Rolla State Bank v. Pezoldt

95 Mo. App. 404 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902

BARCLAY, J.

This action originated before a justice of the peace. It is founded op a negotiable-. promissory note, dated Rolla, Missouri, June 21, 1900., *407at sixty days, for $250 and interest, payable to the order of E. A. Goodhue, and expressed to be forvalue received. It is signed by F. E. Dowd. On the back are indorsements by the payee, Goodhue, and by J. S. Dowd and Julius Pezoldt, successively. The maker and these three indorsers were made defendants in the summons in the justice’s court. Plaintiff, the Rolla State Bank, had judgment before the justice against three of the defendants, the other (J. S. Dowd) not having been served with process. Mr. Pezoldt alone appealed to the circuit court, where a trial anew took place before the learned judge, without a jury. A judgment for plaintiff for $262 (including interest) resulted.

The leading issue presented in the case is whether the proper steps were taken by plaintiff to fix the liability of defendant as indorser of the note in suit.

Plaintiff read in evidence the note (which bore the proper revenue stamp duly cancelled) with the indorsements already mentioned. Then was offered the certificate of protest of the notary. The latter, after the usual statements of presentment, demand, non-payment and protest, recited that the notary had given notice in writing thereof, August 23, 1900, to defendant and the other parties to the paper, by mailing the same to each of them to Rolla, Missouri. We do not quote the certificate fully. It was duly verified by the affidavit of the notary, and is conceded to be sufficient except in the particulars pointed out by defendant’s-criticisms, which we shall discuss.

Plaintiff then introduced testimony tending to show that defendant was a butcher and had a business shop in Rolla, Missouri, in which city the plaintiff bank was also located. In a conversation with the cashier of plaintiff, about a month after the note was due, defendant admitted that he had received the notice of protest. But no statement of defendant was given in *408evidence fixing the date or time when he received the notice.

It further appeared that the bank officers knew that defendant had a place of business in Rolla when the note became due.

The defendant introduced no testimony at the trial.

On these facts the learned trial judge refused an absolute ruling that plaintiff was not entitled to recover. He gave, on the contrary, the two following declarations of law for plaintiff:

“1. The court declares the law to be, that while the certificate of protest, read in evidence, is not sufficient to show notice of the presentment, demand and protest of the note sued on, yet if it is further shown that the defendant received the notice of such presentment, demand and protest, stated in said certificate to have been mailed to him, then the law presumes that it was received in due time after such mailing.
“2. The court further declares the law to be that one who writes his name on the back, of a promissory note before the delivery thereof, who is neither the payee nor indorsee, is presumed to be a maker, and as to such person no protest of said note is necessary.”

Another request by defendant for a declaration of law was refused in these terms:

“2. That it appears from the notice of protest in this case read, that the notice of protest was not mailed to the defendant, Pezoldt, at the proper time and the issues must be found for the defendant.”

Defendant asked another declaration which the court modified and gave, after erasing the part we indicate by inclosing in parentheses and adding the words marked by italics in the following copy:

“1. The court sitting as a jury in this case, declares the law to be that if the defendant Pezoldt had ■a place of business in the city of Rolla, known to the plaintiff, at the time when the note sued on became *409due, then it was not a sufficient protest of the same to mail notice of protest to the defendant Pezoldt (that it must further appear that all of said defendants received such notice) unless it is further shown that such notice was received by said Pezoldt.”

After the verdict for plaintiff a motion for new trial was filed by defendant assigning these grounds, viz.:

“Because the court erred in denying and refusing defendant’s demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence.
“Because the court erred in refusing to give and allow instructions asked on behalf of defendant, Nos. 1 and 2. .
“Because the judgment of the court was erroneous and should have been for the defendant.”

A motion in arrest was also made. As no point of error is assigned thereon, it requires no further remark.

These motions were overruled. Defendant then appealed, following the usual procedure for that purpose.

1. The points of error assigned in this court are that there was no sufficient protest (by which we understand notice of dishonor to be meant) and that the trial court erred by the giving of the second declaration of law.

