38 Mo. 201 | Mo. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the cour';.
Plaintiff instituted suit against defendant on a negotiable promissory note made by defendant, payable to the order of James Oastello, sheriff, for the sum of eighteen hundred and fifty-sis dollars twenty-five cents, due two years after date, and endorsed by Oastello before maturity to plaintiff.
The defendant in her answer alleged, that, in a certain proceeding in partition, wherein she was one of the parties, by the decree of the court, the said James Oastello, then sheriff of St. Louis county, was ordered, adjudged and required to sell the real estate in the partition suit mentioned and described, according to law, and upon the following terms, to-wit: one third of the purchase money to be paid in cash, one third in one year, and one third in two years from the date of said sale; the deferred payments to bear interest at the rate of sis per cent, per annum, and to be secured by notes and deed of trust on the property. That, in pursuance of said order of sale, the said Oastello, as sheriff, proceeded to sell the property on the terms required by the order, and took notes from the purchasers secured by deeds of trust on the property for the deferred payments. • That a part of the real estate so sold was purchased by the defendant, and for the deferred payments she executed her notes to the said James Oastello as sheriff, and gave her deed of trust on the property to secure the payment of the same ; that the note for the last payment is the same note sued on this case; and that when Oastello assigned and delivered the note to the plaintiff, he delivered alsq the trust deed; and that when said note and deed of trust were so assigned and delivered to plaintiff, the plaintiff had full knowledge of the fact that the note was gived to Oastello as sheriff, and that the said note was given for the purchase money, in part, of the tract of land sold in partition under the order of court. Defendant further averred, that Oastello had never accounted as sheriff for the proceeds of the note, if any, he received from the plaintiff; that his term of office had expired, and that he was
It appears from the evidence .that Castello, while still sheriff of St. Louis county, and before the note became due, endorsed the same and delivered it, together with the deed of trust, to one of his deputies, requesting him to place it in the hands of .a street broker to sell. The deputy placed the note and deed of trust in the hands of one Hunt for that purpose-Hunt testified that the deputy sheriff under .Castello placed in his hands the note sued on and the deed of trust made to secure itthat he was a note broker, and the note was placed in his' hands for sale ; that he showed plaintiff the note ; that the endorsements “ James Castello, sheriff,” and “James Cas-tello,” were both on the note at the time he offered it to plaintiff for sale ; that plaintiff bought the note, and he paid the money over to Castello ; that he never left the deed of trust with plaintiff until after he got the money for the note from him; plaintiff said the maker of the note was good.
Castello’s insolvency was then proved, and the proceedings and decree of the court in the matter of the partition were then given in evidence, as also the deed of trust; whereupon the defendant asked the following declarations of law: ■
“ 1. If the note was taken by the sheriff Castello for the-sale in partition.of a tract of land under decree of the St. Louis Land Court, made by him as sheriff of St. Louis1 county, for the benefit of the parties mentioned in the answer in this cause, or any of them, he held the same as trustee for said parties, and he has no right to sell said note.
“ 2. And if the court finds from the evidence, that before the note was purchased by plaintiff, he saw and had knowledge of said note and the endorsements thereon, and of the deed of trust in evidence, then he cannot recover herein.”
A similar question to the one presented in this case was before this court in Powell v. Morrison et al., 35 Mo. 244; and it was there held that the word “sheriff” after the name of the payee of a promissory note was merely descriptive of. the person of the payee and endorser; and that the endorsee of such a note, who took it in good faith, for a valuable consideration, before its maturity, was not chargeable with notice of a trust by means of such description. There was also a deed of trust to secure the deferred payments given in that case, but from the report it is not shown whether the endorsee had actual notice of it or not. The decision is placed strictly and exclusively on the ground of descriptio persona. There are many authorities holding that the words agent, trustee, guardian, executor, administrator, &c., annexed to the name .of the payee, are merely descriptive, and that a sale, endorsement and delivery of the instrument by the payee in the note .containing the designation will confer a good title. But where the payee holds the note or instrument in a fiduciary capacity, and the purchaser or endorsee has notice of the fact, and also that the trustee in the sale is committing a breach of faith, will he be protected ? Certainly not.
But the main question is, what will be considered notice, or sufficient to put the party on inquiry. By the Revised Statutes, in cases of partition, the sheriff acts for all the parties on sale of the property. It is made his duty to take the notes and bonds for the purchase money, collect and pay over the same according to the order of the court, and make a deed to the purchaser — R. C. 1855, p. 1116, § 35. He acts by ■order of the court and for the parties. He is a trustee, executing a trust devolved upon him by law. It is true, the instrument here declared on is in the nature of commercial paper; it is a negotiable promissory note, having by the statute the force and character of an inland bill of exchange. And it is the well settled doctrine that a bona fide holder ■of a negotiable instrument for a valuable consideration, with
In the case of Evans v. Kymer, 1 Barn. & Ad. 528, a bill was drawn by Nevett, and accepted by Evans, for the purpose of being discounted, and having the proceeds applied in the payment of other bills accepted by Evans; but the other bills, before they became due, were pajd by Evans, who directed Nevett to hold the first mentioned bill for his (Evans’) use, and not to part with it without his authority. Nevett, however, for his own purposes, endorsed the bill to Gore & Co. for a valuable consideration, who had notice of the fact that it belonged to Evans, and that Nevett had no authority to part with it. The Court of King’s Bench decided that the property in the bill was in Evans, the acceptor. Where a party held a note on a guardian, and purchased a mule and some plank of the guardian, and it was agreed that it should go in satisfaction of the note, but the guardian subsequently refused to apply the articles as a credit on the note, and brought suit on the same, it was held that such an application of the ward’s money would have been a wilful misapplition of the trust fund, and would have involved both parties in a direct breach of trust, and neither could enforce the agreement. All parties who are concerned in the transaction, with notice, are equally liable in breaches of trust—Lancaster v. Allen, 1 Head, 326; Wilson v. Moore, 1 Myl. & Keen, 127. The facts in this case do not call for a decision as to
If the plaintiff knew of the deed of trust , when he purchased the note, he cannot plead want of knowledge.
Eeversed and remanded.