Avery v. Tucker

118 S.W. 672, 137 Mo. App. 428, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 226
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 672 (Avery v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. Tucker, 118 S.W. 672, 137 Mo. App. 428, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 226 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

— Action on a negotiable promissory note dated May 19, 1906, at Edina, Missouri, executed by defendant and whereby he promised to pay to the order of the Knox Milling Company $320.06 for value received, with interest at six per cent from date, and indorsed on the back under date of July 18,1906: “Pay to the order of George L. Avery.” In the petition it is alleged the note was assigned by the. payee, Knox Milling Company, to plaintiff in accordance with the. indorse[431]*431ment. Thé answer admitted execution by defendant, denied the other allegations of the petition and said defendant caused the original payee, Knox Milling Company, to be paid by Mary E. and C. A. Uhl, the sum of $220 on the note on January 31, 1906, alleged the note was executed on September 16, 1905, instead of the day it was dated, and that said payment was made by the Uhls after execution and delivery, but prior to said date. The answer further alleged plaintiff was not a holder or purchaser in good faith for the reason the note was assigned to him without recourse, after due and after said payment had been made, but without a credit being entered on the back of the note. The genuineness of the indorsement to plaintiff was denied and it was alleged there was no such company or corporation as Knox Milling Company. Defendant admitted owing one hundred dollars, principal and interest, and offered to permit plaintiff to take judgment for said amount. The reply denied allegations of new matter in the answer, averred the note was assigned to plaintiff before maturity and he was a holder for value without any notice regarding its consideration. Previous to December 16, 1905, defendant had been engaged in the grocery business in Edina, Missouri, but about said date sold his stock of merchandise to Mary E. and C. A. Uhl. Just before the sale he had ordered a bill of flour to cost $220 from the Knox Milling Company, a concern of Gales-burg, Illinois. Part of the consideration of the deal between defendant and the Uhls was an agreement by the latter to pay for the flour, which had not yet arrived, but when it did would go into the stock of merchandise ; and so they remitted for it when due. Defendant says the note in suit, though dated May 19, 1906, was executed on or about the first of January of said year, covered the price of the flour and the payments by the Uhls ought to' have been credited on it. The Knox Milling & Exchange Company was a corporation in which plaintiff Avery was interested and whose assets he purchased [432]*432May 11,1906, thereafter carrying on the business in the name of the Knox Milling Company, named as the payee of the note. The Knox Milling Company therefore was not a corporation, but simply plaintiff’s business name or style and the note was really made payable to him. The action was brought under said style because the attorney to whom the note was sent for collection did not know the facts, but supposed the Knox Milling Company was a corporation and owned the instrument. Plaintiff’s contention, which is supported by testimony, was that the amount of the note did not include the price of the flour; that though given after defendant had sold out to the Uhls, it was meant to settle an indebtedness which had accrued from various other purchases made by defendant to the Knox Milling & Exchange Company prior to said sale and running from some time in 1904 to near the close of 1905. It would be useless to recite the testimony pro and con on this question and we will only say defendant was quite positive part of the consideration for the note was the $220 to be paid for the flour, and that he had fully settled with the Knox Milling Company for all indebtedness growing out of earlier transactions between him and the milling company; whereas the evidence for plaintiff was very cogent to the contrary and tended to prove defendant owed the full amount of the note without reference to the bill of flour. One item of evidence should be adverted to because error is assigned regarding it. This is a bill or statement of transactions between defendant and the Knox Milling & Exchange Company which purported to have been receipted as paid by a memorandum written across its face, signed by F. A. Green. Defendant testified he paid one Green the amount of the bill ($268) in cash, thereby clearing up what he owed for previous purchases of merchandise, and leaving1 no debts which would be full consideration for the note in suit i f the cost of the flour was excluded. Defendant testified the man he paid was a traveling salesman of the milling and exchange company, but it [433]*433turned out the only man by the name of Green who traveled for the company was Horton B. Green, not F. A. Green. Horton B. Green testified the signature to the receipt was not his, and that signature and several genuine signatures of said Green were put in evidence and submitted to this court for comparison. They look to be in different handwritings. But defendant testified Horton B. Green was the very man to whom he paid the money and who signed the name F. A. Green to the receipt. Various entries in the books of account of the milling company were introduced to show purchases and payments made by defendant through 1904 and 1905 and prove he owed the amount of the note regardless of the flour purchased. Defendant objected to this evidence on the score that Avery, who testified the entries were original ones in the books of the company, could not refresh or revive his recollection, because he did not make them or see them made; but the entries were admitted in evidence as having been made in the course of business and were competent. [Anchor Milling Co. v. Walsh, 108 Mo. 277.] The rules of law regarding what memorandum a witness may use to refresh or revive his memory, is not in point.

Another assignment of error is that the case was tried outside the issues joined in the pleadings, wherefore irrelevant evidence was admitted, and the allegations of the petition remain unproved. The supposed irrelevant evidence consisted of account books of the Milling Company and some other testimony, all of which was received to show from what transactions the indebtedness covered by the note accrued. This evidence was objected to because the cause of action stated in the petition was, that plaintiff was an innocent holder of a negotiable instrument obtained by him for value before maturity and his right to recover, according to the face of the instrument, could not be impaired by payments made to the payee named in it. which had not been en[434]*434tered on it as credits. It is true issues are joined in the pleadings, particularly in.the answer and reply, as to' those matters; but issue was joined too, and necessarily, regarding whether the $220 paid by the Uhls, was paid on the note — whether it should be treated as a payment on that obligation; and the answer to this question depended on whether the note was given to cover the cost of the flour bought by defendant of the Milling Company and for which the Uhls had agreed to pay, or embraced only the amounts of other purchases. The evidence supposed to be incompetent, was relevant to this issue alike if plaintiff was an indorsee or if he was the original payee; for unless the note included the price of the flour, defendant was not entitled to have it credited in either contingency with the Uhl’s remittance. The only difference in the result would be that, if plaintiff was an innocent indorsee, no credit could be allowed as against him even though the price of the flour was embraced in the note. This assignment of error will be overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 672, 137 Mo. App. 428, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-tucker-moctapp-1909.