264 S.W. 706 | Mo. | 1924
In its origin (taking plaintiff's petition as the origin) this suit apparently involved a simple suit upon a note for $3000, dated April 24, 1918, payable to National Bank of Commerce, and signed by Henry D. Laughlin. Said note was due and payable on July 23, 1918, and bore interest from such date at eight per cent.
Defendant plead by way of answer and counterclaim, which were met by a reply. The simple suit upon the $3000 note, supra, finally resulted in a verdict of the jury, in these words: *15
"We, the jury, find for the defendant on plaintiff's cause of action; and we further find for the defendant on defendant's counterclaim and assess the amount of his recovery thereon in the sum of $8381.65 with interest at six per cent. Interest $2011.59. Total $10393.24."
Defendant's answer and counterclaim contain a wealth of detail, but the transactions between the parties to this suit seem to justify the pleading, and there is evidence upon the part of defendant tending to show all the well pleaded facts in his answer and counterclaim. The answer and counterclaim are in these words: "1. Now comes the defendant, and by leave of court, files this his amended answer and counterclaim.
"Defendant denies all and singular the allegations in plaintiff's petition contained, and prays to be hence dismissed with his costs.
"4. That a short time prior to February 6, 1908, B.F. Edwards, who was at that time, and for a long time prior and subsequent to said date, the president of the bank, approached defendant and informed him of the state of affairs between the bank and said Kern, as above stated, and requested the said defendant to take, in his name, for the use of the bank, a note for ten thousand dollars, signed by Kern and secured by second deed of trust on the two thousand acres of land in Macon County, owned by Kern, and requested that he, the said defendant, for the accommodation of said bank, endorse his name on the back of said note and deliver it to the bank, so that said bank could hold same as collateral to secure some of the notes of said Kern, held by it.
"5. That at said time, the defendant covenanted, represented and warranted that said Kern owned said land in Macon County; that the same was worth a sum largely in excess of the said second deed of trust for ten thousand dollars, and that the said bank could and would make the whole sum of ten thousand dollars, and accumulating interest thereon, out of the second deed of trust on said land, and that the said bank and said Edwards covenanted, warranted, agreed and guaranteed that the deed of trust was ample to pay the ten thousand dollar note, and that the said bank and the said Edwards would warrant and guarantee said state of facts and indemnify the defendant against any loss, whatever, on account of the endorsement and delivery of said note, and further covenanted, *17 guaranteed and warranted that the indebtedness of Kern to the bank to secure which said ten thousand dollar note should be attached as collateral, would be placed prior to, and ahead of, any other indebtedness of Kern, and be first paid by moneys derived from Kern's properties, and particularly, by money received from the sale of the Kern lands, upon which the deed of trust was to be given.
"6. Defendant says that for the sole purpose of accommodating the plaintiff, and in consideration of the bank and Edwards undertaking as aforesaid, the defendant agreed to permit the note to be taken in his name, secured as aforesaid, and thereupon the plaintiff caused to be prepared a promissory note, dated February 6, 1908, in the sum of ten thousand dollars, and to secure its payment did cause to be prepared a deed of trust covering all of said lands belonging to Kern in Macon County, to-wit, 1851.75 acres, and thereupon, on the conditions aforesaid, and at the request of the bank, and for its accommodation (but not for the accommodation or at the request of said Kern or any other person) the defendant did endorse and deliver said note for ten thousand dollars, to the bank, upon the conditions aforesaid, and relying solely upon the undertakings of the plaintiff and said Edwards, as above set forth; that said bank, having thus obtained the possession of said note, caused said deed of trust to be filed for record in the office of the Recorder of Deeds for Macon County, and it became the second encumbrance, subject to the prior encumbrance of twenty-six thousand dollars, on all of said lands.
"7. Plaintiff says that after the delivery of the said note for ten thousand dollars, the defendant, at the request of said bank, and for its accommodation, executed in lieu thereof, other notes in varying amounts, and at divers times, and defendant avers that the note sued upon is part of the original transaction evidenced by the note dated February 6, 1908, the details of which will be more specifically set forth thereafter. *18
"8. Defendant further states that on or about the 10th day of August, 1908, while the bank was holding said note, the defendant, at the request of said bank, executed and delivered to said bank a quit-claim deed purporting to release six hundred and eighty-two acres of the land covered by the said second deed of trust, in order to enable the bank to co-operate with said Kern and convert the said land so released into cash or secured notes, by which the debt of Kern, for which the ten thousand dollars was held as collateral, could be paid or otherwise secured, and the note of February 6, 1908, released and satisfied.
"9. Defendant states that some time prior to October 27, 1910, the plaintiff approached the defendant and stated to him that Kern was re-financing his affairs; that he had exchanged about four hundred acres of his land in Macon County, Missouri, for two hundred acres of land in Cameron County, Texas; that the Cameron County land was of the value of thirty thousand dollars; that he, the said Kern, had about twelve hundred acres of Macon County land still in his name, and that he had arranged to borrow thirty-five thousand dollars on first deed of trust thereon, and to give to defendant, for the use of the bank, a note for ten thousand dollars, secured by second deed of trust on said twelve hundred acres in Macon County, and he, the said Kern, had agreed to give the bank a first deed of trust for twenty thousand dollars on the two hundred acres in Cameron County, Texas, and that if defendant would make a full release of the deed of trust dated February 6, 1908, said Kern would execute a new note to defendant, for the use of the bank, for ten thousand dollars, in lieu of the note of February 6, 1908, and that if defendant would endorse and deliver said new ten-thousand-dollar note to the bank, for its accommodation, the bank would hold the Kern note for twenty thousand dollars, secured by the Cameron County, Texas, land, as first collateral to secure said new note of ten thousand dollars, and that as soon as any sums were derived *19 from either the Macon County or Cameron County, Texas, deeds of trust, they would be applied as a credit on the new ten-thousand-dollar note upon which defendant's name would appear as an endorser.
