defense suggested by his objection. Whether the said lodge was incorporated or not, is not made to appear by the evidence, nor is it material, one way or the other, that it should.
The defendant further objects that the evidence does not show that the two trustees of said lodge, who made the assignment, had any authority so to do. The record of the lodge offered in evidence tended to show that the said trustees had been elected and were acting as such when they made the indorsement of the note. It further appears from the by-laws of the lodge that any two of said trustees should constitute a quo
Whether the trustees were authorized by the lodge to make the indorsement, was a question of fact for the jury to determine from the evidence. The court we think correctly instructed the jury, at the instance of the plaintiff, in effect, that though the trustees indorsed the note without the knowledge or authority of the lodge to Mayer & Bro. for-a valuable consideration, yet if said lodge afterwards received and applied to its own use the consideration and otherwise acquiesced in such indorsement, that such acts were a ratification of the authority of the trustees, and the verdict should be for plaintiff for the unpaid balance on the note, provided Mayer & Bro. had for a valuable consideration sold the
The defendant, however, contends that this theory of the plaintiff’s instruction is erroneous, in submitting to the jury the question of ratification, for the reason that it did not appear from the evidence that the lodge had knowledge of the indorsement of the note by the trustees and so could not ratify their act. It does not clearly appear from the evidence at just what time the fact that the indorsement had been made first came to the actual knowledge of the lodge. Its treasurer had notice of the fact, and, if there was nothing more, we should be inclined to think notice to him was notice to the lodge. Story on Agency, sections 140, 451; Bank v. Lavitt, 114 Mo. 519. But that the lodge'did acquire actual knowledge of the transaction later on is conceded all around, and when it did acquire such knowledge it did not repudiate «the act of the trustees and tender back the consideration that ■ had been covered into the treasury, and demand the return of the note, but permitted the status quo to remain undisturbed and thereby ratified the act of the trustees.
Another instruction given for plaintiff told the jury that if they found from the evidence that the trustees indorsed and delivered the note in behalf of the lodge to Mayer & Bro. for a valuable consideration which was received and appropriated by it to its own use, and Mayer & Bro. for a valuable consideration sold the note to plaintiff their verdict should be for him. From the' power conferred on the trustees by the by-laws and the order to settle with Mayer & Bro. and procure their deed to the hall, we think the jury might well have inferred the authority- to negotiate the note and thereby raise the amount of money
We can discover no ground upon which those asked by him and refused could have been given. The case went, to the jury upon instructions which in substance were unexceptionable in their statement of the rules of law applicable to the case and the defendant has, therefore, no ground of complaint on that account.
The defense of estoppel pleaded in the answer was submitted to the jury under an instruction given for defendant, so there is no complaint in respect to it.
The death of Robinson, the treasurer of the lodge, did not disqualify the plaintiff as a witness in the case, for the reason that neither party to the assignment, about which he testified, nor the trustees or agents connected therewith were dead at the time of the trial. If interest of the lodge in the result of the suit would disqualify plaintiff under the statute, which we can not see would be the ease, still the facts which his testimony tended to prove were likewise testified to by other witnesses, so that it was at least but cumulative evidence.
Nor can we think that plaintiff with the witnesses Graves and Jesse, were incompetent because of the death of Rucker the principal in the note, or Robinson, the treasurer. The defendant being alive was a competent witness for all purposes in the case reaching to the original contract; the statute did, therefore, not
The judgment seems to be for the right party, and, as no ground of error has been called to 6ur attention materially affecting the merits, we are bound to affirm the judgment which is accordingly ordered.