Ginter v. McBride

14 S.W.2d 41, 222 Mo. App. 1156, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 137
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 41 (Ginter v. McBride) 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
Ginter v. McBride, 14 S.W.2d 41, 222 Mo. App. 1156, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 137 (Mo. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

* Corpus Juris-Cyc References: Bills and Notes, 8CJ, section 109, p. 72, n. 47; section 118, p. 74, n. 97; section 522, p. 344, n. 2, 5; section 731, p. 519, n. 63. This is an action upon a promissory note in the sum of $1500, dated November 26, 1919, due December 1, 1921 and bearing six per cent annual interest. Respondents Clyde V. and Pearl McBride are sued as makers and the Commerce Trust Company as indorser of said note. At the close of the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of Commerce Trust Company, whereupon plaintiff dismissed as to defendants Clyde V. and Pearl McBride, and the jury returned a verdict as directed. After judgment on the verdict, plaintiff appealed.

The facts are as follows:

The note in suit was one of three notes executed by McBride and wife to Commerce Trust Company, and represented a real estate loan which the trust company had made to the McBrides on land owned by them, located near Kidder, in Caldwell county, Missouri. The three notes were dated November 26, 1919 and totaled $19,000. One of the notes was given for the principal sum of $16,000 and the other two for $1500 each. One of the $1500 notes matured December 1, 1920, the other December 1, 1921 and the $16,000 note matured December 1, 1926.

Within a short time after the execution of the $16,000 note, the Commerce Trust Company sold it to the Missouri State Life Insurance Company. The evidence of respondent shows that at the time of this sale there was placed on the back of the $1500 note in suit the following signed memorandum.

"Commerce Trust Company, for and in consideration of the sale of the note or bond for $16,000 described in and secured by the same deed of trust by which this note is secured, hereby agrees, in case of foreclosure of said deed of trust, that the trustee shall, out of the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, pay the note or bond above mentioned in full before any part of the proceeds of such sale shall be applied towards the payment of this note.

"COMMERCE TRUST COMPANY, "By Townley Culbertson, V.P."

*Page 1158

Appellant's testimony was to the effect that the same memorandum was placed on the other $1500 note at the same time.

The $1500 note first maturing, was paid in full to the Commerce Trust Company on its due date, December 1, 1920. It appears that Roscoe L. Terry, cashier of the bank of Kidder, held a second deed of trust on the same land which secured by a first deed of trust the $1500 note in question, and the $16,000 note which had been sold by the Commerce Trust Company to the Missouri State Life Insurance Company. When the $1500 note matured on December 1, 1921, Terry, in order to protect his second mortgage, requested the Commerce Trust Company to extend the time of payment of the $1500 note until March 1, 1922. This request was granted on condition that the $1500 note and the interest due on the $16,000 note be paid at that time.

On March 8, 1922, Terry paid to the Commerce Trust Company slightly more than $2500, which represented the amount due on the $1500 note and the past due interest on the $16,000 note held by the Missouri State Life Insurance Company. Of the $2500 paid by Terry, an amount sufficient to pay the $1500 note was furnished to Terry by the Kidder bank. The note was delivered to Terry, uncancelled. Terry's evidence is to the effect that he purchased the note from the trust company for the Kidder bank, while that of the trust company tends to show that he did not purchase the note, but paid it.

On March 8, 1923 the Kidder bank, acting through Terry, its cashier, sold the $1500 note to plaintiff and received payment therefor out of his account in said bank. Plaintiff held the note until July 26, 1927, on which date he brought this suit. Prior to the institution of this suit, the Missouri State Life Insurance Company foreclosed the deed of trust securing the note for $16,000 which it held, and the $1500 note held by plaintiff. The proceeds of said sale were used towards the satisfaction of the $16,000 note.

Appellant's first contention is that he is entitled to recover against the trust company because said company by its act clothed Terry with the usual and apparent evidence of ownership, and plaintiff purchased for value and in good faith.

If the signed memorandum placed on the back of the note amounts to an indorsement, appellant's contention is well founded. Otherwise not, because delivery of the note to Terry without indorsement, would not clothe Terry with the usual and apparent evidences of ownership.

What are the facts? The Commerce Trust Company held three notes, dated November 26, 1919, one for $16,000 and two for $1500 each, and all secured by a first deed of trust. Shortly after the execution *Page 1159 of these notes, the trust company sold the $16,000 note to the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, under an agreement with said insurance company, and as a part of the consideration of said sale, that in case of foreclosure of the deed of trust securing said notes, the $16,000 note should have priority of payment over the two $1500 notes. As evidence of this agreement a memorandum signed by the trust company, and reciting that in case of foreclosure of the deed of trust securing these notes, the $16,000 should have priority of payment over the other notes, was indorsed on the back of the two $1500 notes at the time the $16,000 note was sold to the insurance company.

This signed memorandum was placed on the note shortly after its execution in November, 1919, not for the purpose of transferring the $1500 note to anyone, but as evidence of the contract between the trust company and the insurance company relative to the sale of the $16,000 note to the insurance company. The trust company still owned and held the $1500 note with this signed memorandum indorsed on the back thereof. When it matured in December, 1921, Terry, in order to protect a second deed of trust he held on the same land which secured the $16,000 and the two $1500 notes, requested the trust company not to foreclose under its deed of trust securing the $1500. This request was finally granted and the time extended to March 1, 1922, on condition that the $1500 note and the interest on the $16,000 be paid at that time. On March 8, 1922, Terry paid the trust company $2500, which amount covered the $1500 note and the interest on the $16,000 note. At the time this payment was made, the $1500 note was delivered to Terry, uncancelled. Terry testified that at the time he took up the $1500 note, he asked the trust company not to cancel it; that he wanted the note to be good itself and requested that it be not cancelled because he wanted to hold it as a lien against the land.

There is nothing in the evidence that tends to show that the trust company intended to indorse the note, or that the officers of said company led Terry to believe that the signed memorandum on the note, amounted to an indorsement.

Terry was acting for the bank of Kidder at the time he took up the $1500 note, and this bank afterwards sold the note to plaintiff. The gist of the evidence is that Terry took up the $1500 note in order to prevent a foreclosure, and at his request, the note was not cancelled at the time it was taken up.

In the light of the facts thus presented, plaintiff must stand or fall on the proper construction of the signed memorandum appearing on the back of the note, unaided by other facts or circumstances. *Page 1160

The question presented is whether or not the signed memorandum on the back of the note amounts to an indorsement.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 41, 222 Mo. App. 1156, 1928 Mo. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ginter-v-mcbride-moctapp-1928.