"10. The said bank and the said Edwards then and there stated, covenanted, warranted and guaranteed that the second deed of trust on the Macon County land would cover twelve hundred acres, and would be amply secured; that said Kern's equity in said twelve hundred acres covered by said second deed of trust was worth a sum largely in excess of ten thousand dollars; that the bank could and would collect the entire sum of ten thousand dollars, and interest, out of said equity, and that it would hold said deed of trust as security for said ten-thousand-dollar note, and further stated, warranted and guaranteed, that it had arranged to obtain from Kern a first deed of trust on two hundred acres of land in Cameron County, Texas; that said Cameron County land was worth thirty thousand dollars, and that the deed of trust was worth its face, twenty thousand dollars, and that it would hold said twenty-thousand-dollar note and deed of trust in addition to the ten-thousand-dollar deed of trust as security and as collateral to secure defendant as an endorser on said note, and the said bank further agreed, stated, represented and warranted that it would indemnify the plaintiff against any and all losses he might sustain on account of his said name appearing on the back of said ten-thousand-dollar note.
"11. Defendant, relying upon the covenants and understandings aforesaid, and for the sole accommodation of the bank, agreed with the bank to do as it requested, if the bank would remain bound by the aforesaid representations, guaranties, and warranties, and consent, also, that Kern might give to the St. Louis Union Trust Company a second deed of trust for five thousand dollars on the same land, and allow the deed of trust from Kern to Laughlin for ten thousand dollars for the use of the bank, to rank as a third deed of trust on said land, subject *20 to prior encumbrances, aggregating forty thousand dollars, and to this change, the bank consented and agreed to remain bound by the representations, guaranties and warranties aforesaid, and thereafter the said bank prepared, or caused to be prepared, a deed of trust from Robert H. Kern to Henry D. Laughlin, dated October 27, 1910, to secure a note for ten thousand dollars, payable on demand after date, with six per cent interest thereon from date; that defendant took no part in the preparation of said deed of trust, and did not know how many acres it covered, but has since learned that it covered 374.25 acres only, but the defendant, believing said deed of trust covered twelve hundred acres, as agreed, wrote his name on the back of the note and delivered it to the bank for its accommodation and at its request, on the conditions aforesaid, and relying upon the covenants and understandings and warranties above set forth.
"12. Defendant says that the said bank then and there received said note of October 27, 1910, in its possession; that on or about the 19th day of February, the defendant was indebted to the bank on account of the balance of other notes, in the sum of $2,943.44, and on said date the bank computed the amount of interest accruing on said ten-thousand-dollar note, and averred that it amounted to $1,381.65, which interest, added to the principal, aggregated $11,381.65. On and about the said 19th day of February, 1913, the bank requested the defendant to give to it his note for $14,327.05, being the amount of said two items, and on said date, he did give to said bank his note for said amount, maturing the 20th day of May, 1913, on the condition and with the understanding, as more fully stated hereinafter, that he was to pay said bank that portion of the note represented by the $2,943.44, which he owed said bank, and that the remainder of said note, to-wit, $11,381.65, was in lieu of the Kern ten-thousand-dollar note, and should not be paid by him, but should be paid out of the collateral, to-wit, the ten-thousand-dollar note of Kern, secured by deed of trust on *21 the Macon County lands, and the twenty-thousand-dollar note secured by deed of trust of Kern, given on the said Cameron County lands, both of which notes the bank then held as collateral security for the balance of the $14,327.05 note, after deducting the part thereof owed by defendant, to-wit, $2,943.44.
"13. Defendant says that on June 30, 1913, he remitted to the bank, four thousand dollars, and out of that sum the bank paid the $2,943.44 (together with interest) which was owing to it by the defendant and included in the $14,327.05 note, and retained the remainder for the use of the defendant; that such remittance was made at the request of the bank and for its accommodation, and that thereafter, at the request of the bank and for its accommodation, the plaintiff remitted to the bank various sums of money which the bank credited to said defendant, and on each occasion when he remitted money to the bank, the $14,327.05 note was renewed, the amount of said renewal being reduced by the amount of credit which the bank gave on account of remittances received from Laughlin, until said note was, on April 26, 1918, renewed for three thousand dollars, the same being the note sued upon in this case.
