Ensign Co. v. Crandall

231 S.W. 675, 207 Mo. App. 211, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 169
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 675 (Ensign Co. v. Crandall) 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
Ensign Co. v. Crandall, 231 S.W. 675, 207 Mo. App. 211, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 169 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

ALLEN, P. J.

This is an action upon two promissory notes, each for the sum of $375, executed hy the defendant on April 4, 1913, payable to the order of the Night Commander Lighting Company, a corporation, two years- after the date thereof, with interest. from maturity at the rate of six per cent, per annum. Plaintiff sues as the holder in due course of said notes. The trial below, before the court and a jury, resulted in a *213 verdict' and judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff has brought the case here by appeal.

The petition is in two counts, one upon each of the notes. In each count, after alleging the execution and delivery of the note therein mentioned to the said payee named therein, it is alleged that the payee endorsed and delivered the same to the Jackson Brokerage Company; that the latter, for valuable consideration paid to it by plaintiff, endorsed the note in blank and delivered it to plaintiff, ■ who thereby became the owner and holder thereof prior to the commencement of the suit; that plaintiff is an innocent purchaser thereof “without notice whatever of any infirmity in the title thereto of his immediate endorser.” Each count concludes with the usual prayer.

The answer admits the execution of the notes in suit and their delivery to the Night Commander Lighting Company, but denies each and every other allegation in the petition. Further answering the defendant alleges that at and prior to the execution of these notes one Rickey was an agent of the Night Commander Lighting Company, and local manager of its business conducted at Quincy, Illinois; that prior to the execution of these notes the defendant became a surety upon a bond executed by'Rickey to said company, conditioned on the faithful performance by Rickey of his duties as such agent and manager; and that at the time of the execution and delivery of the notes sued upon, one Jones, president and manager of said company, falsely and fraudulently represented to defendant that Rickey was short in his accounts with the company, and owed the company a large sum of money; all of which was false and untrue, and known so to be by said Jones. And it is averred that the defendant, relying upon said false and fraudulent statements, and in order to discharge his supposed obligation as surety on the bond, did, on said April 4, 1913, execute three promissory notes to the said Night Commander Lighting Company, each for *214 the sum of $375, due respectively in one, two and three years from said date, and delivered the same to said company. And it is alleged that Rickey was not then, nor has he ever been, short in his accounts with said .Night Commander Lighting’ Company, but has faithfully performed all of his duties as the agent and manager of said company, and that defendant was in no wise liable on said bond. And it is further averred that the Night Commander Lighting Company and the Jackson Brokerage 'Company are one and the same, and owned by the same individuals; and that plaintiff, when the notes in suit were assigned to him, knew all of said facts and participated in the fraudulent purpose of said endorser, and is not in good faith the owner of the notes in suit, in due course, for value before maturity, and that the same are void.

Other allegations touching the alleged fraud are made, which need not be noticed. And the answer alleges that of the three notes so executed and delivered by defendant, one thereof, viz., that due one year after said date, was, at its maturity, presented by the Jackson Brokerage Company to a bank in Wyaconda, Missouri, where the notes are made payable, for payment, purporting to have been endorsed by the Night Commander Lighting Company and by the Jackson Brokerage Company; that said brokerage company was organized for the purpose of taking and holding notes payable to .the Night Commander Lighting Company, so that said brokerage company might pose, as an innocent purchaser thereof for value in due course of business. And it is averred that when said note payable one year after date became due, it was protested for nonpayment, and has never been paid, “because of the facts in this answer set forth, all of which was known to this plaintiff wheri the notes sued on were assigned to plaintiff for collection, and are held by him with the knowledge of the fraudulent acts of the endorsers of said notes sued on, and he is liot in good faith the owner and holder for value in due course and should not recover.”

*215 The reply puts in issue the new matter of the answer.

At the trial the notes were introduced in .evidence, bearing endorsements purporting to be those of the Night Commander Lighting Company and the Jackson Brokerage Company, each endorsement being made “per G. W. Mayes.” Plaintiff, by deposition, testified that he purchased the notes in suit on November 9,1914, from the Jackson Brokerage Company, the latter being represented by G. W. Mayes, who brought the-notes to plaintiff’s office; that the notes bore the endorsement of the Night Commander Lighting Company, known to him to be the genuine and authorized endorsement of the company, and were endorsed by the Jackson Brokerage Company, through Mayes, “one of the proprietors and chief owners of the Jackson Brokerage Company, a partnership, ’ ’ in his presence, in his office in Chicago. Plaintiff’s further testimony is that in the transaction in question he purchased the two notes in suit together with six other notes, aggregating a total face value of $2335, for which eight notes he paid $1940. And he introduced in evidence two cancelled checks, both dated November 9, 1914, drawn by him on the Continental Commercial Bank of Chicago, one for the sum of $1000, and the other for'the sum of $940, the former being payable to the Night Commander Lighting Company and the latter to the order of the Jackson Brokerage Company. Plaintiff testified that these checks were thus made payable, one to the Night Commander Lighting Company and the other to the Jackson Brokerage Company, at the request of Mayes, from whom he purchased the notes. Each of the checks is stamped paid, and, in addition to the endorsement of the payee, bears the endorsement of the Jackson City Bank, of Jackson, Michigan, to the order of the Corn Exchange National Bank, of Chicago, and bears the “clearing house stamp,” purporting to show that it was “paid through the Chicago Clearing House” on November 10, 1914, at 10 A. M. And plaintiff testi *216 fled that both cheeks were paid by the Continental Commercial Bank, upon which they were drawn, and charged to his account. '

When asked if he knew of any infirmities or other defenses in favor of the maker of these notes when he purchased them, he said that he did not; that on the contrary he was informed that they had been given in settlement of an account between the maker and the Night Commander Lighting Company; and that he purchased the notes before maturity in the usual course of business. He further testified that on said November 9, 1914, he wrote to defendant a letter, a copy of which appears in the deposition, and which purports to be a letter notifying the defendant of plaintiff’s acquisition of the notes in suit, and requesting defendant to mail to plaintiff a check or draft for each note when the same should become due.

With this deposition, and exhibits attached thereto, in evidence, plaintiff rested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 675, 207 Mo. App. 211, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ensign-co-v-crandall-moctapp-1921.