Brookfield Trust Co. v. Foster

246 S.W. 617, 212 Mo. App. 347, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 83
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 4, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 617 (Brookfield Trust Co. v. Foster) 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
Brookfield Trust Co. v. Foster, 246 S.W. 617, 212 Mo. App. 347, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 83 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

This is a suit for money had and received. Plaintiff is a corporation located at Brookfield, Linn County, Missouri, and defendants are husband and wife residing on a farm near Porker in said county.

The petition is in three counts, the first of which seeks to recover on a'certain promissory note. Said note is payable to one C. R. Thomas and by him assigned to plaintiff. The second count alleges that Henry E. Poster and Jessie T. Poster are husband and wife; that they own a large farm in Linn County, Missouri, on which they have lived for twenty years last past; that twelve years ago Henry E. Poster, being in poor health, turned over the operation and management of his farm to his wife and authorized and empowered her to do all things necessary to run the farm and carry on the business, hire help, buy and sell stock and grain, and borrow money to carry on said operations; that Poster spent much of his time in Colorado, not personally attending *349 to the business of running his farm, and that the same had been run and operated by his wife, the co-defendant herein, with his full knowledge and approval.

The second count further alleges that for the purpose of aiding in carrying on the business of the farm and in the operation thereof, the wife, Jessie T. Foster, on the first day of October, 1920, borrowed on their account of C. E. Thomas, the sum of $1500 and at the same time presented to him the joint note of defendants which the payee supposed was properly executed, and that by means of this note she procured a loan of $1500, agreeing to pay the same within one year thereafter, and that defendants received and the said O. E. Thomas paid to them the full amount of the said $1500 so borrowed by them. The-second count of the petition further alleges that afterwards the payee, Thomas, sold, assigned and transferred the said debt to plaintiff, and that plaintiff is the legal owner and holder of the same. That said sum of $1500 and interest thereon ia now past due and that payment thereof has been demanded and refused.

The third count alleges that the Benson Banking Company of Laclede, Linn County, Mo., on April 22, 1921, had loaned to Jessie T. Foster, on the account of H. E. Foster, the sum of $25, payable on demand, evidenced by a note in that amount signed by Jessie T. Foster, and that said debt was contracted and the money used as part of the expense of running the farm aforesaid. That the said debt was duly assigned and transferred to the plaintiff herein, who is now the legal owner and holder thereof; that payment thereof has been demanded of defendants and by them refused.

Defendant Henry E. Foster files separate answer and therein specifically denies that he signed or executed in any way the note mentioned and described in the petition; and denies each and every other statement and allegation in said petition contained. Defendant Jessie T. Foster filed no answer and made no defense.

*350 The cause was tried on December 19, 1921. At the close Of all the evidence the court signified its intention of giving plaintiff’s requested instructions Nos. 1 and 2, both being peremptory instructions to find for plaintiff on the second count of the petition. Plaintiff thereupon took a voluntary nonsuit as to the first and third counts. A verdict accordingly was returned in favor of plaintiff on the second count in the amount of $1648.08, for which judgment was entered. Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were duly filed and by the court overruled. Defendant Henry P. Poster appeals.

The evidence tends to show that when Henry P. Poster decided to go away for his health in 1910', he executed written authority to his wife to transact his business. This document, made in quadruplicate, is in words and figures as follows :

“Laclede, Missouri, Junt 25, 1910.
“To Avhom it may concern:
“‘I am now in poor health and unable to attend to the running of my farm and business, and have authorized my wife Jessie T. Poster to act for me, and I give her full authority to control and manage my entire business. She has the right to run the farm, hire help, buy and sell stock and grain and if needed borrow money to carry on the business.
“H, E. Poster.”

Said four copies were deliveréd-te his wife by Henry E. Poster and the testimony tends to show she had them from that time until the institution of this suit, either in her own possession or in the possession of banks or persons where she had deposited them in the transaction of her husband’s business. Henry E. Poster was away from home at intervals from 1910 to 1919, during all of which time his wife managed the farm and did whatever Avas necessary in connection with the operation and management thereof. The testimony further shows that in November, 1918, while armed Avith such authority, Jessie T. Poster became a depositor and customer of plaintiff bank.

*351 Among the transactions she had with the bank after the deposit therein of one of the copies of the written authority was the obtaining* of loans therefrom in small amounts on notes signed in her name only. One such not for $529, another for $250, another for $100, one for $81.50 and one for $500.

The testimony tends to show that these small loans had been made for the purpose of a horse, cows, corn, vaccination of hogs and other things incident to the needs of the farm and family. On October 1, 1920, Mrs. Foster applied to plaintiff bank for the loan of $1500 for the purpose of paying off the smaller notes above indicated, and for the purpose of securing same, proposed a deed of trust on their farm; at the same time stating that as her husband was away from home they would have to send the note and deed of trust to him for his signature. Said note and deed of trust accordingly were made out and handed to Mrs. Foster and, afterwards these documents were returned to plaintiff, purporting to have been signed by both defendants. The deed of trust is not sought to be foreclosed and it is, therefore, not involved in this action.

[Defendant Henry E. Foster denies that he signed either the note or deed of trust mentioned. There is no denial that defendant Jessie T. Foster signed both instruments, and it is contended by her husband that she signed both names to them. Plaintiff contends that, in view of the fact that the second count of the petition is the only cause of action now involved and that being on account of money had and received, the issue of Henry E. Foster’s signature is not material.

After Mrs. Foster borrowed the $1500' involved herein the amount was placed to her credit in plaintiff bank and she proceeded, by checking against the same, to pay off all the smaller not ;s above referred to. She then was left with less than $5 to her credit on the books of the bank, out of this sum. Defendant Henry E. Foster, some time in December, 1921, repudiated this $1500 in *352 debtedness, together with some other debts similarly contracted by his wife. Henry E.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 617, 212 Mo. App. 347, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookfield-trust-co-v-foster-moctapp-1922.