"14. The defendant states that at and before the date when he signed the note for $14,327.05, the bank and its president, B.F. Edwards, stated to him that they, the said Edwards and the said bank, were being severely criticized by the shareholders of the bank, and some of the directors, and the bank examiners, on account of the long delay in realizing on the obligations of the said Kern, and that the criticisms had produced great embassassment to the bank and said Edwards, and that he, the said Edwards and the said bank, therefore desired to change the form of obligation so that it would not appear so stale and overdue, and to that end the bank and said Edwards requested defendant to give his note to the bank to cover the amount he owed it individually, and also, in lieu of the amount represented by the Kern note, upon which he *22 was endorser, and to pay, as soon as possible, the amount really due from said Laughlin, and to renew, from time to time, the note taken in lieu of the obligation of Kern, and at each renewal, to remit to the plaintiff certain sums of money of which the plaintiff would keep strict account, and to continue this course of dealing until such time as the bank could realize upon the deeds of trust held by it on the Cameron County lands, and said bank and said Edwards stated that the same understandings and agreements entered into between the defendant and the bank and said Edwards at the time when the note of February 6, 1908, was endorsed, and at the time when the note of ten thousand dollars, dated October 27, 1910, was endorsed (all of which has heretofore been alleged herein), would be continued and would apply to that part of the $14,327.05 note, representing the Kern indebtedness, which defendant would sign, and to any renewal thereof, and that any sums of money which defendant remitted to the bank at the time said note might be renewed, over and above what he really owed as aforesaid, would be held for the use and benefit of the defendant, and repaid to him with interest, as soon as the collateral could be realized upon, and the bank and said Edwards, at that time, warranted, convenanted and guaranteed that it held a mortgage of forty thousand dollars on lands of Kern which mortgage was of great value, and that the Cameron County deed of trust for twenty thousand dollars was a first deed of trust, good and collectible, and was of the value of twenty thousand dollars, and was owned by the bank and could be collected by the bank, and when so collected, the first money arising therefrom or from the forty-thousand-dollar deed of trust would be used to pay back to Laughlin any sums of money that he might remit to the bank, and to take up the balance, if any, of the Kern indebtedness represented by the $14,327.05 note, or any renewal thereof, and further, again convenanted and agreed to indemnify defendant against any loss he might sustain by reason of having signed said note or *23 any renewal thereof, or by reason of having remitted to the bank any money at the time said note was renewed.
"15. Defendant says that he relied upon each and all the agreements, representations and warranties above set forth, and because of and on account of so relying he, on the conditions before stated, endorsed and delivered for the accommodation of the bank, the two ten-thousand-dollar notes, dated February 6, 1908, and October 27, 1910, and signed the note of February 19, 1913, for $14,327.05 and each renewal thereof, and remitted to the plaintiff on or about the dates when the last mentioned note was renewed, the sums of money hereinabove referred to in this pleading.
"16. Defendant says that the said bank broke, breached and violated the conditions, representations, guaranties and warranties above set forth, in the following particulars, to-wit:
"After obtaining from the defendant the release of the deed of trust dated February 6, 1908, the bank allowed the said Kern to dispose of a large part of the land covered by it, to-wit, about four hundred acres, of great value, and failed and neglected to take from said Kern a deed of trust on twelve hundred acres of land in Macon County, subject to two prior deeds of trust, aggregating forty thousand dollars, as agreed, but, on the contrary, took from said Kern, without the knowledge or consent of defendant, a deed of trust dated October 27, 1910, on only 374.25 acres of said twelve hundred acres, all of which 374.25 acres (together with other lands), were subject to prior deeds of trust aggregating forty thousand dollars, and had no equity of any value, and on the remaining lands in said twelve hundred acres the bank took another deed of trust for forty thousand dollars, dated October 27, 1910, given at request of the bank to its cashier, W.B. Cowen, and assigned to the bank, which last named deed of trust was taken to secure indebtedness of Kern to the bank, other than said ten-thousand-dollar note endorsed to the bank by Laughlin.
"That the forty-thousand-dollar deed of trust was *24 of no value and the deed of trust on the Cameron County land was not a first mortgage on two hundred acres, but covered one hundred acres only, and said one hundred acres were subject to an encumbrance or vendor's lien, in the sum of seven thousand dollars, which was prior to the deed of trust held by plaintiff, and that said land was not of the value of thirty thousand dollars, but was worth not to exceed six thousand dollars, and that the vendor's lien aforesaid was adjudged prior to the bank's deed of trust and was foreclosed and the land sold on or about __, 19__, for less than seven thousand dollars, and said note and deed of trust were utterly worthless and of no value, and neither plaintiff nor defendant ever received anything on account of said twenty-thousand-dollar deed of trust, or on account of any collateral.
"17. Defendant says that he remitted to the bank large sums of money aggregating over eight thousand dollars, and incurred expenses in a large sum, on account of the matters and things herein alleged, and the plaintiff has failed and neglected and refused to re-pay to defendant the sums so remitted and expended, all of which have been a loss to the defendant, and the premises considered, defendant says plaintiff is not entitled to recover on said note, and he prays judgment for his costs in this behalf laid out and expended.
"19. The defendant further states that on or about January, 12, 1916, the bank still insisted that the Cameron County twenty-thousand-dollar deed of trust was of a value largely in excess of the amounts defendant had remitted to the bank, and of the balance claimed to be due on the note, and then and there, to defendant, and in his presence, repeated, ratified and adopted the representations, statements and covenants heretofore set forth *25 herein, and agreed to be bound by them and to carry them out, and in consideration thereof, requested defendant to foreclose said mortgage, and delivered the same to him under the agreements aforesaid, and as evidence of, and in confirmation of, the said previous agreements and understanding, the said bank made a memorandum in writing of same, and endorsed it upon the papers relating to said matter, and said memorandum is to the effect that the bank would pay the defendant the first ten thousand dollars realized from the sale of the said Cameron County property, and any balance over said ten thousand dollars should be paid to the bank and applied on the balance unpaid on said note, which balance then was sixty-five hundred dollars. A copy of said memorandum is hereto attached and made part of this pleading, and marked `Exhibit A.'
