Davis v. Holliday

188 S.W.2d 40, 354 Mo. 10, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 485
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 4, 1945
DocketNo. 39328.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 40 (Davis v. Holliday) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Holliday, 188 S.W.2d 40, 354 Mo. 10, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 485 (Mo. 1945).

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Action to recover on two renewal notes, one for $7,000 and the other for $7,500. At the close of the case the court directed a[41] verdict for plaintiff and the jury returned a verdict for $20,355, which included interest. Motion for a new trial was sustained and plaintiff appealed. *Page 13 The cause was commenced in Howard County, but the venue was changed to Carroll County. The notes were dated April 22, 1936; were due one year after date, and were payable to the Fayette Bank. They were signed, "Methodist Episcopal Church South of Fayette, Missouri, by D.C. Rogers, president, Rowland Ricketts, Sec. Treas., Board of Stewards." Hereinafter we refer to the Fayette Bank as the Bank, and to the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, of Fayette, as the Church, and plaintiff contends that the defendants as such members are personally liable on the notes.

The amount of the two notes is the balance due on three notes aggregating, when executed, $30,000, and dated February 23, 1928. The original notes were for $15,000, $10,000, and $5,000, and were signed in the same manner, as we understand, as the two notes sued on. The execution of the three original notes came about in this way. In 1928, Central College, a Methodist school located in Fayette, hereinafter referred to as the College, embarked upon an expansion program and put on a money raising campaign. The Church wanted to contribute $30,000 to the expansion program of the College, and the $30,000 was obtained from the Bank by the Church and turned over to the College. In the money raising campaign the College obtained a number of pledges and these, to the extent of more than $30,000, were put up with the Bank as collateral to secure the loan of $30,000 to the Church. Also, in connection with the loan, the Church executed a fourth note to the Bank for $8,000 and secured this note with deed of trust on the Church parsonage, and this note was put up as additional collateral to secure the $30,000 loan. We might say here that the grantors in the deed conveying the parsonage lot to the Church in 1872, inserted a clause limiting use to that of a Methodist parsonage, and that the Bank closed November 3, 1935, before the execution of the notes sued on.

February 23, 1928, when the three original notes were executed and the loan of $30,000 made, plaintiff and his father were livestock dealers and farmers, and depositors of the Bank. At that time plaintiff had "an individual box of his own" in the Bank, and in 1932 became a director of the Bank. The cashier of the Bank testified that plaintiff "took up", purchased, the $15,000 note in March, 1928; that $3,000, collected from the pledges to the College, was paid on the notes and that in September or October, 1928, plaintiff "took up" $12,000, that is, purchased the other two notes. The three original notes were not endorsed by the Bank when purchased by plaintiff, but were placed in his box. The Bank retained possession of the pledges, collected on them, and turned the collections over to plaintiff, so that on April 22, 1936, when the two renewal notes were executed, there was a balance of $14,500 due on the three original notes. The unpaid pledges were turned over to plaintiff "in November or December, 1935, *Page 14 after the Bank closed"; plaintiff delivered these to his attorney, Judge Williams, who "deposited them with the clerk of the circuit court of Howard County when the petition was filed", and it was agreed that these pledges, at the time of the trial, were lost. The only reason given for making, the renewal notes payable to the Bank (then closed) instead of making them payable to plaintiff was because "the contract was made to the Fayette Bank."

The contract referred to was executed along with the three original notes on February 23, 1928. This contract was pleaded by plaintiff and introduced in evidence by him, and defendants rely on it to establish that they are not personally liable on the renewal notes. Plaintiff, however, contends that the defendants are precluded from relying on the contract because they answered by general denial only, which plaintiff says is the same as saying the contract "did not exist." No authority is cited which would support this contention, and we do not think that the situation is such as to justify depriving defendants of whatever there is in the contract helpful to them.

The contract was termed a "contract and agreement for loan, security and repayment thereof." The Bank was the first party, the Church was the second party, and the College was the third party. It was signed. "The Fayette Bank, by J.F. Denneny, its president, party of the first part; The Methodist Episcopal Church, South, of Fayette, Missouri, by its board of stewards, represented by George L. Todd, president of the Board, Rowland Ricketts, secretary of the board, party of the second part: The Curators of Central College, by Xenophon [42] P. Wilfley, president of the board." In signing the College was not designated as the third party, but the contract recites that the College was the third party.

The contract recited that the Church desired to borrow $30,000 from the Bank and that the governing body of the Church, that is, the Quarterly Conference, had given the Church full authority to execute the contract and obtain the loan; that the board of stewards of the Church, after authorization by the Quarterly Conference, authorized the president and secretary of the board of stewards, George Todd and Rowland Ricketts "and their successors in office" to act for said board "in all matters appertaining to the loan of $30,000"; to obtain said loan and turn the money over to the College.

The provisions of the contract upon which defendants rely are these: "Whereas, all parties hereto agree that this contract shall govern the rights and liabilities of each and all parties hereto touching the initial notes given by the party of the second part to the party of the first part as evidence of said loan, and all renewal notes that may be subsequently given by said second party to the said first party as evidence of said loan, as set out hereinbelow; and they further agree that no act of any party hereto touching these loans shall be construed except through the terms of this contract. *Page 15

"It is mutually understood and agreed by the parties hereto that the said Messrs. George Todd and Rowland Ricketts, and their successors in office representing the legally constituted board of stewards of the Fayette Methodist Episcopal Church, South, as bound by this contract and their signatures on the notes of the second party and do bind the said board of stewards of the Fayette Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to this contract and the said note solely in their official capacity as recipients and distributors of the funds and moneys belonging to the second party" (italics ours).

Also, it appears that the Quarterly Conference, by resolution adopted April 22, 1936, date of the renewal notes, authorized the board of stewards of the Church to execute the renewal notes "as evidence of indebtedness as and for" the Church. And on the same day the board of stewards by resolution authorized its chairman and secretary to execute said notes "in accordance with the resolution passed by the Quarterly Conference" of the Church.

The Church was a voluntary or unincorporated association and, as such, defendants say, could have been sued at the time of the execution of the original notes. Supporting such suggestion defendants make reference to the 7th provision of Sec. 1186, R.S. 1919, now Sec. 880, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 880. On May 18, 1928, nearly three months after the execution of the original notes on February 23, 1928, Sec. 1186, R.S.

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Related

Ervin v. Davis
199 S.W.2d 366 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1947)

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188 S.W.2d 40, 354 Mo. 10, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-holliday-mo-1945.