This action is on a promissory note. The defendant pleaded payment and was sustained in his defense by the judgment in the circuit court.
The case involves the authority of plaintiff’s cashier.
The record does not' present the facts which seem to make up the case with the clearness it should. The best we can make out from the evidence as follows: Defendant executed the note to plaintiff, with one Ogle as surety, for $60, borrowed money. Ogle owed defendant a sum equal to the note on account for brick furnished Ogle in a building the latter built for one Schorgl, defendant having a mechanic’s lien on the building therefor. Ogle also owed plaintiff $400. Schorgl owed Ogle on account of the building a sum of money, but the amount does not appear. Whatever was done by plaintiff was by and through its cashier. This cashier, it dimly appears, was also agent for a building and loan association. The cashier was intending to obtain a loan to Schorgl on the building aforesaid from the association and in order to do so the building must be cleared of liens. The cashier, therefore, proposed to defendant that he would take a transfer of his ac
The point made by plaintiff on this appeal is that the cashier had no authority to take the account from defendant and discharge him on the note. our opinion this position is not well taken. The cashier of a bank “is considered the executive officer of the bank through whom the whole moneyed operations of the bank in paying or receiving debts, or disposing or transferring securities, are conducted.” Bank v. Hughes, 62 Mo. App. 581.
“Such an officer is virtute officii intrusted with the notes, securities and other funds of the bank, and is held out to the world by the bank as its general agent for the transaction of its affairs, within the scope of authority, evidenced by such usage, practice and course of business.” Case v. Bank, 100 U. S. 454; Winsor v. Bank, 18 Mo. App. 665.
It seems to us that the facts which we have summarized as best we can from a vague and unsatisfac