Linn County Bank v. Clifton

172 S.W. 388, 263 Mo. 200, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 388
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 388 (Linn County Bank v. Clifton) 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
Linn County Bank v. Clifton, 172 S.W. 388, 263 Mo. 200, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 388 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

This cause was sent and docketed here under a reversed title. We reconstruct the title by transposition as above to agree with our usage and avoid confusion in our reports. When a case comes up on error, by present usage here the title runs the same as the statute prescribes on appeal. [R. S. 1909, sec. 2039.] So, when a defendant is plaintiff in error, it has been found that the word “defendant” creeps by slip into our opinions in a double sense; hence, [206]*206for convenience and to avoid confusion, throughout this opinion we will use the term plaintiff for “defendant in error” and the term defendant for “plaintiff in error.”

The record shows that in the years 1904, ’05, ’06, one W. II. Clifton was a member of a firm of merchants in business at Brookfield, Missouri, under the style of Chapman, Clifton & Co. At a certain time Clifton retired and the remaining partners continued business under the old firm style. Subsequently, to-wit, on the last day of April, 1907, Clifton died testate and some time thereafter his widow, the defendant, Mary L. Clifton, was duly appointed executrix of his will and thereupon took upon herself the burden of administration. Thereafter, on June 3, 1909, plaintiff bank sued her as executrix for money had and received by the firm on sundry dates prior to the retirement of her husband. On the next day summons was served. This was within the two years allowed for the exhibition of claims. On October 8, 1909, leave was granted plaintiff to file an amended petition in forty-five days. Out of time, to-wit, in the ensuing February, such petition was filed in five counts. We infer this was beyond the two years for the exhibition of claims. Without objection on the part of defendant or motion to strike out because filed out of time, or because of a departure, presently an answer was filed making certain admissions and denials and pleading new matter deemed to constitute a defense. A reply coming in, the cause was at issue on the facts and merits, and at a trial to the court without the aid of .a jury judgment went for plaintiff bank for $4287.71 and costs. No motion for a new trial or in arrest or bill of exceptions was filed, but within a year thereafter defendant sued out a writ of error in the Kansas City Court of Appeals. That court certified the case here on a constitutional point and here it is on the record proper.

[207]*207At bottom the questions are two, viz.: (1) Does tbe petition state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action? (2) Did the circuit court of Linn county have jurisdiction of tbe subject-matter?

Sufficient further summary of tbe record to pass on those two questions understandingly will appear in tbe body of tbe opinion.

I. Of the petition, (a) Tbe petition alleges, inter alia, that when tbe money -sued for came into tbe bands of tbe firm of Chapman, Clifton & Co. during tbe time testatrix’s decedent was a member, notes were taken as evidence of tbe indebtedness, which were renewed from time to time and part payments were made thereon. At such times as these renewals were made tbe then outstanding notes were surrendered to the firm and tbe last series of notes given in renewal were brought in and tendered to defendant. By her answer she pleaded, inter alia, that after her husband died the firm of Chapman, Clifton & Co., as it then existed, went into bankruptcy and these identical notes were allowed against tbe bankrupt estate in tbe Federal court having jurisdiction of tbe bankruptcy proceeding; that plaintiff bank received dividends thereon, Clifton not. being a member of tbe firm at tbe time and tbe notes having been renewed by tbe firm after her husband’s retirement; she pleaded tbe allowance in bankruptcy, as we construe it, by way of estoppel, or else by way of conclusive evidence that tbe plaintiff bad accepted tbe new notes in full discharge of tbe old notes on which her husband was bound as a member of tbe firm. Be it one way or tbe other, issue was taken on these averments by tbe reply, and tbe court found against her on tbe issue so raised. In this state of tbe record we are asked to consider tbe matter pleaded in her answer, and to determine that tbe court erred in its finding on tbe issue. But such argument avails nothing; for not only have we no evi[208]*208deuce here, absent a bill of exceptions, but the determinative question in hand strikes only at the sufficiency of the petition. To determine the sufficiency of a petition on the averments of an answer is not a rule of decision of this court known to us. We are cited to no case and it is probable on principle that none could possibly exist sustaining the line of argument advanced by learned counsel. A petition stands on its own foot. It is bad or good in law by its own four corners. We may not look to the answer to adjudg-e the sufficiency of the petition in stating a cause of action.

(b) It is argued further that the judgment is iniquitous and that certain elaborately mentioned things, brought to light (it is said) since the judgment was rendered, establish its iniquity. If reason be the life of the law, then, what is said' in the former paragraph applies here. None of those things are before us on a writ of error on this record, and if they were they are logically disconnected from the question of the sufficiency of the petition. Accordingly we put them away from us.

(c) It is argued that by taking notes and renewing them the cause of action on the original consideration, as for money had and received, was suspended until the maturity of the last renewal notes. Therefore, it is said, the suit was prematurely brought, that the petition should have shown by proper allegation that the notes had matured. As to that we say: Assuming for the nonce that the petition should have contained such an allegation or an equivalent one, and assuming, for the purposes of this case only, that absent a demurrer to the petition and present an imnlied admission below that the petition was good in that particular, as here, the point is'still open, yet we cannot allow the petition bad on inspection because of such alleged infirmity. The argument runs on the theory that these renewal notes and all the notes were payable “on demand;” that, therefore, the notes [209]*209did not mature until suela demand. Hence, a “demand” should have been averred. Now, the petition does contain averments that the various balances claimed are due and imp aid. After judgment we think the averment is sufficient. It is not too far a cry to say that if demand is necessary to make money due, an allegation that the money is due is impliedly an allegation of demand by way of inference. We have been so lately over the question in Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Kuhlmann, 238 Mo. l. c. 702 et seq., that further exposition is waste time and space. At the very worst it was the imperfect statement of a cause of action, and the rule of decision in this jurisdiction is to liberally aid the petition by every reasonable intendment and inference springing from the averments actually made. The strong presumptions are that the judgment was correct, that the court proceeded by right and not by wrong. Hence, on such bare record as we have here, we must assume that court heard evidence sufficient to found the judgment upon and to sustain it after its rendition.

(d) As we understand the brief of learned counsel for defendant, other specifications of error, though of a double aspect, group themselves more naturally under the head of jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 388, 263 Mo. 200, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linn-county-bank-v-clifton-mo-1914.