264 S.W. 77 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1924
This is a suit on a note made by the defendant, the plaintiff having purchased the note from one Robertson, Robertson having acquired it from Ayres, the payee. The note was properly endorsed and delivered to Smith and payment made by him to Robertson before maturity. Prior to this suit the defendant, Francis, filed a bill in equity against the plaintiff, Charles A. Smith, charging that an automobile which was delivered to Francis by Ayres was a stolen car, and that the note for $1000 given for the same was a fraudulent transaction on the part of Ayres; and that Smith knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence could have known, that the car was stolen and not the property of Ayres and had knowledge, or could have known by the exercise of ordinary diligence, of the fraudulent means used by Ayres to induce Francis to execute said note. The petition in the suit in equity asked that Smith be enjoined from negotiating, transferring or enforcing said note, and prayed that it be delivered up and canceled.
The case was tried in the circuit court of St. Clair County and the trial court granted the relief and an appeal was taken by Smith to this court (reported under the style of Francis v. Smith,
Subsequently, and after the note became due, Smith filed the present suit on the note and the defense made in the trial court is that he had knowledge, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have had knowledge of the fraudulent means used by the said Ayres to get from the defendant the note, and that he knew that the note was not given for a valuable consideration but was wholly void and of no effect as between Ayres and the defendant Francis.
It is set up in the answer that Robertson, who purchased the note from Ayres, was acting on behalf of Smith, as Smith's agent. It is not pleaded in the petition but it was argued orally in this court that the evidence in this case showed further that Smith was in fact a party to the fraud with Ayres in procuring the notes.
The defense of res adjudicata was raised in the trial court, and as the note was admittedly made by Francis and delivered, the plaintiff, Smith, asked for an instruction directing a verdict. The court overruled the instruction and held that the question of Smith being a holder in due course was still open and for the jury to determine.
A number of errors are assigned, but the main contention made by appellant is that the former judgment of this court reversing the judgment in the suit in equity, which was in effect dismissing the bill in equity filed by Francis, after this court had considered the evidence, forever barred the question of Smith's good faith so far as any suit between the same parties to this note was *297
concerned. We think there is no question but what the appellant is correct in this stand under the Missouri law. Respondents' attorneys admit that the only case which they can find bearing directly on the situation, as it exists here, is that of Cramer v. Moore, 36 Ohio State Rep. 347, which holds flatly with respondent's contention in this suit. The other cases cited in respondent's brief are not cases where the question involved here has been directly passed on. In passing, we may say that we found a case from California, apparently cited with approval in Barnett v. Smart,
On the other hand, we find this question has been determined in Missouri otherwise, in the case of Lynch v. Donnell,
The case of Melvin v. Hoffman,
In the case of Morehead v. Cummings,
Applying this rule to the case in hand, we have Francis filing a bill in equity against Smith, charging that he is not a holder of the note in due course and in *299 good faith, which bill, when it comes to final judgment in this court, is dismissed, or the judgment below is reversed, amounting to the same thing as a dismissal of the bill, then when he is sued on the note in the present action, he undertakes to set up the same grounds of fraud and rely on showing the defense that Smith is not a holder in due course. Under the Missouri cases which we have heretofore cited this defense is barred, and the trial court should have so held and directed a verdict for the plaintiff, the suit being on a note which was admittedly executed and delivered. It is, therefore, the order of this court that the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded to the trial court to proceed with the case in accordance with the views herein expressed. Cox, P.J., and Bradley, J., concur.