45 Mo. App. 544 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
— This is a suit begun at the October term, 1889, of the Audrain county circuit court, to restrain the appellants, Richards as trustee, and the Sturgeon Savings Bank, the beneficiary, from selling eighty acres of land under a deed of trust, given by respondent to one William 0. Crosswhite as beneficiary, to secure a note for $1,125.25, both of which, the deed of trust and note, are dated Decembers, 1884. Respondent claims that said note is paid, and appellants deny its payment. On the eighth day of December, 1884, respondent bought of said Cross white said eighty acres of land, and assumed the payment of a deed of trust thereon, and a note for $500 given to one Mrs. Flynn, and made the note and deed of trust sought to be restrained for a part of the purchase price. Mrs. Flynn sold and assigned the $500 note to B. P. Ritchie at about the time plaintiff bought the land, and, some time after the sale, Ritchie bought the $1,125 note of Cross-white, thus becoming the owner of both notes. The court below submitted the issue of payment to a jury, which found the note had been paid. The court adopted this finding, and entered a decree enjoining the sale under the deed of trust. We are asked to review the case on the facts.
It must be said in plaintiff’s favor that by the production of the note at the trial from his possession, past due, made for him a prima facie case. But this concession is all that can be allowed him out of this record. All else is against him, and the question with us is, is it so much against him, as disclosed by the testimony, as to overthrow his prima facie case % We are compelled to answer that it is abundantly so. While there was other testimony than his own, to which we will refer further on, yet the case against him is principally made from his own.
The whole record discloses (notin direct words, but quite as effectively) that he was not a man of wealth, or.
Notwithstanding he did stock business through Mitchell, a banker, and that he had an account at the bank, he says that he kept this money at his house in a tin box on the cupboard; that when he went away, it was in charge of his wife, and that when they both were from home, she took it. When asked what kind of money it was, he said, “Most of it was greenbacks, I reckon.” And as to how his wife carried it, he answered, “I don’t know ; in her pocket, I reckon.” During this period of his putting money away in the box, he owed, beside the note in controversy, the notes for $120 and $500 and two or three other notes of from $100 to $200, all drawing eight or ten-per-cent, interest, and yet he says he had money in the tin box at home. He says he was saving it for the note in controversy; but, at the time of the alleged payment of the note in controversy, he says he paid the $120 note, and within a few days, before or after, he paid $250 on the $500 note. During this time he borrowed money. At one time he borrowed $5 of a neighbor to pay a girl who had done some work at his house. As before stated, it appears from his testimony, that when he paid Ritchie no one was present. He brought the money in in a roll. Handed it to Ritchie without counting it, and, as he could not say whether he got any change, it must have amounted to just the sum to liquidate the two notes and interest to that day. He remembers nothing about what he did in
The fact that plaintiff had possession of the note at the trial is, of course, strongly corroborative of his assertion that he had paid it; especially is it so in the absence of any explanation from defendants as to how it got out of the possession of Ritchie’s estate. But, if the testimony discloses the fact that he did not pay it, it is not requisite that its loss should be accounted for. Keeping in mind that plaintiff’s case rests upon his assertion that he paid the money to Ritchie in the “first half of December,” we find from the testimony of a disinterested witness that it was seen in possession of Ritchie at the bank, after that time. Besides such testimony we find that the note was seen by those interested in Ritchie’s estate, including the officers of the- bank, at different times, up to and after the death of Ritchie. Their testimony is such as to preclude a mistake on their part. Their testimony is false, or the note was not in the plaintiff ’ s possession until after Ritchie’s death. It is shown, perhaps, as suggesting a way in which the note came to be in plaintiff’s possession, that, after Ritchie’s death, those interested in the estate, including two married daughters, were in the bank all or part of two days about June 10, the father having died June 1, looking over and listing notes, among others the note in controversy; and that, during this time;, the two ladies were in and out, going