114 Mo. App. 663 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
The plaintiff’s petition seeks to charge defendant as having accepted a draft for $800, which plaintiff bought of the drawee. The trial court heard the evidence offered in plaintiff’s behalf and then sustained a demurrer to the evidence which counsel for defendant offered.
The petition is in three counts, all based on the same transaction, and, as what we shall say disposes of all three, we will not mention them separately. It appears that one Warren lived in or near Fox Lake in Wisconsin and one Vandeveer lived in King City, Missouri; that Vandeveer was in Wisconsin and purchased a horse of Warren for $800. They went to the plaintiff’s banking house May 30, 1903, where Vandeveer drew his draft on defendant in favor of Warren for $800 with exchange. Warren indorsed it to plaintiff, who on the same day mailed it to defendant and then on the same day telegraphed to defendant this inquiry, “Will you honor draft J. L. Vandeveer eight hundred dollars?”
The question which the case presents is: does the agreement of defendant with plaintiff to accept a draft for $800 bind it to plaintiff as indorsee of a draft for that sum with exchange, the parties residing at different places?
We will treat the two principal points made by plaintiff in the inverse order of their presentment. It is contended that the acceptance was what is known to commercial law as a partial acceptance and that defendant may be held to the amount of its acceptance and discharged as to anything over that sum. It is the law that, as to a bill already drawn, an acceptor may accept for a certain sum less than that named in the bill. [Brinkman v. Hunter, 73 Mo. 172.] But, plainly, in order to hold one to have contracted to make a partial acceptance of a bill, he must necessarily have known just what the bill was. Thus, if one is asked to accept a bill for $200, he may answer, “No, but I will accept it for $100.” A partial acceptance is a qualified acceptance, and such acceptances consist in a change of amount, of place, or date of payment. For one to change anything in the sense of offering to contract for its change presupposes that he knows of its original condition. In the case in hand, it is not pretended that defendant knew of a bill differing in any particular from the one it was asked to accept. The mind of defendant’s officers never operated on any other bill than the one mentioned in the telegram. Manifestly, the case is not one of partial acceptance.
But plaintiff insists that the acceptance of a bill for $800 is an acceptance of a bill of $800 and exchange.
In this State we hold to the strict rule that an alteration of a promissory note by the holder will avoid it as to the maker, however honestly made. We need not enter into an examination of the many decisions of this character. Those of Kelly v. Thuey, 143 Mo. 422, Bank v. Fricke, 75 Mo. 178, and Haskell v. Champion, 30 Mo. 136, will suffice. Now, suppose that the acceptance here in question had been made on the draft itself and that the words “with exchange” had not then been in the bill, but that after-wards they had been inserted by the plaintiff, would anyone for a moment think that defendant could be held? It will not do to say that such rule is founded upon and applies only in cases of fraud on the part of the holder; for it finds as ready application where the
A case practically identical with this arose in Iowa. A bank in that State telegraphed to the plaintiff in that case (who resided in California) that it “would pay Barro’s draft on it for two thousand dollars.” On receipt of the telegram, Barro drew a draft for $2,000, “with exchange on New York.” The Supreme Court of Iowa held the bank not liable. [Lindley v. Bank, 76 Iowa 629.] It is true that the draft in that case was not drawn until after the receipt of the bank’s telegram, while'in this case the draft was drawn before the receipt of a like telegram. There is no distinction in principle from these facts. One agreed to pay a draft to be drawn for a certain sum. The other agreed to pay a draft already drawn, but stated to be for a certain sum. In each the draft was for more than the sum agreed to be paid. When one agrees to pay a draft yet to be drawn, he is not liable unless the draft be for that exact sum. [Brinkman v. Hunter, supra.] And there can be no difference in his liability, though the draft is already drawn, if he has no knowledge of the sum for which it is drawn except through the false representation made by the party, with whom he makes his contract of acceptance.
The point is made that there was no answer to one of the counts in plaintiff’s petition. We do not regard it as material since the case was tried on the theory that an answer was in. It is too late now to raise such ob
Tbe judgment will be affirmed.