73 Miss. 12 | Miss. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
Foster brought this suit against W. E. Ringo individually, and against W. E. Ringo and W. P. Richardson, late partners in trade under their firm name of W. E. Ringo & Co., upon the following note:
“$3,800. Mound Landing, Miss., April 3, 1893.
‘‘ On January 1 after date I promise to pay to the order of B. P. Foster thirty-eight hundred dollars, value received, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum from maturity until paid. (Signed) W. E. Ringo. 5 ’
Indorsed on back: “We hereby waive notice, demand, protest and all other formalities. (Signed) W. E. Ringo & Co. ’ ’
The declaration contains three counts. In the first, all parties are sued as makers. In the second, Ringo is sued as maker, and Ringo & Co. as indorsers. The third is a common count for money lent to the defendants or paid out and expended for their benefit.
On the trial, the plaintiff read in evidence the instrument sued on, and was then sworn as a witness. He was proceeding to state the circumstances under which the note was given, and that the firm name was indorsed on the back thereof as copromisors with Ringo, and contemporaneously with his signing; that, in truth, the sum named in the note was loaned to said firm, and on its credit, and not to Ringo, whose name is signed to the note, when the defendant, Richardson, objected to the competency of any oral testimony, on the ground that its effect would be to contradict the written contract of the parties. This objection was by the court overruled, and the testimony admitted, and this ruling gives rise to the principal assignment of error.
Counsel for appellant concede that where the name of one, and nothing more, appears upon the back of an instrument by irregular indorsement, parol evidence is admissible to show the character in which he signed, as has been frequently decided by this court. Thomas v. Jennings, 5 Smed. & M., 627;
Pearson v. Stoddard, 9 Gray, 199, is on all fours with the present case. In that case the name of Darius Whithead appeared on a promissory note by irregular indorsement, and the words ‘ ‘ waiving demand and notice ’ were written above it. There, as here, it was argued that these words controlled the character of the indorsement. But the court said: “The words ‘waiving demand and notice,” written above the name of the defendant, although certainly more appropriate words to accompany an indorsement of a note by a regular indorser, yet do not change the relation of the defendant, or his liability to be charged as maker, if, in fact, when he signed the note the same had not been negotiated by the payee and indorsed by him. The evidence shows that this was the fact, and of course controls any inference which might otherwise be drawn from the use of the words. ’
The appellee, Foster, and Ringo were examined as witnesses touching the transaction in which the note sued on was exe
It was proved by the appellant that he never had any knowl
The appellant objected in the court below to the introduction of evidence that the money loaned by the appellee went to the use of the firm of Ringo & Co., contending that the liability of the firm, if any existed, must spring from the contract under which the money was borrowed, and not from the use of the money after it had been loaned to Ringo.
We think it clear, from the instructions given and refused by the court, that this evidence was admitted under the count for money had and received, under which it was clearly admissible, but that the court, on the final submission of the cause to the jury, being of opinion that no recovery could be had on that count, so instructed the jury. We express no opinion as to the competency of the evidence under the count on the note. If counsel desired to reserve this exception, he should have moved the court to exclude the evidence when the testimony had been closed, and the plaintiff had failed to maintain the count for money had and received to his use.
The criticism of the charges for the plaintiff, in view of the instructions given for the defendant, is too refined. The instructions for the parties do not conflict, but those for the defendant supplement and explain those for the plaintiff. It is impossible to believe that the jury could have understood the instructions of the court as announcing liability on the part of
Having proceeded with the trial after knowing that one of the jurors was under the influence of intoxicants, the defendant cannot assign that for error. It is not material that the court also knew the fact, and punished the juror. It remains true that the defendant, with knowledge of the fact, proceeded without objection with the trial, and took the chance of securing a verdict in his favor. It is this which precludes him from making the irregularity the ground of motion for a new trial.
The judgment is affirmed.