94 Mo. 43 | Mo. | 1887
On the twenty-first of May, 1874, the-plaintiff, then Caroline S. Cranston, a widow lady, through A. W. Mead, loaned to Stubblefield, three-thousand dollars, for which she received the note of the lattfer for that amount, payable in two years to the order of Million, and by him endorsed in blank, the note being secured by a deed of trust on real estate. Mead had been her agent in loaning money before, and continued-
The answer is, first, a general denial, and then it sets up in substance that Mead had full power to collect the interest and to discount, or hypothecate, the note. There is a further allegation that defendant purchased the note in good faith, and without any notice that Mead did not have any authority to deal with the note from the owner; that the note bore the plaintiff’s ■•written endorsement; and that she thereby put it in The
The case, as made by the pleadings, is one at law, and no instructions having been asked or given there is but a single question before us for consideration, and that is, whether there is any evidence to support the general finding for the defendant. In these actions at law, tried by the court without a jury, it is just as essential that instructions should be given or refused, in order to enable us to review the action of the court, as it is in like cases tried with the aid of a jury. In either case, we must look to the instructions given, and the verdict or finding of the court, to see how the disputed questions of fact were resolved, and to the instructions, given and refused, to see upon what theory of law the cause was tried. We have no more right to determine disputed questions of fact in these suits when tried by the court, than we have when tried with the aid of a jury. In either case, the finding as to the facts on conflicting evidence is binding upon this court. Altum v. Arnold, 27 Mo. 264 ; Easley v. Elliott, 43 Mo. 289 ; Harbison v. School District, 89 Mo. 184.
Counsel for the plaintiff in error seem to suppose we will look to the written opinion of the trial court to learn how the disputed facts were found. We find no ■such opinion in the transcript. Even if incorporated in the bill of exceptions, it would be no part of the record. Such opinion cannot be made to take the place of instructions, or a finding of facts given as an instruction. The opinion of the trial court may be cited and used in the consideration of the case presented by the record, and in that respect is often of great value to us; but it is no part of the record upon which the case must be determined in this court. We have said this much because we are constantly asked to look to the -opinion of the trial court as a substitute for instructions,
There can be no doubt but the husband may be the agent of the wife, though the agency must be clearly established. Eystra v. Capelle, 61. Mo. 580; Rodgers v. Bank, 69 Mo. 562. In this case Mead was the agent of the plaintiff before and after their marriage; of this there is no question. The question of fact is as to the extent of that agency. The evidence tends to show that Mr. Mead collected the interest on this note for four years before the defendant acquired it. Plaintiff ordered the bank to deliver the note to him. The note bore the untestricted endorsement of “Mrs. Caroline S. Cranson,” and it was a negotiable note, not overdue when defendant received it; for the time of payment had been extended. Mead dealt with another of plaintiff’s notes for twelve hundred dollars, and hypothecated the same with the defendant, in substantially the same way that he did the one in question, and of’ this she seems to have been well informed. Mead was without means, and it appears that the proceeds of the note in question were, in part at least, used in paying house-rent and other family expenses. In making these transactions with defendant, Mr. Mead professed to be acting for a lady friend, the marriage not being disclosed either by him or her. Prom this evidence and the facts before stated, the court might well have found that Mr. Mead was authorizéd by her to hypothecate or sell the nóte. It is true the plaintiff’s evidence has a tendency to prove a want of such authority ; but as the case now stands we are only concerned in knowing that the evidence sustains a finding that he did have such power, for this is one of the issues made in the case.- With this conclusion the judgment will be affirmed.
It may be, as contended by the defendant, that as the plaintiff clothed Mr. Mead with outward power to
The judgment is affirmed.