"20. That it was, on or about January 12, 1916, covenanted and agreed, by the bank, that defendant, in consideration of his undertaking to foreclose said mortgage on the Texas lands, should be re-paid by the bank, all expenses incurred by him in the matters of foreclosing said deed of trust, and that pursuant thereto he employed counsel in Texas to file and prosecute said foreclosure suit and paid said counsel a reasonable fee, to-wit, three hundred dollars, for performing said services, and defendant also incurred and paid other expenses accruing on account of said foreclosure, including railroad fare to and from Texas, aggregating at least two hundred dollars; that such proceedings were had in said case that the deed of trust or mortgage of the bank was held to be subject to a prior vendor's lien for seven thousand dollars, which exceeded the value of the property and nothing was realized from said deed of trust or from said foreclosure, and defendant says the plaintiff is indebted to him in the sum of five hundred dollars, for money paid and expenses incurred in prosecuting said action of foreclosure. *26
"21. Defendant further says that from November 25, 1913 to April 24, 1918, the bank received from him, on the following dates, the following sums of money, to-wit:
"Nov. 25, 1913 ............ $1,083.33 Feb. 26, 1914 ............ 135.00 June 3, 1914 ............ 645.50 Aug. 28, 1914 ............ 631.75 Feb. 19, 1915 ............ 617.75 June 19, 1915 ............ 644.90 Sept. 30, 1915 ............ 633.47 Jan. 24, 1916 ............ 624.20 May 16, 1916 ............ 613.85 Sept. 25, 1916 ............ 601.66 Jan. 22, 1917 ............ 590.00 May 25, 1917 ............ 583.33 Sept. 24, 1917 ............ 571.17 Feb. 19, 1918 ............ 547.60 Jan. 24, 1918 ............ 45.60 _________ "Total, ... $8,569.11
"22. The defendant further says that on February 19, 1913, the bank computed the interest on the Kern ten-thousand-dollar note, which defendant had endorsed and delivered to the bank, at $1381.65, and said sum, plus the ten thousand dollars of principal, was incorporated in the note of $14,327.05, given on that date, and the interest at six per cent, on said $11,381.65, from February 2, 1913, to August 27, 1913, amounted to $356.57, making the total interest accrued on said note, to August 27, 1913, the sum of $1738.22, and on February 19, 1913, and August 27, 1913, and on other times between said dates, the bank received of defendant the said sum of $1738.22 and applied it as a credit on said interest.
"23. Defendant further says that the balance unpaid on said $14,327.05, on August 27, 1913, was the sum of ten thousand dollars; that on September 29, 1913, said ten-thousand-dollar note was renewed for the principal sum of $10,083.33 (the $83.33 representing interest thereon), *27 and on November 25, 1913, the plaintiff received from defendant $1083.33, and said note was on November 25, 1913, renewed for the principal sum of $9,135, and that each time thereafter, from November 25, 1913, to and including February 24, 1918, when the sums of money above set forth were received by the bank, it applied same as a credit on the said note, and in each instance a renewal note was given for the balance unpaid, the note sued upon being the last renewal note.
"The defendant therefore says that the bank is indebted to him as follows:
"For outlays on and after Jan. 12, 1916, in the matter of foreclosing Texas deed of trust or mortgage ........................... $ 500.00
"For money had and received by the bank from the defendant on the dates heretofore stated, and by said bank used to take up the interest to February 19, 1913, accruing on the Kern note of ten thousand dollars ...................................... 1381.65
"For money had and received by the bank from the defendant on the dates heretofore stated, and used by the bank to take up the interest on $11,381.65, from February 19, 1913, to August 27, 1913, at six per cent (the principal on which said interest is computed being the amount of the Kern note plus interest accruing up to February 19, 1913) ........................ 356.57
"For money had and received from defendant on the dates heretofore specified, and used by the bank to reduce the principal indebtedness, the total whereof, as heretofore shown, being ................................. 8569.11 __________ "Total ....................................... $10,807.33
"Defendant says that all said sums of money were received by the bank from the defendant for its accommodation, *28 and were obtained from the defendant because and on account of the representations, covenants, promises and guaranties heretofore set forth herein, upon all of which he relied; that the plaintiff, as heretofore alleged, has not kept or performed the same, but has breached the same in all the particulars heretofore set forth; that the bank did not hold the collateral which it alleged it held, nor was the collateral which it held of any value, and the money so received by the bank from the defendant cannot be made out of the said collateral, nor can it be recovered from any other person, and that by reason of the premises, defendant says he has suffered loss in the sum of $10,807.33, for which sum, together with six per cent interest from the dates when said bank received said moneys, and for his costs in this behalf laid out and expended, he prays judgment of the plaintiff."
The exhibit pleaded in the answer and counterclaim reads:
The reply sufficed to put in issue all matters pleaded by defendant, both by answer and counterclaim, and emphasized the fact that all that Laughlin did was for the accommodation of Kern, and not for the accommodation of the bank.
The case hinges largely upon the sufficiency of defendant's pleaded facts, because if they are sufficient in law to show a good defense to the note sued upon, and a good counterclaim, there is evidence in the record from which the jury could have found as they did find. It is *29 clear that Laughlin did not get a cent when he indorsed the note for ten thousand dollars of date February 6, 1908. It is also clear that, although this note was secured by a second deed of trust, the security was ample to make it good had it been protected. Laughlin says that he took this note from Kern at the instance of the bank, and for the accommodation of the bank, and indorsed it over to the bank, for its accommodation pure and simple. For two years or more this note was held and no interest was demanded of Laughlin, or paid by him, and in 1910 a new note was made for $10,000 in lieu of the old, for the same purposes and indorsed over in the same manner. This note was to have been secured by a third deed of trust on one thousand two hundred acres of Macon County land, upon which there were to have been prior incumbrances for $35,000 and $5,000, or $40,000 in all. Laughlin did not get a cent for the act of indorsing over this note. He says that he did it all for the accommodation of the bank and its president upon the assurances of the bank as to the securities held by it. The third note was the outgrowth of the note of 1910, except that in it Laughlin included $2,943.44 of his own indebtedness to the bank, thus making the third note of date, February 17, 1913, the aggregate sum of $14,327.05. That the bank and its president were having trouble over the condition of its paper during these times is made clear. Laughlin says that this note and all of its renewals were without consideration, and made to accommodate the bank in its efforts to satisfy bank examiners. He does not claim that $2,943.44 of it was without consideration, but this sum he says was more than paid the June following, and that all other payments were made for the accommodation of the bank, and with the understanding that he was to have them later returned to him with interest. Such outlines the case.
