St. Louis National Bank v. Flanagan

31 S.W. 773, 129 Mo. 178, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 134
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 18, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 773 (St. Louis National Bank v. Flanagan) 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
St. Louis National Bank v. Flanagan, 31 S.W. 773, 129 Mo. 178, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 134 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

This is an action on the following note:

“$6,000. St. Louis, December 14, 1892.
“Thirty days after date, for value received, we promise .to pay to the order of the St. Louis National Bank sis thousand dollars, payable at St. Louis Na[186]*186tional Bank with interest from maturity at the rate of eight per cent per annum.
“A. K. Florida,
“F. G-. Flanagan.”

The petition was in the usual form. The answer of respondent Flanagan set up as a defense that he signed the note as maker with Florida for the accommodation purely of Florida and without receiving any value or consideration whatever, and that plaintiff knew this when it took the note; that Florida never negotiated or delivered the note for value to plaintiff, and, if he ever delivered it at all, plaintiff gave no value for it; that plaintiff did not acquire the note in good faith or in the ordinary course of business, but wrongfully appropriated the same, and pretended to discount it and place the proceeds of said discount to the credit of Florida for the purpose of paying an existing indebtedness of Florida to the bank, caused by overdrafts, to the amount of $7,789.53.

The reply denied all the allegations of the answer, but admitted that Florida was indebted to the bank upon his account current by overdrafts to the amount of $7,789.53, and averred that on the ninth day of January, 1893, Florida requested plaintiff to discount the note in suit; that this was done and the proceeds, $5,-989.34, were placed to Florida’s credit in his account current, and that plaintiff applied the same toward payment of his said overdrafts.

At the trial the plaintiff offered the note -in evidence and rested.

The defendant then offered to read the deposition of Lewis C. Nelson, taken by a notary public, August 23, 1893, at the instance and on behalf of defendant, as the declaration of the plaintiff. Plaintiff objected on the groimd that the said Nelson was in court. This was conceded to be the fact. But the court overruled the [187]*187objection and plaintiff excepted. Examined by Mr. Grover for defendant. The deposition was in substance as follows:

‘ ‘Am president of tbe plaintiff bank. Florida kept an account with plaintiff bank, a pretty extensive account. We often discounted paper for him; his account was often overdrawn.
“Q.‘ Now, I will ask you when you first saw this note that your bank sued on in this case (note shown to witness)? A. Well, I can not state exactly what ■ time I first saw it; it appears to have been discounted January 9; it has my official stamp upon it January 9, 1893.
“Q. That don’t answer the question. A. Well, I don’t know when I did see it first; I might have seen it first, December 14; you asked me a question that it would be preposterous for me to answer.
“Q. Can you state when it first came before the bank or before you for discount? A. Well, it was presented to me by Mr. Burr some time before it was discounted, a few days before, I think.
UQ. What do you mean by a few days? A. I mean a few days.
“Q. Three? A. It might have been three or ten, I should call either a few days.
“Q. Well, was it entered on your book when it was first presented for discount by Mr. Burr? A. No, sir, it wasn’t.
“Q. Was it presented for discount to you by Mr. Burr, or did Florida hand it to you the first time you say it was offered for discount? A. I am not positive; it might have been presented by both; I hnow it was presented by one or both.
‘ ‘ Q. Well, ivhat was done with it when it was first presented the first time? A. I declined to take it.
[188]*188“Q. On what' grounds? A. Well, I said Mr. Florida had all the money from the bank that he was entitled to at that time; he had borrowed all that I thought he ought to have.
Q. Was he in good credit at the time in your bank? A. Yes, sir, fairly so; so much so I would have taken that note with Flanagan’s indorsement on it.
UQ. Now, Mr. Nelson, Flanagan’s name was on it; why didn’t you take it? A. I have stated before that I thought he had all the money he was entitled to.
“Q. Flanagan’s name then, cut no figure in it when it was first presented? A. I shouldn’t have taken it in any event, unless Mr. Flanagan’s name had been there.
“Q. Mr. Flanagan’s name was not on all the paper Mr. Florida had in your bank at that time, was it? A. No, sir; somebody else’s name was, I suppose, eqully as good for what they represented.
“Q. When that note was first presented to you, you didn’t consider Mr. Florida’s single name as good for the amount? A. Well, there are very few single names that ‘go’ in our bank.
“Q. You didn’t consider Florida’s single name at the time that note was first presented to you for discount, you didn’t consider it as good? A. Well, it might have been good; I would not have taken it.
“Q. You would not? A. No, sir; I wouldn’t have taken it.
“Q. Do you know what amount of discount you carried for. Florida at that time? A. I don’t remember just now.
“Q. I mean at the time this was first presented for discount? A. I don’t remember just now.
“Q. Do you know whether those discounts, any of them, were paid off between the time this note was [189]*189first presented and'the time of the discount? A. My impression is, they were.
UQ. You don’t know? A. I think they were more than the amount of the note paid off from the time it was presented to the time it was presented and accepted; when it was first presented I considered his discount line amply full, considering the condition of the supply of money I had on hand at the time, and when it was presented the second time, I think his line had been materially reduced during the few days that had elapsed afterward.
“Q. Now, prior to the discounting of this note, hadn’t you had an interview at your residence at Normandy with Florida, at which Hammett was present, about his financial situation and about the money that he owed your bank? A. Prior to the discount of that?
“Q. Yes, sir; prior to the ninth of January, when that note was discounted. A. I believe I had.
“Q. It was on Sunday afternoon, wasn’t it? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. The eighth of January? A. I believe it was.
“A.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 773, 129 Mo. 178, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-national-bank-v-flanagan-mo-1895.