Lowrey v. Danforth

69 S.W. 39, 95 Mo. App. 441, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 64
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 39 (Lowrey v. Danforth) 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
Lowrey v. Danforth, 69 S.W. 39, 95 Mo. App. 441, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 64 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BARCLAY, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note in the following terms:

“4,000.00 “ Paynes ville, Mo., Sept. 12; 1898.
“On or before September 12, 1899, I promise to pay to Henry T. Lowrey or order, four thousand dollars, with interest from date at the rate of seven per ■cent per annum.
“S. T. Danforth:.”

The indorsements on the note are admitted to be .genuine. They are as follows:

“Pay to the order of Mrs. H. T. Lowrey.
“Henry T. Lowrey.”
“April 20 credited by cash two thousand dollars
<$2,000.00).
(Signed) “H. T. Lowrey.”

[445]*445Tlie plaintiff is the Mrs. H. T. Lowrey mentioned in one of the foregoing indorsements.

The petition follows the ordinary form of a claim upon a note against the defendant who is maker thereof. The allegations concerning the transfer to-the plaintiff are that, “before the maturity of said note, said Henry T. Lowrey indorsed the same to plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff became the owner of said note and entitled to payment of the amount mentioned therein. ’ ’

The answer of defendant contained a general denial, except as to the execution of the note and the-payment of $2,000 thereon which were admitted. Defendant then sets up a special plea to the effect “that since the year 1868 he performed divers and sundry personal and clerical services for the deceased, Henry T. Lowrey, who was a man of large affairs, and that the said Henry T. Lowrey, recognizing his obligation and indebtedness to the defendant for and on account of such services so rendered him by defendant, revoked and cancelled said note, together with the remaining interest thereon, and released the defendant from any obligation to pay any portion of the remainder of said note for the consideration above stated; such release being in writing and signed by said Henry T. Lowrey and dated August 15, 1899; and defendant says that by means of such release he has been discharged from any and all liability on said note- and the same is fully paid and discharged, and he pleads the same in defense of this action.”

A reply was filed containing a denial of the new matter in the answer.

At the trial, defendant admitted the indorsements on the back of the note to be genuine. Plaintiff then-read the note in evidence and rested.

Defendant without objection (so far as this record discloses) read in evidence the paper mentioned in the-answer in these words:

[446]*446“This is to certify that a certain note drawn by S. T. Danforth of Paynesville, Mo., payable to me and dated about September 12, 1898, for four thousand dollars, and upon which note two thousand dollars were paid in March, 1899, is hereby revoked and can-celled together with the interest thereon, and I promise to cancel and return to him said note as early as convenient.
“This cancellation is not intended as a gift or legacy, but is in payment of clerical and other personal services he, the said Danforth, has rendered me since the year 1862, and for which no other compensation has been given; and that the said Danforth makes no claim for compensation for such services and that I alone insist upon the payment as an act of justice. “Dated St. Louis, Mo., August 15, 1899.
“H. T. Lowrey.”

Testimony was admitted to prove the signature of said document to be authentic, and that Mr. Lowrey was dead. When he died does not appear from the abstracts before us now.

Defendant then introduced a witness who gave evidence tending to show that defendant from time to time had rendered valuable services of a clerical character to Mr. Henry T. Lowrey, during a long period of years, and that Mr. Lowrey had expressed the intention to “remember him” (meaning the maker of the note) on that account.

The court excluded an offer of defendant to prove by himself as a witness, the kind and value of the services above mentioned, and that Mr. Lowrey had admitted an indebtedness on that ground. The offer was excluded on the objection that the adverse party to the transaction was dead, and hence defendant was incompetent.

The court also excluded defendant’s offer in evidence of a letter sent, by mail from plaintiff to defendant, admitted to be genuine, as follows:

[447]*447“St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 9, 1899.
“S. T. Danforth., Esq., Paynesville, Mo.
“Dear Sir: Some time ago you wrote me in regard to a release which you claimed you held, relieving you from the payment of a certain promissoiy note, given to you by my husband, H. T. Lowrey,- deceased, bearing date of September 12, 1898, due on or before September 12, 1899, with the amount of principal $4,000 with interest at the rate of seven per cent per annum from date. Now I find an indorsement of payment of $2,000 on the back of this note. I also found the note had been indorsed over to me for collection from my husband, thus enabling me to proceed to collect the note either in a fiduciary or individual capacity. It was my husband’s wish that should the principal be paid promptly the interest should be remitted. This is now, on account of delayed action on your part, a matter optional to my discretion. The release which you claim to have seems hardly plausible judging from existing circumstances prior to my husband’s death. I therefore desire you to call and show some disposition toward the payment of the balance of this note as it is now two months past due. Hoping to hear from you soon in regard to this matter, I remain,
“Respectfully,
“Mes. H. T, Lowest.”

The grounds of objection to the admission of that latter were that the plaintiff was not a competent witness on account of the death of Mr. Lowrey, that the letter related to matters of a confidential nature between husband and wife, and that defendant had closed his evidence before the offer was made.

On this case the court gave a binding instruction to the jury to find for plaintiff “in the sum of four thousand dollars together with interest thereon from date of said note at the rate of seven per cent per annum, less the sum of two thousand dollars with seven per cent interest thereon from April 20, 1899, to date.”

[448]*448The jury accordingly returned a verdict for plaintiff for $2,360.75, and judgment was rendered thereon from which defendant appealed to this court in the usual manner.

1. • The note sued upon is not expressed to be for value received. It is therefore not a negotiable note within the purview of our stattite on that subject (R. S. 1899, sec. 457). Beatty v. Anderson, 5 Mo. 447; Famous Co. v. Crosswhite, 124 Mo. 34. But yet the note is transferable, and the assignee, as the real party in interest, may sue the maker thereon in her own name, under Missouri law. R. S. 1899, secs. 540, 896; Bennett v. Pound, 28 Mo. 598.

No further proofs than the possession of the paper and the indorsement was offered by plaintiff to show the transfer to her; but they were evidence of that fact. Spears v. Bond, 79 Mo. 467. The note imports an original consideration (R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 39, 95 Mo. App. 441, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowrey-v-danforth-moctapp-1902.