I. Just a little acrimony seems to have crept into the trial of this case, especially between Mr. Edwards, *30 former president of plaintiff bank, and the defendant, Judge Laughlin. Their spars at each other were fairly equally balanced, and their testimony exceedingly contradictory. TheAppellate tenor of the one was that Laughlin was anPractice. accommodation indorser, but was such for Kern and not the bank. The tenor of the testimony of the other was to the effect that the indorsement of the first note, and all others, was at the solicitation of Edwards, the president of plaintiff bank, and for the accommodation of the bank. Laughlin's testimony, whether true or false, was explicit to the effect that all the notes were given and payments made upon the 1913 note, were for the accommodation of the bank and its then president, who seems to have been in trouble both with the Government agencies, and with his own stockholders. It suffices to say that he was shortly deposed, and no doubt the large Kern indebtedness (alleged to be $100,000 or more) was a prime factor in this event. When pressed upon many points as to the understanding between Judge Laughlin and himself, as agent and chief officer for the bank, Mr. Edwards was driven to the time-honored exigency of saying that, "I don't remember." His testimony is punctuated with such answers upon material matters. But all this is adrift from the real issue, because this case was tried as a suit at law, and the credibility of the witnesses was for the jury, and that body seems to have believed the alleged unreasonable testimony of the defendant. It is not for this court to determine the weight of the evidence, but if there was substantial evidence, its weight and credibility were for the jury, and their finding is binding here. Whether the evidence is sufficient in law to show a valid defense, or a valid counterclaim, is a question for this court, which we discuss later. What we now rule is, that the finding of the jury precludes us as to the dispute between these two witnesses, upon the question as to whether or not Laughlin was doing what he did to accommodate the bank or to accommodate Kern. This finding was to the effect that *31 all done by Laughlin was for the accommodation of the bank, and not for Kern. Behind this finding we are not permitted to go, because we would be trespassing upon the province of the jury. Both the weight and credibility of the evidence is usually for the jury, and there is nothing in this case to take it out of the general rule. But the evidence itself, and the finding thereon, may not suffice to show a defense to the action, or a valid counterclaim, and this question is with us.
II. Plaintiff moved that the cause be referred to a referee, under the statute covering compulsory references. This motion was denied, and the question is urged here by the brief of appellant. The facts are so fully pleaded, that we may well refer to the pleadings. These pleadings do not show such a longReference. and complicated account, as to authorize the trial court to compel a reference. The items of account are comparatively few, and the real issues were elsewhere. In such situation the trial court was right in denying a reference. [Ice Co. v. Tamm, 138 Mo. l.c. 389-90; Browning v. N.M. Ry. Co.,
As suggested in Browning's case the real issues are not involved in the items of the account, but as to the contract out of which the items grew. In the case at bar there is but little dispute as to the few items of account, if the alleged contracts out of which they grew were valid and binding. In fact plaintiff's books show most of the claimed items, and the liability of the plaintiff therefor is dependent upon the contracts. There was no error in refusing a reference under the cases, supra. This disposes of the first assignment of error made by the appellant. There are some six formal assignments of error, but only four of them are briefed. Others will be taken as abandoned.
III. The second briefed assignment of error reads:
"The court erred in permitting Laughlin to testify that at the time he indorsed the Kern notes and at the *32 time that he took up the indebtedness represented thereby, by giving his own demand, collateral, promissory note, he had a verbal understanding with the bank that he was notParol Proof: to pay the Kern notes according to his endorsementAccommodation or to pay his own note given to the bank inIndorsement. discharge of his endorsement, according to his contract in writing to do so expressed in his own note. To permit him to do so was to violate that fundamental rule of evidence which denies to a party the right to contradict, impeach, vary or modify the terms of a written agreement."
It will be noticed that this assignment covers the whole list of notes and renewals given by Laughlin, or indorsed by Laughlin. It overlooks the fact that the answer in this case is explicit upon some of the matters (not explicit) in St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Laughlin, 254 S.W. 844. That case covered much of the field covered in this case. By this we mean it covers dealings with St. Louis Union Trust Company as connected with R.H. Kern, the real debtor in this case. That case covered these three alleged defenses:
"(1) That defendant indorsed the note for the accommodation of the plaintiff; (2) that he was induced to indorse it by means of untrue representations made by plaintiff's officers as to collateral then held to secure the payment of the note; and (3) that he indorsed the note in consideration of a promise on the part of plaintiff that it would obtain from the maker certain additional specific collateral security, which promise it failed to keep."
They are much the same as we have here, but the answer in the instant case (set out in full) shows that the pleader made good in pleading all the defenses. In the St. Louis Trust Company case we ruled that the plea of accommodation indorser was good, and it must be so ruled in this case. Under that case it must be further ruled that the second alleged defense in that case, shown by the excerpt, supra, is well pleaded in this case. In fact under St. Louis Union Trust Co. v. Laughlin, *33 supra, all the defenses in this case are well pleaded. Learned counsel may have followed our ruling, supra.
