81 Mo. App. 400 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
Plaintiff began this suit; before a justice of the peace by filing the following petition, together with a copy of the note described in the petition:
“PETITION:
“Mary P. Rhea, Plaintiff,
v.
Buckley Custom Shirt Manufacturing Company. (Corporation), Defendant.
“Before ¥m. J. Hanley, Justice of the Peace, Eighth District, City of St. Louis, Mo.
“Plaintiff for cause of action states that defendant is a corporation, duly organized under the laws of the state of Missouri; that on the Yth day of November, 1894, by its negotiable promissory note of that, date, by it duly executed at the city of St. Louis, in the state of Missouri, promised for value received, to pay to the order of one George H. Rhea, Jr., July 9, after said date of November Y, 1895, the sum of three hundred ($300) dollars; that thereupon and before the maturity*404 of said note, said George IT. Rhea indorsed the same in writing, across the back thereof, and delivered same to plaintiff for value, whereby plaintiff became the owner of said note, and entitled to the payment of the amount mentioned therein, said note is herewith filed and marked Exhibit AT
“Plaintiff states that she is still the owner of said note, and that the same has long since matured and become payable but that no part thereof has ever been paid; wherefore plaintiff prays judgment for the sum of three hundred dollars, together with interest at seven per cent per annum, from the Yith day of November, 1894, the date of said note.”
The defense was payment. Erom the justice’s court the cause was taken by appeal to the circuit court, where on a trial de novo judgment was recovered by plaintiff, from which defendant duly appealed to this court.
The cause was tried in the circuit court without a jury. No exceptions were taken to the admission or rejection of testimony on the trial. No declarations of law were asked or given, and the case is here for review on the record proper and evidence only.
Erom the evidence it appears that on July 9, 1894, the respondent had $1,000, which she trusted to her brother Geo. IT. Rhea, Jr., to loan at interest for her. Her money was deposited in the Union Trust Company of St. Louis. To enable her brother to effectuate the loan, she drew her cheek payable to herself on the Union Trust Company, indorsed it in blank, and in this condition delivered it to him; he in turn delivered it to the appellant and took from it its two promissory notes for $500 each, due in six and twelve months, with interest, payable to himself and dated July 9, 1894. The first of these notes was paid at or before maturity to Geo. IT. Rhea, Jr., and the money turned over by him to his sister. On November Y, 1894 and before the maturity of the second note, plaintiff asked her brother to see defendant and ask for a payment of $200 on the second note. George went to defendant
On March 21, 1895, respondent with a telegram from her brother asking a deposit of $20 to his credit in a St. Louis bank, 'went to defendant and requested it to make the deposit to tire credit of her brother. Defendant’s secretary testified that at this time he told plaintiff that Rhea had overdrawn his account and the amount of the $300 note, and that plaintiff made no claim to the note, nor disclosed the fact that the note belonged to her or was in her possession or under her control. She denied that any such conversation took place. A few days after the maturity of the note payment was demanded and refused.
Appellant’s contention here is, that the respondent sued on one cause of action, and was permitted to recover on another and different one; and second, that she is bound by the payments made to George H. Rhea, Jr., her agent; and third, that under the undisputed evidence the verdict should have been for appellant.
(1) A plaintiff can not sue upon one cause of action and recover on a different one, though the latter is supported by the evidence. Chitley by next friend v. Railroad, 48 S. W. Rep. 870. ' But this rule has no application to this case. Section 6138, Revised Statutes of 1889 provides that “no formal pleadings upon the part of either plaintiff or defendant shall be required in a justice’s court” * * * “the plaintiff shall file the instrument sued on.” * * * The plaintiff instead of'filing the instrument sued on, was permitted to file a copy thereof and the petition as the foundation of .the suit. No objection was made to the filing of a copy in lieu of the original note. It was the note (represented by the copy), that furnished the foundation of the suit and not the petition; the latter was not necessary and was unauthorized by the section of the statute, supra, and should be ignored.
(2) If George H. Rhea, Jr., had been the owner of the note, unquestionably the moneys advanced to him would have
The check of respondent delivered to the appellant on the making or the loan; the known financial standing of George Rhea, Jr.; the improbability that he would have so much as $1,000 to loan were facts known to appellant, and tend to prove that its officers were possessed of such knowledge as to cause them to believe that he was the agent of his sister. The trial court evidently so found, as upon no other theory of the evi-, deuce can the verdict be supported. With this finding this court is powerless to interfere, even were it disposed to do so. Waddell v. Williams, 50 Mo. 216; Tucker v. Railroad, 54 Mo. 177; Miller v. Breneke, 83 Mo. 163; Sebree v. Patterson, 92 Mo. 451; Simpkins v. Simpkins, 22 Mo. App. 25; Green’s Bank v. Wickham, 23 Mo. App. 663; Zervis v. Understall, 29 Mo. App. 474. It follows that the judgment; must be affirmed.