Kalamazoo National Bank v. Clark

52 Mo. App. 593, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 422
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 Mo. App. 593 (Kalamazoo National Bank v. Clark) 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
Kalamazoo National Bank v. Clark, 52 Mo. App. 593, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 422 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is a suit upon two promissory notes negotiable in form, made by the defendant to the Phillips & Bigelow Wind Mill Company, a manufacturing corporation of the state of Michigan, and by it assigned to the plaintiff, a banking corporation of the same state. It is alleged in the petition that the wind mill company sold and assigned by indorsement thereon in writing said promissory notes before the maturity thereof. The defense interposed by the answer was that of non est factum. There was a trial which resulted in judgment for defendant, to reverse which plaintiff appeals.

The errors complained of arise out of the action of the trial court in the giving and refusing of instructions. The plaintiff’s first instruction, which was refused by the court, directed the jury that under the pleadings and evidence their verdict must be for it. The determination of the question thus presented imposes upon us the duty to examine the evidence in the case, which tends to establish about these facts: The wind mill company sold the defendant a wind mill, designed for pumping water, which it agreed to and did put up on the latter’s farm. Some time after the mill had been put up an agent of the wind mill company met the defendant who was at a neighbor’s, about a quarter from his own place, and there asked the latter to give his two notes for the purchase price of the mill. This the latter refused to do, saying, “I don’t intend to [596]*596sign the notes until the company makes the mill run.” The agent replied that “the company was responsible for whatever they do.” The defendant then said, “If you will put that on the note I will sign it, and I will not do it before — that you will make the mill work.” The agent then turned over the notes and wrote on the back of them. The defendant asked him to read to him what he had written. He then read: “In case the Phillips & Bigelow "Wind Mill Company failed to make the wind mill give satisfaction the notes were to be null and void.” The defendant undertook to read the indorsement the agent had made on the notes, but not being a very good scholar and not being able to see on account of the infirmities incident to age, being over seventy-two years old, he could not do it, so he asked the agent to read it for him. The defendant could see there was writing on the back of the notes, but it seems he could not tell what it was. The machine never did work.

The cashier of the plaintiff bank testified that the notes in controversy were purchased by it of the wind mill company before maturity, in the usual way, and in the ordinary course of discount business of the bank.

The notes were produced in evidence and showed an entire absence of the indorsement thereon, which the defendant testified the agent wrote. The defendant does not deny that the signature to the notes is his, but insists that the notes on the face the same as these, which he signed and delivered to the agent of the wind mill company, had the written conditions thereon indorsed, which we have already stated. The question now is whether or not, under this state of facts, the court should declare, as a matter of law, that the plaintiff should recover.

An agreement written on the back of a promissory note before signing is not a prior or contemporaneous [597]*597agreement, but a part of the note. Randolph on Commercial Paper, secs. 92, 229. In Shirts v. Overjohn, 60 Mo. 305, it was stated that the result of the best considered cases on this subject may be generally stated to be, that where it appears that the party sought to be charged intended to bind himself by some obligation in writing, and voluntarily signed his name to what he supposed to be the obligation he intended to execute, having full and unrestricted means of ascertaining for himself the true character of such instrument before signing the same, but by his failure to inform himself of its contents, or by relying upon the representations of another, as to the contents of the instrument presented for his signature, signed and delivered a negotiable note in lieu of the instrument intended to be signed, he cannot be heard to impeach its validity in the hands of a bona ficle holder.” Bank v. Stanley, 46 Mo. App. 440; Cowgill v. Petifish, 51 Mo. App. 264.

In Frederick v. Clemens, 60 Mo. 313, where the essential facts were similar to those in this case, it was said that it should have been left to the jury to say whether defendant, without negligence on his part, signed the note sued on in ignorance of its true character, through any artifice or fraudulent representations on the part of the payee of the note. But does the rule just stated apply to a cause like this? Here the evidence tends to show that defendant did not have the free and unrestricted means of ascertaining for himself the true character of the instruments before he signed them.

In Daniel on Negotiable Instruments, section 847, it is stated: “The fifth class of cases is that in which some natural infirmity or defect of education has been imposed upon, and the party deceived into signing a note, under the impression that it was for a different [598]*598amount, or was a contract of a different character. Thus, if a note was fraudulently or falsely read to a blind man, and he were to sign it believing it to have been correctly read, or if a party were unable to read and signed a note after due inquiry and precaution, under the assurance that it was an agreement of a different kind, we should have a new element entering into the consideration of liability. In such cases the want of faculties to detect the fraud shields the party from its consequences. He has created no agency or trust. He has not intentionally or knowingly given appearance of validity to the instrument. It cannot be said that he has acted negligently because his infirmities prevented that diligence which men of ordinary faculties and education possess.”

But-, by reference to the adjudged cases, it will be seen that this rule is probably not as broad as stated by Mr. Daniel. It has been, in effect, ruled in a number of cases that, when a person of this class has been misled and imposed upon by a stranger, to whom he has delivered a note, and by his own negligence or careless indifference' contributes to the imposition, or if, by the exercise of a prudent diligence or regard for his own rights, he might have protected himself, he should suffer rather than the innocent holder of his paper, carelessly issued by him. Williams v. Stole, 79 Ind. 80; Fenton v. Robinson, 11 N. Y. (4 Hun) 252; Webb v. Corbin, 78 Ind. 403; Greenfield’s Estate, 14 Pa. St. 489; Walker v. Ebert, 29 Wis. 194; Griffiths v. Kellogg, 39 Wis. 290; Bowers v. Thompson, 62 Wis. 480. These cases hold that, where such a party has been guilty of no negligence in affixing his signature, he will be protected against a bona fide holder.

It would thus appear that, though defendant was partially blind and illiterate, yet, if by the exercise of a prudent diligence and regard for his own rights, he [599]*599might have protected himself against the fraud and imposition of the agent of the wind mill company, it was his duty to do so; otherwise he will not be protected. Fusili v. Railroad, 45 Mo. App. 535. The burden of showing prudence was on him.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Mo. App. 593, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalamazoo-national-bank-v-clark-moctapp-1893.