Laughlin testified (which is covered by his pleadings) that the bank requested him to indorse the first note ($10,000 note of 1908) as an accommodation to it. The bank prepared both the note and the deed of trust. To all the facts of this transaction Laughlin testified, and the point made, supra, is that this and other portions of his testimony was and is incompetent. The assignment covers more than this particular transaction, but we will take them up separately. The point made is that in the face of his written indorsement, he could not orally testify that it was given for the accommodation of the bank, rather than for the benefit and accommodation of Kern, who was largely indebted to the bank.
That Laughlin was competent to testify as to his agreement as an indorser has long been settled in this country, and in England. Originally the English doctrine was contra, but later cases changed the rule. [Davis v. Brown, 94 U.S. l.c. 426.] The modern rule is thus stated in the Davis Case, supra:
"Be that as it may, it has led those courts which, on considerations of commercial policy, adopted the rule of Walton v. Shelley, to qualify the rule, so as to limit its application strictly to cases arising on negotiable bills and notes, and to cases where the transaction affecting the validity of the paper was not between the parties in suit. The holders of commercialpaper, who enter into agreements or transactions with the makersor indorsers, affecting its validity or negotiability, cannotinvoke protection against the infirmity which they have aided tocreate. There are no considerations of commercial policy whichcan exclude the parties in such cases from testifying to thefacts."
Note that the rule covers indorsers as well as makers of accommodation paper. Persons who make accommodation paper cannot spread upon the face of it the fact that it is accommodation paper. In would serve no useful *34
purpose in that situation. Of course if accommodation paper passes to the hands of innocent parties, we have a different rule. But, where as here, the paper remains as between the two contracting parties, the failure of consideration, and the character of the paper may be shown by parol. The consideration of a note is always subject to proof as between the parties to the contract. So also the fact as to whether or not the note or the indorsement thereon is for the accommodation of another, is likewise subject to the same kind of proof, as between the original parties. Such has been the course followed in cases from this State, and elsewhere. [Chicago Title Trust Co. v. Brady,
In all these cases the trial courts heard the oral evidence upon the question as to whether or not the party was an accommodation maker or indorser. In the Rea Case, supra, 68 Minn. l.c. 191, it is said, "For the inquiry always is, To whom did the maker of the paper loan his credit, as a matter of fact?" In that case the maker made a note to a bank as payee, but for the accommodation of another. The maker of the note neither owed the bank nor the other party. He got nothing from either for his note. It was contended that as the bank was the payee, it was the party accommodated, but the court heard the oral testimony, and determined that the bank was not the accommodated party, and permitted a recovery in its behalf.
In this case, according to the finding of the jury, the bank asked Laughlin to permit it to get this first note and deed of trust from Kern to him, that he might indorse it over to the bank for the accommodation of the bank. *35 Laughlin simply lent his credit to the bank by this indorsement, and did it to accommodate the bank, then being harrassed by examiners about the condition of Kern's paper. It was proper to show by parol evidence that Laughlin was a mere accommodation indorser.
What has been said about the note of 1908 (the first note) applies with equal force as to the note of 1910. If the first indorsement was a mere accommodation to the bank, the indorsement of the second note is also such an indorsement under the proof. Kern was not indebted to Laughlin and Laughlin was not getting a red cent for the notes in which he was the payee. But if the evidence was competent, as we have said, the finding of the jury forecloses the fact that these indorsements were made for the accommodation of the bank, and not otherwise. This brings us to the note of 1913, and of this matter next.
IV. We now reach the note of February 17, 1913, for $14,327.05. Under evidence which we rule to be conpetent the jury found that there was no liability upon the part of Laughlin upon either of the $10,000 notes. So that on the 17th of February, 1913, Laughlin was not indebted to the bank upon anyPart Payment account, except a sum of $2,943.44. The bank,by Indorser. according to the testimony of defendant, wanted further accommodation, in that it desired for reasons stated in the answer and counter-claim and shown by the evidence, to have its accommodation in the shape of a note direct to it and to give public evidence to the bank examiners that it was collecting up the Kern indebtedness; it asked this new note of Laughlin's be made to cover not only his debt of $2,943.44, but also $11,381.65 on account of the valueless obligation on the note of 1910. It also wanted payments from time to time, so as to show that it was in good faith gathering up the Kern indebtedness. Laughlin accepted the offer of the bank to thus accommodate it, but with the understanding that whatever accommodation he granted by way of payments *36 should be repaid to him with interest. Whether or not this note of 1913 was for the accommodation of the bank was just as much the subject-matter of oral proof as was the accommodation indorsements which we have just discussed. The consideration of a note is always a subject-matter of proof, and an accommodation note is but one given without consideration, and given to accommodate the person to whom given. As between the two parties to the contract (as here) all the facts can be shown, as we have ruled, supra. For $11,381.65 of this $14,327.05 note there was absolutely no consideration under defendant's evidence and the finding of the jury thereupon. In June, 1913, Laughlin made a payment of $4,000, which more than covered the valid portion of this note. Any renewals after this date were purely accommodation notes, without consideration, and as between the parties, unenforceable. The $3,000 note sued upon was the last one of these renewal notes. Under the facts shown (and properly shown as we have ruled, supra) the jury was authorized to find as it did. That is, to find for the defendant as to his liability on such note. It was a simple question as to whether or not the jury believed the evidence introduced by plaintiff, or the evidence introduced by defendant. Such body seems to have believed the defendant, and the finding is binding upon us.
