92 Mo. App. 335 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This action is to recover judgment on three negotiable promissory notes of $100 each. The defendant prevailed in the circuit court.
We may concede that their business connection was such as to justify a finding that if one had notice, so had the other. What may be termed the affirmative or positive testimony was all to the effect that neither of them had notice. But circumstances are sometimes of sufficient force to overthrow such testimony. The evidence shows that the notes were purchased of the payee on August 4, 1898, in Sedalia. That the defendant lived at Sweet Springs about twenty miles away. That on August 2, either Lawson or the plaintiff asked the cashier of the bank in Sedalia, where they did business, to “make inquiry” in regard to the notes. That the cashier wrote to his correspondent bank at Sweet Springs on August 2 and he received an answer thereto on August 4, saying “that the notes may be paid when due, but he would not under any circumstance discount them and would not advise our friends to do so.” Before hearing from the cashier’s letter, Lawson learned of a lawyer at Sweet Springs of whom he could make inquiry and he telegraphed him on August 3, receiving an answer by telegram saying he considered defendant’s notes to be “gilt-edged.”
Both Lawson and plaintiff testify that they did not get any information from the bank cashier before the purchase of
The finding against plaintiff on this branch of the case can not be permitted to stand without overturning well-settled principles of law governing commercial paper. A purchaser of such paper may have cause for suspicion of defect of title in the holder; he may be negligent, or he may have knowledge of circumstances that would arouse the suspicion of a prudent man and put him on inquiry for further information; yet, in the absence of bad faith, his title will be upheld. Hamilton v. Marks, 63 Mo. 167; Mayes v. Robinson, 93 Mo. 114; Bank v. Stanley, 46 Mo. App. 440.
Defendant has felt the force of the law-as thus stated, and has endeavored to uphold the verdict in the trial court upon the idea that while suspicion or knowledge of circumstances sufficient to put a prudent man on inquiry will not charge a purchaser with notice, yet, under the authority of
There was another issue in the ease. Defendant charges that material alterations were made in the notes after she executed them. If that be the fact plaintiff, conceding him to be an innocent purchaser, can not recover. That issue was properly submitted in the instructions.
It seems that when defendant executed. the notes, she likewise signed and gave to the payee a letter addressed to him, wherein she' states what property she owned and that she owed nothing except the three notes now in controversy, and that “they will be paid when due or before.” This was delivered to plaintiff when he purchased the notes and it is claimed to be an estoppel on defendant. "We think not. It was issued contemporaneously with the notes. Its statements that the notes would be paid was no more than the notes themselves stated. The statement was not made for effect upon, or as an inducement to, purchasers. It amounted to
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.