Schlicker v. Gordon
This text of 74 Mo. 534 (Schlicker v. Gordon) 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.
Opinion
This proceeding was instituted in the Moniteau circuit court under sections 3904 and 3905, Revised Statutes 1879, for judgment against defendants on account of money alleged to have been paid by plaintiff as their security upon a judgment rendered in said circuit court against defendants and plaintiff. Upon the trial plaintiff had judgment, from which defendants have appealed.
Section 3904, Revised Statutes, provides that in all cases where judgment is given in any court, whether of record or not, upon any bond, bill or note for the payment of money or delivery of property, against the principal debtor and any surety therein, and such surety shall pay [537]*537the judgment, or any part thereof, he shall be entitled, on motion, to a judgment in the same court against the principal debtor, for the amount he has paid with ten per cent interest thereon from time of payment, together with costs. This section necessarily clothes the court, in which such a motion, as is authorized by it to be filed, is pending, with Jurisdiction to hear and determine all questions growing out of the motion. If the question presented be one of fact, we can see no reason why it might not be submitted to a jury if either party should demand it. The court did not err in overruling the objection. The proceeding is summary, and the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine such motions has been upheld in the following cases, in which similar objections to the one made in this case were involved. Hensley v. Baker, 10 Mo. 157; McCune v. Hull, 20 Mo. 596; Edwardson v. Garnhart, 56 Mo. 81.
Defendants, on this state of facts, asked the court to' declare in effect that if defendants executed the note for the purpose of procuring the money for plaintiff and for his accommodation, and he received the money procured,, and at or before the time plaintiff' signed the note he agreed to pay it out of the money coming or due to him on his. contract to build the school house, and he failed to do so-, he could not recover. This the court refused to do, and in so doing, we think, committed error’, for which the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded,
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