Moore v. Macon Savings Bank

22 Mo. App. 684, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 349
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 22 Mo. App. 684 (Moore v. Macon Savings Bank) 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
Moore v. Macon Savings Bank, 22 Mo. App. 684, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 349 (Mo. Ct. App. 1886).

Opinions

Hall, J.

If the indorsement of the memorandum of the agreement between the plaintiff and the bank upon the back of the instrument in suit was an alteration of the instrument, then thereby was Shdrtridge, the surety, released, under the facts hypothetically stated to the jury in the instruction given by the court. Because £ £ the rule is now firmly established in this state that any alteration of a written instrument, after delivery, however immaterial in its nature, or however innocently made, without the consent of all the parties, vitiates the instrument.” Morrison v. Garth, 78 Mo. 437; Bank v. Fricke, 75 Mo. 178; Moore v. Hutchinson, 69 Mo. 429; Bank v. Armstrong, 62 Mo. 59; Bank v. Dunn, 62 Mo. 79; Evans v. Foreman, 60 Mo. 449; Haskell v. Champion, 30 Mo. 136.

The first question for our determination, therefore, is, was such indorsement an alteration of the instrument %

This identical question was passed upon in Bucklen v. Hubb (53 Ind. 474). That was an action upon a promissory note. The defendant in his answer, as a defence, pleaded that he was a surety only; that between the principal in the note and the plaintiff, an agreement had been made for the extension of the time of the payment of the note for an indefinite period of time, without the defendant’s knowledge or consent, and that in pursuance of such agreement the note was, without defendant’s knowledge or consent, ££ altered and changed in a material part thereof, by writing on the back thereof the following agreement:

[690]*690“I hereby agree to pay ten per cent, interest on this note hereafter.
“July 29, 1868. M. E. Cole.”

A demurrer was sustained by the trial court to so much of the answer as set up said defence, and the supreme court held, properly sustained. The court said: “ We do not regard the contract by the principal in the note, shown by the indorsement, as of itself sufficient to change, alter, or supersede the contract evidenced by the face of the note. It was the agreement of the principal to pay a higher rate of interest than that mentioned on the face of the note. It does not purport to be an alteration of the contract evidenced by the face of the note, but only an additional stipulation to which the principal and creditor only are parties. Had it been on a separate paper, it would hardly have been supposed to be an alteration of the note.” See, also, Huff v. Cole, 45 Ind. 300.

The agreement for the extension of time was held to constitute no defence for the surety, because it was for' an indefinite time.

“An alteration of an instrument is something by which its meaning or language is changed, either in a material or immaterial particular. If what is written upon, or erased from the paper containing the instrument, have no tendency to produce this result, or to mislead any person, it cannot be said to be an alteration.” Morrill v. Otis, 12 N. H. 472.

The question we are now considering is different, and must be distinguished from a change of the contract, such, for instance, as a valid agreement for the extension of the time of th'e payment of the note without the surety’s consent. We are now considering the question of the alteration of the instrument, and not the change of the contract. A valid parol agreement between the holder of a note and the principal in the note, without the surety’s consent, for the extension of the time of the [691]*691payment of the note, will release the surety, because thereby the surety’s contract is changed. The question now is, would the indorsement of such an agreement upon the back of the note be an alteration of the note itself, the written evidence of the contract? We think, not. Such indorsement would not purport to alter in any particular the meaning or language of the note. By the agreement indorsed upon the note the contract evidenced by the note would be changed, but the meaning and language of the note would remain the same, unaltered.

The indorsement upon the note of a new and distinct agreement between the payee and the principal in the note is only evidence of the new agreement; it cannot be said to alter the note, which is the evidence of the prior •agreement. By such indorsement, the meaning and 1am-.guage of the note are left unaltered, and the new agreement is simply evidenced. A change in the original -contract cannot be said to have been attempted by an alteration of the written evidence of it, when a new and distinct agreement is made and indorsed upon the note in such a manner as to show that the indorsement is of a new agreement, and that in no manner can it alter or affect the language of the note.

The indorsement on the instrument in this case was only a memorandum of the agreement between the plaintiff and the bank; it did not set out the agreement in full. The indorsement was, however, signed for the bank by J. B. Melone, cashier, and by him alone, and it can have no other effect as to this point than it would have had had it set out the agreement in full. The indorsement purported to bind only the bank; it purported to be a new and distinct agreement by the bank: it in no way purported to alter the meaning or language of the note, or to be a part thereof. The indorsement showed for itself what it was, so far as it concerned the note; it was separate and apart from the note, in the sense we are now considering it, not as the contract, but as the evidence of the contract. The indorsement comes within [692]*692the rule that, “if the new writing is amere memorandum outside of the note, it is not an alteration.” 2 Parsons ©n Bills and Notes (2 Ed.) 546.

In our opinion the indorsement upon the instrument was not an alteration of it. And in this opinion we are-supported by an intimation in 8tilwell v. Aaron (69 Mo. 543), and by the logic of Williams v. Jensen (75 Mo. 684).

II.

Was the agreement for the extension of the time of the payment of the instrument a valid agreement ?

The consideration of the agreement was the promise-by the bank to pay ten per cent, interest, to be compounded every six months.

It is contended by counsel for the defendant, that the instrument in suit drew ten per cent, interest only until maturity. In this state an instrument drawing a specified rate of interest before maturity draws the same rate of interest after maturity. Borders v. Barber, 81 Mo. 644; Bank v. Forbes, 9 Mo. App. 575; s. c., 79 Mo. 226 ; Briscoe v. Kenealy, 8 Mo. App. 77.

Had the instrument in suit, by so many words, called for ten per cent, interest “from date,” or “until due,” it would, under the above decisions, have drawn the same rate of interest after maturity. The words used by the instrument are, “with interest at the rate of ten percent. per annum for the time specified.” By the terms of the instrument the amount of the deposit was payable in sixty days after date, and “the time specified” meant from date until maturity, and nothing more; the instrument drew the specified rate of interest after maturity just as it would have done had it in express words called for such interest “from date,” or “until due.”

The agreement for the extension of time was made-after the maturity of the instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Mo. App. 684, 1886 Mo. App. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-macon-savings-bank-moctapp-1886.