Henry v. Diviney

101 Mo. 378
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 101 Mo. 378 (Henry v. Diviney) 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
Henry v. Diviney, 101 Mo. 378 (Mo. 1890).

Opinion

Ray, C. J.

This is an action founded on a promissory note executed by defendants’ testator, Antony Henry, deceased, to the plaintiff, Bryan Henry, his father. The note is an ordinary promissory note for one [380]*380thousand dollars, dated J anuary 1, 1869, and due one day after date. On said note is an indorsement as follows : “ Paid November 6, 1882, twenty-five dollars.” The note was first presented to the defendants, the executors of said Antony Henry, deceased, and to the probate court of Bates county, Missouri, for allowance ; the attorney of said Bryan Henry having been elected judge of the probate court, before the said cause was heard in said court, the same was certified to the circuit court, where the case was tried. There were no pleadings and the defense was the statute of limitations.

The body of the note and signature thereto, as was admitted by defendants at the trial, were in the handwriting of said Antony Henry, deceased, but as the note bore date January 1, 1869, and was due one day after its date, it was barred by operation of the statute of limitations unless taken out of the statute by reason of said payment of twenty-five dollars thereon, on the sixth of November, 1882. The controversy, therefore, was over this payment and indorsement on the note, and is presented in this court on exceptions to evidence in that behalf admitted on the part of plaintiff, and to instructions given at his instance, and to certain rulings in respect to the application and motion' for new trial, which will be taken up in appropriate order hereafter.

When plaintiff offered to read the note with its said indorsement thereon in evidence, it was excluded upon defendants’ objection until proof of the indorsement was made. Plaintiff then introduced Miss Minnie Henry, daughter of plaintiff and sister to Antony Henry, deceased, maker of said note. The note was shown her and she testified as follows: “I know of the indorsement of the twenty-five dollars on it; was present in my mother’s room at our mother’s home in Lewiston, Illinois. My father, brother Will and cousin Tom Lally were present. The money was received in a draft on. National Bank. The indorsement was placed on the note by direction of my father, Bryan Henry, at the [381]*381time the money was received and at the date it purports to have been done. Cousin Tom was present when the letter and draft was received; father called to one of the boys to indorse the amount of the draft on the note and I think cousin Tom did it; it is in his handwriting, I think. The draft came in a letter written and sent from Butler by my brother, A. Henry, to my father; the draft was twenty-five dollars. I was at home and brother Will lived at father’s until he came to Butler. He was there. This is the letter the draft came in.”

Plaintiff; here offered and read in evidence without objection as follows:

“A. Henry, Attorney at Law.
“Butler, Mo., November 3, 1882.
“I wrote you last Monday from Kansas City. , I suppose you got it. Harry is not well yet, but has improved some. I send you inclosed twenty-five dollars, and when you need let me know. I will, sometime between this and Christmas, come to see you all. I I hope mother will take some -care of' herself and get better. There is nothing new I can state.
“Antony.”

Witness continued: “Brother Antony wrote father a letter from Kansas City a few days before we received the letter containing the draft.”

Counsel for plaintiff then asked witness to state con-' tents of the Kansas City letter. ' Defendants objected until said letter was accounted for. Witness thereupon stated she had searched for the letter of A. Henry’s from Kansas City, and cannot find it. “I live at home with my father; my mother is dead; she was for many years an invalid ; I was in charge of the house ; did .all the business in caring for my parents ; when this letter came to father I took charge of it. Before coming to the trial I searched the house for it. Sometime ago I destroyed a good many letters and suppose this must have been one of them as I can find it nowhere.”

[382]*382Counsel for defendants here interposed further objection that Miss Henry is not competent to prove by herself her custody of said letter as agent, and the further objection that the evidence as to the loss is not sufficient to admit parol testimony as to contents, but Bryan Henry, the claimant, must himself testify as to its loss, all of which objections the court then and there overruled, and defendants then and there excepted.

Witness then testified: “A few days before this letter with the draft in it came, father received a letter from Kansas City, Missouri, from my brother, A. Henry, in which he said he would send father twenty-five dollars, to be applied as interest on this note.”

Counsel for plaintiff further asked: “Did you ever hear a conversation between your father and A. Henry, about this note ? A. Heard nothing particular about this note, in their conversation in 1883, but I had a conversation with my brother, A- Henry, in 1884, when he was on his way to the National Democratic Convention at Chicago, that nominated Gfrover Cleveland. He often spoke to me about his business at this time ; he said he had about seventy-five thousand dollars’ worth of property and was some in debt. He alluded to the twenty-five-dollar payment; he said he would have'paid this interest sooner but there was no necessity for it.”

CROSS-EXAMINATION.

“ I had frequent correspondence with my brother, A. Henry. I generally attended to the correspondence of the family with him.

Q. Were the two letters referred to in your examination addressed to your father % A. They were, and I read them after he died. I had the letter in reference to the payment of interest from Kansas City; it has been lost; I have searched for it and cannot find it. I have no idea where the envelope for the one written November 5, 1882, is ; I don’t remember when I saw the [383]*383envelope last; nay recollection is that the envelope was one with his attorney’s card on it, with directions to return if not called for. I sometimes kept letters in a drawer in my mother’s room, sometimes in my own room. The drawers' were not locked in our house. The draft for twenty-five dollars was made payable to M. B. Henry, or order. M. B. Henry is my name; I was to draw the money on it. I usually attended to business for my father.”

Defendants’ counsel at the close of the testimony asked the court to withdraw from the jury her evidence in regard to the contents of the letter from Kansas City, because she had not sufficiently accounted for its absence, which request the court refused and defendants excepted. It may be further observed that this witness further stated that her father was eighty years old, lived in Illinois and was unable to attend the trial, and that at the time of said indorsement her mother was an invalid and had since died, as had also her said brother Will and the said cousin Daily, these being the only other persons present at the time the draft was received, and payment indorsed on the note as aforesaid.

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101 Mo. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-diviney-mo-1890.