Concerning the second point of error, it is sufficient to say that defendant’s motion for new trial did not assign error in the giving of instructions. Hence, that ground of complaint can not be considered on appeal. Gordon v. Gordon, 13 Mo. 215; Haynes v. Trenton, 108 Mo. 123; St. Louis Bridge, etc., Co. v. Brewing Assn., 129 Mo. 343; Brown v. Mays, 80 Mo. App. (K. C.) 81.

2. Was the finding of the trial court correct as to notice1?

The last day of grace, on the note in suit, was August 23, 1900. The holder and the indorser sought to *410be held were both resident in Rolla, Missouri, and each had a place of business there. The bank officers knew that defendant had a business shop there.

According to the law as declared by the trial court on those facts, it was not sufficient to mail notice-of protest to defendant in the same city on. the last day of grace. Plaintiff has not appealed, and defendant does not complain of that ruling. It follows certain well-remembered precedents. Barret v. Evans, 28 Mo. 331; Sanderson v. Reinstadler, 31 Mo. 483; Gilchrist. v. Donnell, 53 Mo. 591. It is the law of the case as the record stands.

3. But plaintiff meets the difficulty which, the above rule produces by replying that if the indorser actually receives the notice of dishonor in due time, by any means, it is sufficient. This is now the accepted law. Bank of U. S. v. Cocoran, 2 Pet. 121; Bank v. Wood, 51 Vt. 471; Phelps v. Stocking, 21 Neb. 443.

4. The time within which notice must be given, where the indorser resides in the town where the default occurs, is, at latest, the day following that of the protest. Bank v. Walker, 2 Cranch C. C. 294; Spaulding v. Krutz, 1 Dill. 414.

5. What inference will the testimony reasonably bear in regard to the time of receipt of the notice by defendant?

Here we have the sworn certificate of protest of the notary. It is prima facie evidence of the facts it recites touching notice of dishonor to the parties to the note, as well as of demand, refusal of payment and protest thereof. R. S. 1899, sec. 3134; Bank v. Vaughan, 36 Mo. 94. The certificate shows that the notice to defendant was mailed, on the last day of grace. The word “mailed, ” as used by the notary in his certificate, implies that the requisite postage was prepaid. Pier v. Heinrichshoffen, 67 Mo. 163. A month later, defendant admitted that he had received the notice, not saying when. He was a business man in Rolla. The *411posting of the letter in the mail at that city on Angnst. 23, directed to defendant at the same place, warranted the inference of its delivery in due course on the next day. The learned trial judge had the right to take judicial notice of the customary operations of the Federal mail service so far as to infer that defendant received the notice, August 24, the day following that on which the notary mailed it to him in the same city.

Defendant did not deny the testimony of his admission of the receipt of notice, nor did he offer any testimony to show when he received it. No doubt, as he claims, the burden of proof that he actually received the notice in due time, that is to say, on August 24, at latest, rested upon the bank as plaintiff here. Peabody Ins. Co. v. Wilson, 29 W. Va. 528. But we consider that the bank discharged that burden by submitting the testimony already mentioned, from which the trial judge was authorized to find, as a fact (as he did find), that the date when defendant received the notice was that of the following day after it had been duly mailed to defendant by the notary in the same city. Hyslop v. Jones, 3 McLean 96; Bradley v. Davis, 26 Me. 45; Bank v. Scalzo, 127 Mo. 164. The note was a statutory negotiable promissory note (R. S. 1899, sec. 457) and, hence, notice of dishonor was requisite to transform defendant’s original conditional obligation into' an absolute one, in the circumstances disclosed by the evidence.

' 6. No error in the modified declaration of law, as given by the court and above cited, would be open to' review, because of the omission already quoted to assign as ground for a new trial the giving of any of the declarations or instructions.

7. There was no error in refusing to give, as asked by defendant, the declaration of law which the court modified. As presented it declared in effect that, to fix by notice the liability of defendant, Mr. Pezoldt, as indorser, “it must further appear that all of said *412defendants received such, notice.” That finding was certainly not essential to plaintiff’s recovery. Defendant appellant was the last indorser. "Whether or not all the prior parties to the note received from the notary notice of the dishonor of the paper, could not affect defendant’s liability, if he had been duly notified, on the facts disclosed by the present record. This is settled by direct authority. Bank v. Hatch, 78 Mo. 13.

The judgment is affirmed.

Bland, P. J., and Goode, J., concur.