Another theory of defense was that plaintiff misrepresented to defendant certain securities which it held from Kern by way of liens upon land in Macon County, Missouri, and in Texas. That defendant was induced to sign the notes by reason of such misrepresentations and signed the same in reliance thereon, and of the truth thereof. These securities were to be held by the bank to make Laughlin safe. The record contains evidence sufficient to have this theory of the case submitted to the jury, and its finding concludes us. The defendant presented its two theories of the defense to the note sued upon, and its counterclaim, in the following three instructions:
"1. If you find and believe from the evidence that *37 the defendant signed the notes sued on, and also the note indorsed or signed prior thereto at the request of the bank and for its accommodation, then you should find for the defendant on the notes and also find for the defendant on his counterclaim.
"2. If you believe from the evidence that prior to February 6, 1908, one Robert Kern was indebted to the bank and that on or about February 6, 1908, Robert Kern executed a note for $10,000 payable to H.D. Laughlin and secured the same by a second deed of trust on 1851.75 acres and that H.D. Laughlin as surety for Kern indorsed said note and delivered it to the bank;
"And if you further believe that in 1910 the president of the bank solicited and requested the defendant H.D. Laughlin, to release said deed of trust and to indorse and deliver another note signed by Kern for $10,000 in lieu of the first;
"And if you further find and believe from the evidence that at that time the president of the bank stated to Laughlin that the new note would be secured by a deed of trust on one thousand two hundred acres of land in Macon county, Mo., subject to two prior deeds of trust, one for $35,000 and the other for $5,000, and further stated that the bank would also secure and hold a first deed of trust for twenty thousand dollars on two hundred acres of land in Cameron County, Texas, and would not release the deed of trust on the 1851.75 acres of land until it had obtained possession of the new ones mentioned, and that each of said deeds of trust would be held as collateral security to save defendant from loss on account of his having indorsed said note, and, if you further believe that the president of the bank stated that said deeds of trust were of sufficient value to fully protect defendant against loss, and if you further find that H.D. Laughlin indorsed said $10,000 note because and on account of the statements of the president of the bank;
"And if you further believe that in 1913, the bank requested the said H.D. Laughlin to execute to it a note *38 payable directly to the bank to cover the amount of the $10,000 note and interest then accrued, and at that time the president of said bank stated to him that the bank had the $10,000 note and deed of trust on the Macon County land and the $20,000 deed of trust on the Cameron County land and would hold the same to protect the said Laughlin against loss on account of his signing said note, and that deeds of trust were amply sufficient to protect Laughlin from loss, and that said Laughlin signed the note because and on account of said statements, and that the note in suit is a renewal of the original $10,000 Kern note, and you further find that the bank did not have a deed of trust which was a first lien on the Cameron County lands, and did not have such deed of trust on one thousand two hundred acres of land in Macon County, Mo., as its president stated it had, if you find he did so state, and that the deeds of trust on the Macon County lands and the Cameron County lands were of no value, if you so find from the evidence in the case, then you will find for defendant Laughlin, on plaintiff's cause of action.
"3. If under the evidence you find the facts to be as set forth in defendant's instruction numbered 2, or if you find the facts to be set forth in defendant's instruction numbered 1, and if you further find that defendant did not know that the collateral described in said Instruction No. 2 was of no value until some time in 1916 or 1917, and that prior to obtaining such knowledge, he, the said Laughlin, delivered or transmitted to plaintiff certain sums of money, and the plaintiff received said sums of money and used them to reduce the amount it claimed was owing to it on account of the Kern debt and interest accrued thereon, then you should find for defendant on his counterclaim, and assess the amount of his recovery at a sum equal to the total amount of money so paid by defendant to plaintiff, less $3,043.44 which plaintiff received from defendant after February 19, 1913, and before defendant became aware that said deeds of trust were of no value, and you will allow defendant interest on the sums so found from April 8, 1918, to this date." *39
V. As will be noted the last instruction covers the counterclaim, but by reference includes instructions one and two. The sum of $3,043.44 mentioned in this instruction refers to the $2,943.44 covered by the note, which was in fact Laughlin's debt, and which was covered by a $4000 payment in June. TheExcessive difference covered the interest from February, theVerdict. date of the note to June following, the date of the payment as we conclude. It is conceded by appellant's counsel that Laughlin made payments aggregating $11,327.05, which payments ran from June 30, 1913, to February 11, 1918. There was $1500 in three payments in 1917, and $500 in one payment in 1918. It is the evidence of an officer of the bank. Out of this sum would have to be taken the $2,943.44 and interest thereon from February to June. The counterclaim covers more items and a greater aggregate amount than this admission of counsel. Under the admission of counsel the aggregate payments after deducting the bona-fide sum of $2,943.44 and interest would be $8,283.67, or just two dollars more than the jury allowed by the verdict which we have quoted. The jury allowed $8,381.65, and then added interest in the sum of $2,011.59, making the total verdict of $10,393.24. The aggregated sum of $8,569.11 was claimed by defendant as advanced to plaintiff on the alleged principal of said note, and interest is alleged to have been paid in the further sums of $1,381.65 and $356.67. There was also a claim of $500 as expenses in a Texas foreclosure proceeding. The total amount claimed by defendant was $10,807.33, and interest thereon at the rate of six per cent. The jury saw fit to separate its verdict, so as to show the finding of $8,381.65 as the principal sum of the counterclaim, and $2,011.59 as interest. Defendant has not appealed, and so far as he is concerned we are bound by this verdict. Under the admission of counsel for plaintiff, borne out as said above by a witness for the bank, this finding as to the principal sum is well sustained by the evidence. The books of the bank, as testified to by *40 Harry S. Weigle, show that Laughlin paid into the bank before the execution of the $3,000 note sued upon herein, the sum of $11,327.05, and deducting from this the money actually owed by Laughlin ($3,043.44) there was left the sum of $8,283.61 paid by Laughlin for which there was no earthly consideration, and which must be considered as advancements for the accommodation of the bank under the facts testified to by a witness for defendant, and found to be true by the jury. The principal sum of this verdict is more than within the evidence of the case. This leaves for consideration the question of the interest. This is a separate finding and can and will be dealt with separately.
