93 Mo. 114 | Mo. | 1887
In March, 1873, James C. Rogers died, seized in fee of the one hundred and twenty acres of land described in the petition, leaving surviving him his widow, Sarah J., who afterwards intermarried with Payette P. Payne, and one child, Thomas, aged about two years. In October, 1876, said real estate, in a proceeding in the probate court of Johnson county, in which county the same was situate, was set off to said widow and child as a homestead. On the second day of November, 1876, the said Sarah J. sold, for the consideration of fifteen hundred dollars, and, with her husband, conveyed by general warranty deed, said real estate to one Amanda E. Edwards. On the first of January, 1878, for the consideration of sixteen hundred and fifty dollars, the said Amanda E. Edwards sold, and, with her husband, conveyed, by general warranty deed, said real
The foregoing conveyances were all properly executed and acknowledged, and of record in Johnson county aforesaid, when, on the eleventh day of August, 1880, the plaintiffs, being in possession of an abstract of the title of said real estate, showing as well such conveyances as said proceedings of said probate court setting off said land as a homestead, and who, at that time, were acquainted with the said Thomas Rogers and his mother; knew that said land had been set off to them as a homestead, and that the said Thomas was a minor and the son of the said James Rogers, and that there was a controversy as to his interest in the land, purchased said real estate of said Dixon, who before that date had paid off the one hundred and thirty-dollar note, and the accrued interest on the eight hundred-dollar note to January 1,1880, and fifty dollars of the principal thereof, paying said Dixon, as the consideration for said real estate, the sum of one thousand and fifty dollars in cash, and
On the third of January, 1881, the plaintiffs paid the interest on said eight hundred-dollar note for 1880. On the twenty-fourth of November, 1881, Sarah J. Payne, the mother of Thomas Rogers, died. On the twenty-fifth of December, 1881, plaintiffs paid the interest on said note to January 1, 1882. At the February term, 1882, of the circuit court of Johnson county, the said Thomas Rogers, by his guardian and curator, instituted an action in ejectment against the plaintiffs to recover possession of the premises aforesaid. On the tenth of March, 1882,' the defendant, being also in possession of an abstract of the title to said real estate, and after examining the chain of title, purchased said eight hundred-dollar note of the said Amanda E. Edwards, through her agent, Rowland, for the sum of five hundred dollars, and thereupon she and her husband assigned, by endorsement without recourse, and delivered said note to the defendant. At the June term, 1882, of the Johnson county circuit court, Thomas Rogers, by his guardian and curator, obtained judgment in his action in ejectment against the plaintiffs for the recovery of the premises, and for rents and profits, in the sum of two hundred dollars, with stay -of execution to March 1, 1883. From this judgment, the plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court, where the judgment of the circuit court was affirmed at the October term, 1884, thereof. Rogers v. Mayes, 84 Mo. 520.
Pending said appeal, the plaintiffs commenced this, action in the Johnson county circuit court by petition in the nature of a bill in equity, whereby they seek to have
Counsel for the plaintiffs concede that the note in question is a negotiable promissory note, and that the defendant purchased the same for value before maturity. The evidence in the case, as preserved in the record before us, fails to disclose that the defendant, at the time he purchased the note, had any knowledge of the consideration thereof except such as he might have derived from the note itself, its endorsements, the deed of trust, the record of the title of the real estate, and the abstract thereof, and whilst these could not have informed him of the failure of the consideration of the note, it is contended that they did disclose facts that would have put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, whereby he might have discovered other facts, that is, the existence of Thomas Rogers, his minority, the interest he had in the real estate, which asserted, caused, or might work a failure of the consideration of said note, and are sufficient
If the question of notice in this case is to be determined by the rules applicable to under-due commercial paper, this contention cannot be maintained. It is contended, however, that the note was taken without recourse ; that the defendant relied exclusively upon the security of the deed of trust in making the purchase and is bound by the recitals in the chain of title ; that the proceedings in the probate court, setting off the premises as a homestead, showing that Thomas Rogers at that time had an interest therein, were sufficient to put the defendant upon inquiry, and that, in this case, in determining the question of notice, the rules governing the transfer of commercial paper ought not to obtain, but that the defendant should be treated the same as if he were a purchaser of real estate. That the note was taken without recourse could not in any manner affect the rights of the indorsee against the maker.
Nor could the fact that the indorsee relied upon the security of the deed of trust, and not upon the solvency of the maker, vary the nature of the contract. The contract as to the note was that the maker should pay it at
The judgment of the circuit court was for the right party, and is affirmed.