Green v. Boothe

188 S.W.2d 84, 239 Mo. App. 73, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 366
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 84 (Green v. Boothe) 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
Green v. Boothe, 188 S.W.2d 84, 239 Mo. App. 73, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 366 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

This is an action, instituted on August 17, 1943, in two 1 counts; each upon a promissory note in the sum of $4000, executed by the defendants, in favor of A. M. Robertson, and now held by the plaintiff. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of defendants. Plaintiff has appealéd. ’

*77 The petition alleges that the notes in question were dated August 2nd, 1926, and that each provided that it should bear interest at the rate of 60/o per annum, payable in monthly installments 'of $75, until August 2nd, 1931, when the balance of $250 be paid; that the notes bore interest after maturity at the rate of 8 °f0 per annum; that they had been indorsed and transferred first to George F. Green and then to the plaintiff; that the defendants had made payments on the notes to September 17, 1937; that the balance of the principal and interest due on each of said notes was $1066.42.

The answer to each count consists of a general denial and a plea of the 10 year statute of limitation. Plaintiff’s reply is a general denial.

The notes were secured by a second deed of trust on certain real property in Kansas City. During the time that the notes were owned by George F. Green the Traders Gate City National Bank of Kansas City held them as collateral security for an indebtedness owed by him to it. The cashier collected some of the payments indorsed on the notes. There are indorsements on both notes showing various payments, the last of which is dated December 14, 1932. After applying the credits shown by these indorsements, there was due, upon the principal of each note, the sum of $1062.72, as of December 14, 1932, plus interest from said date. Each note bears the indorsement of A. M. Robertson and George Fuller Green.

The defendant, Mamie B. Boothe, testified that she knew nothing .about the transactions mentioned in the evidence; that she left the handling of all transactions to her husband, the defendant, Wilkes E. Boothe.

Wilkes E. Boothe testified that, after the notes had been reduced to approximately $1000 each in 1932, he made no further payments thereon for several years; that he did not consider the real estate on which the second deed of trust was given to be worth the amount of the first and second mortgages thereon and the delinquent taxes; that when the cashier of the bank requested payment from him on said notes he told him that he did not care to make further payments because of these facts; that the cashier told him that “they” would reduce the amount of the indebtedness and the rate of interest if the witness would make further payments; that, thereafter, -the cashier submitted to him two extension agreements, which he and his wife signed.

Each of the extension agreements recites that there was due a balance of $1060.72 as principal on each of the notes; that the consent of George F. Green had been obtained “to this extension agreement” and for a consideration of One Dollar, and other valuable consideration, the “principal amount of said note. ... is hereby reduced . . . from the sum of One Thousand Sixty Dollars and Seventy-two Cents ... to the sum of Five Hundred Dol *78 lars, ’ ’ which the defendants agree to pay ‘ ‘ as extended, ’ ’ in monthly installments of $5.00, including interest at the rate of 4% beginning September '19, 1937 for a period of one year, and to increase the amount of the installments thereafter, until July 19, 1942, at which time the entire balance was to be paid. They also recite:

“It is hereby agreed and declared, that in default of the punctual, payments of principal and interest under said extension agreement herein nothing herein contained shall waive or annul the provisions of said second deed of trust that said property may be advertised and sold, and it is further agreed and declared that the same may be so advertised and sold in the manner provided in said second deed of trust. ’ ’

(Each* of these agreements is headed “extension Agreement,” although it is quite apparent that they are not such in the sense that the term “extension agreement” is ordinarily used, as they do not purport .to extend the original indebtedness but are new and independent contracts providing .for the payment of a new indebtedness in different amounts, bearing a different rate of interest, and otherwise differing in terms. However, for convenience, we will hereinafter refer to them as the Extension Agreements.)

The defendant,- Wilkes E. Boothe, testified that after the Extension Agreements were executed he paid the cashier the sum of $10 and the latter made the indorsements that appear on the Extension Agreements; that he did not say anything to the cashier at the time he made the payment. Over the objection of plaintiff, defendant was allowed to testify, that he “understood” that such payment -was to be credited on the “Extension Agreements” and that he would not have made a payment except for his understanding.that the amounts of the indebtedness under said notes had been reduced to $500 each in accordance with said extension agreements. Defendants made no payment on the extension agreements other than the one mentioned. This payment was allocated, one-half to each extension agreement, and indorsed thereon, as follows: “Sept. 17, 1937-Int. $2.87, Princ. $2.17, to 9-19-1937, Bal. $497.17, J.E.H.” (The name of the cashier was J. E. Hensley.)

Plaintiff testified that the cashier collected some of the payments indorsed on said notes and collected the payment indorsed on the extension agremeents; that by crediting on the notes the amount indorsed on the extension, agreements, there was due as principal on each of said notes the sum of $1060.72, and interest at 8% per annum from July 30, 1937.

Counsel for plaintiff, in open court, stated that plaintiff was not willing to abide by the terms of the extension agreements reducing the amount of the principal indebtedness to $500 on each note, and forgiving the accrued interest to September 19, 1937, or reducing the rate of interest to 4% per annum after that date.

*79 The sole question involved in this appeal is whether the notes sued on are barred by the statute of limitations.

Plaintiff insists that the court erred in refusing to give an instruction offered by her directing the jury to render a verdict in her favor. In this connection, plaintiff insists that the extension agreements were void for the reason that a debt cannot be satisfied by the payment of any less amount than the amount due on the debt; that, by executing the void extension agreements, defendants did not change the existing liability (on the notes) to the plaintiff and that the indebtedness continued unchanged and unreduced; that “it is not the indorsement of a credit, but the payment, that operates as a renewal of the promise and removes the bar of the Statute of Limitations. Hence it is immaterial as to the intention of respondents, that they only had in mind, of paying on their pretended reduced indebtedness, and not on their original indebtedness, 'named in their extension agreements;” that on September 17,1937, defendants, with full knowledge of the facts, made a voluntary. payment on the principal and interest of “their indebtedness,” although under a mistaken belief as to the legal consequences. of the extension agreements.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 84, 239 Mo. App. 73, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-boothe-moctapp-1945.