VI. When we said in a previous portion of this opinion that the specific assignment of errors were six in number, and that only four of them were briefed, we overlooked an additional brief by other counsel for appellant. There are no specific assignments of error in this brief. By this we mean that there is noExcessive sub-head entitled, "Assignment of Errors," as isInterest. customary and usual in briefs, and as required by our rules. There is, however, a sub-head of "Points and Authorities" in such brief, and the points made therein are sufficient to constitute assignments of error under repeated rulings of this court. Among these errors it is charged that defendant's instruction three is error because it authorized the jury to find interest from April 8, 1918. According to the abstract of record this suit was filed August 15, 1918. In one of the briefs for the appellant it is asserted that the counterclaim was filed on April 8, 1919. Counsel then proceeds:
"Evidently defendant's counsel, and the court in giving this instruction, considered the filing of defendant's counterclaim as a demand and intended to authorize the allowance of interest from that date, but in naming the date erroneously wrote April 8, 1918, instead of April 8, 1919." *41
There can be no question that the filing of the counter-claim was such a demand as would entitle the calculation of interest from that date. The case went to trial on April 11, 1922 — three years and three days after demand. Calling the time three years and calculating interest at six per cent on the principal sum found ($8,381.65) the interest per year is $502.899. IfDemand. we multiply this by four, as the jury evidently did, because the instruction told them to count interest from April 8, 1918, instead of April 8, 1919, we have, as interest, $2,011.596. The jury found $2,011.59, and it is evident that they followed the instruction. They cut off the six-tenths of one cent. But grant that the instruction was in error by one year, we have all the data from which to require a remittitur. We would only have to compel the defendant to remit $502.899Remittitur. to have the correct amount of interest. No demand was shown except by the filing of the counterclaim, and it is clear that the defendant was proceeding upon this theory of a demand. This because there is no reason suggested by the record for making April 8, 1918, the date from which to commence the calculation of interest. This was evidently a mistake made in drawing the instruction, but it can be easily remedied here as suggested above. This because the jury has thoughtfully separated the principal and interest.
It is urged in one of the briefs that some of the items of the account in the counterclaim are barred by the Statute of Limitations. The Statute of Limitations is pleaded in the reply, but plaintiff abandoned that theory of the case in its requested instructions. No instruction upon that theory wasLimitations. requested. So even if an item or two had been barred (a theory of the law to which we do not concede), yet this theory of the case was abandoned by plaintiff when it came to requesting instructions.
But in addition, Laughlin testified that these sundry payments were to be put into a savings account for him *42 by the bank. In this we have an open running account by a express agreement of the parties. On the other hand the advances of money at intervals to the bank for its accommodation, and without aquid pro quo, would by implication create an open running account, so that the last item would draw to it all those which change to fall beyond the period of limitations. [Thompson v. Brown, 50 Mo. App. l.c. 320, and cases cited.] One of the cases cited is Boylan v. Steam Boat Victory, 40 Mo. l.c. 251, whereat it is said:
"Where it is specially agreed or impliedly understood between the parties that the account is to be kept open and continued as one and the same continuous transaction and course of dealing, the account will be considered as one continuous account and one demand. [Madison Co. Coal Co. v. St. Bt. Colona,
This last mentioned case was approved in Fulton Iron Works v. Mining Smelting Co., 80 Mo. l.c. 269. But as first said, plaintiff did not choose to submit the matter of the Statute of Limitations to the jury, and thereby abandoned this defense, as to the items alleged to be barred. Plaintiff is bound here by the trial theory below.
VII. Complaint is further made as to the giving of instructions one and two for the defendant. All these instructions we have purposely set out, supra. Complaint is also made as to the refusal of two instructions for plaintiff, which were demurrers. One directed the jury to find for the plaintiffInstructions. upon the note, which amounted to a demurrer to the evidence offered upon the defense as against the note. The other directed the jury to find against defendant upon his counter-claim. *43 What we have previously said disposes of these two demurrers. The instructions for defendant set out, supra, we think fairly present the law of the case. Complaint is also made on account of the trial court having modified instructions three and five asked by the plaintiff, and giving them as thus slightly modified. An examination of these instructions will show that the plaintiff was not harmed by the slight modifications.
The judgment nisi is correct except as to the one year's interest allowed upon the principal which the jury found. The judgment should be modified by reducing the sum total thereof by the sum of $502.90. We make it 90 cents intstead of .899 for convenience of calculation. Deducting $502.90 from the total verdict for defendant of $10,393.24, we have left $9,890.44. Judgment will be entered here in favor of defendant for said sum of $9,890.44 as of the date of the judgment, nisi, i.e. April 12, 1922, so that such judgment may draw interest at six per cent per annum from said April 12, 1922.
Judgment of the trial court modified, and judgment entered here as above indicated. All concur.