Ripley National Bank v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance

47 S.W. 1, 145 Mo. 142, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 22, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 1 (Ripley National Bank v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance) 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
Ripley National Bank v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance, 47 S.W. 1, 145 Mo. 142, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 76 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Brace, P. J.

On the first day of August, 1893, M. H. Sibert, one of the defendants in the above entitled cause, by his deed of that date, in which his wife joined, conveyed a tract of land, containing one hun[147]*147dred and twenty acres, described in the petition, and situate in Pettis county, to John Montgomery, Jr., in trust to secure the payment of a promissory note in words and figures as follows:

“$3,365.23. Sedalia, Mo., July 21, 1893.
“Four rhonths after date I promise to pay to the order of C. Newkirk and J. C. Thompson, at the First National Bank of Sedalia, Mo., thirty-three hundred and sixty-five and twenty-three hundredths dollars, for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount, with interest from date at tfie rate of eight per cent per annum.
“H. M. SlBERT.”

This deed of trust was filed for record in the office of the recorder of said county on the nineteenth of August, 1893, and duly'recorded in Book 100 at page 133. Afterward the following release was entered upon the margin of said record of said deed of trust:

“The note herein mentioned having been fully paid, satisfaction of the deed of trust is hereby acknowledged. Dec. 8th. 1893.
“C. Newkirk .
“J. C. Thompson.”
“Note produced and canceled.
“Attest: J. H. Pilkington, Recorder.”

On the same day, December 8, 1893, there was filed for record in the office of the recorder of said county and duly recorded, a deed of trust duly acknowledged and delivered by the said M. H. Sibert and his wife, whereby they conveyed the same with other lands, the whole containing six “hundred and forty acres, to E. W. Rowse, in trust to secure the payment of a principal promissory note for $9,000, payable five years after date, and ten interest notes each for $270, payable half yearly, to the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company. [148]*148Afterward on the eighteenth of May, 1894, this suit was instituted by the respondent bank, against said insurance company, Rowse, Pilkington, Montgomery, M. H. Sibert and Louise Sibert his wife, charging in the petition, that the said promissory note before due and for full value was indorsed by the said J. C. Thompson and O'. Newkirk and delivered to the plaintiff bank, which is now and ever since has been the owner thereof; that the same remains due and unpaid; and that said deed of trust was also delivered to plaintiff and has since remained in its hands, a subsisting and valid security for said note; that the said Newkirk and Thompson, without any power so to do, or any knowledge of or authority from the plaintiff bank, as'sumed wrongfully to release said deed of trust on the margin of the record thereof; that said marginal release falsely certified that said note was paid, and that said release was attested by the recorder who certified that the note was at the time produced and canceled, all of which was untrue; that by the filing of the Rowse deed of trust on the same day, the same became apparently but wrongfully a prior lien of record on said one hundred and twenty acres of land, when it should of right be a lien subsequent and inferior to plaintiff’s deed of trust; and praying a decree that the pretended release be canceled, and that .the lien of the Rowse deed of trust be postponed and made subject to the other, and for general relief. The defense set up by the defendant Sibert in his answer to the petition, is payment of the note in full to J. C. Thompson, who, it is therein alleged, was at the time the agent of the plaintiff, duly-authorized to receive payment of the same, upon which, issue was joined by reply. The answers of the other defendants do not appear in the record. Upon the hearing the issues were found for the plaintiff bank, and a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of the [149]*149petition, from which the defendant Sibert alone appeals.

It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff is a national bank doing business in Ripley, in the State of Ohio, of which W. T. G-albreath was cashier, and Gr. Bambach was the vice-president and attorney; that the defendant Sibert, a large land owner of Pettis county, Missouri, was, and for many years had been, a customer of the First National Bank of Sedalia, Missouri — frequently needing in his business money, which he obtained from the Sedalia bank (of which O. New-kirk was president and J. O. Thompson cashier) without security, upon notes similar to that hereinbefore set out, which were indorsed by Newkirk and Thompson and forwarded to and discounted by the plaintiff bank. These notes were sometimes paid, and sometimes renewed from time to time, and thus Sibert as maker, and Newkirk and Thompson as indorsers, became indebted to the Ripley National Bank on one or two of these notes overdue, in the sum of $3,625.23 on the twenty-first of July, 1893, in consideration and discharge of which indebtedness Sibert executed the note and deed of trust in question, in pursuance of an arrangement to that effect that day made between him and Mr. Bambach, attorney for the plaintiff bank. Thereupon, Mr. Bambach, delivered up the old note or notes; Newkirk and Thompson indorsed the note’ in question and the same was delivered to Mr. Bambach for the plaintiff bank, who took the same to Ripley Ohio, and delivered it to the plaintiff bank, to whom the deed of trust,' after it was recorded, was also delivered, and both note and deed were in the actual possession of said bank at Ripley in Ohio on the eighth of December, 1893, when the release was entered on the margin of the record at Sedalia by Newkirk and Thompson.

[150]*150There can be no question on the evidence but that, when the note and deed of trustwere thus executed and delivered, Sibert fully understood the exact relation that Newkirk and Thompson sustained to this indebtedness as his indorsers, and to the Ripley National Bank, his creditor, to whom the note had been thus indorsed and delivered. The note fell due November 21, 1893. On the sixteenth of November, 1893, G-albreath, cashier, wrote Thompson, cashier, as follows: “The H. M. Sibert note, $3,365.23, and four months three days interest, is also due November 21-24. I hold it here to hear from you. If he does not get the money as expected to pay it, have him send the interest due for the time as above, $91.97, which will be credited on the note and held longer for time you direct or find necessary; but if he is ready to pay, advise me, and I will send it to you. Note and interest to maturity, $3,457.20.”

On the twentieth of that month Thompson cashier answered as follows: “In regard to the Sibert note I would suggest that you hold it for the present. He has applied for a loan on his land with which to take up this, and another note, and I am confident that the loan applied for will be secured. Will probably not know in regard to this before the last of the present week.” The note not having been paid at maturity, and protest having been waived by the indorsers, was held by the bank, in pursuance of this request, until the twenty-first of December, 1893, when Galbreath, cashier, in a letter of that date, under the impression that Sibert had failed to secure the contemplatedToan, wrote Thompson, cashier, as follows: “We will carry the H. M.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 1, 145 Mo. 142, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ripley-national-bank-v-connecticut-mutual-life-insurance-mo-1898.