State Ex Rel. Strohfeld v. Cox

30 S.W.2d 462, 325 Mo. 901, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 517
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 8, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 462 (State Ex Rel. Strohfeld v. Cox) 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
State Ex Rel. Strohfeld v. Cox, 30 S.W.2d 462, 325 Mo. 901, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 517 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*903 WHITE, J.-

Certiorari to the Springfield Court of Appeals.

The Meyer Milling Company, a corporation, brought suit against the relator, Strohfeld, in the Circuit Court of Christian County, on *904 a promissory note for one hundred dollars. On change of venue to Lawrence County the ease was tried and judgment rendered for the defendant. On appeal to the Springfield Court of Appeals the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the .trial court to enter judgment for the plaintiff.

The note, signed by Strohfeld, was payable to the order of George W, Wilson, trustee. It passed into-the hands of one W. E. Smith, who later, before maturity, sold it to the Meyer Milling Company, plaintiff in the suit. '

On a former trial of the:case the verdict was for the defendant; on appeal to the Court of Appeals the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded. Then followed a second trial, with the result stated. The defense was that the note was procured by fraud and the plaintiff had due notice of the defect in the payee’s title. The Court of Appeals held that the defendant assumed the burden of proving that such title was defective, and did prove it, but directed a¡ verdict for the plaintiff on the ground that it, Meyer MiUini? Com-. pany,. was a purchaser in good faith for value without notice, and therefore was a holder in due course under Section 838, Revised Statutes 1919.

The relator here asserts that the ruling of the Court of Appeals is in conflict with the rulings of this court in three particulars.

I. Proposition one relates to a holding by the Court of Appeals that a telephone conversation offered in evidence by the defendant to show notice to the plaintiff Meyer Milling Company of a defect in title was improperly admitted. That court thus stated the, proposition as the principal issue in the case, quoting from the defendant’s brief: •

“We think that it can fairly be said that just two principal questions are involved in this appeal.
“First, did the trial court rule correctly in permitting Witness Howard to testify on behalf of the defendant, to- a certain telephone conversation that he had with somebody relative to certain notes, of which the one in suit here was one; Second, If the court did rule properly in admitting that evidence, was it of such a character as would convict plaintiff of bad faith in purchasing said note without first making an investigation/’

The opinion then relates the conversation referred to. Mr. Howard, a banker in Billings, testified that in the latter part of 1924 someone called: on- the- teléphone; he answered and the caller asked if it was the Bank of Billings. The witness answered that it was, and the caller said: “This is the Meyer Milling Company talk *905 ing.” Then followed a conversation in relation to notes connected with a deal in which Smith, who negotiated the note to the Meyer Milling Company, was engaged, regarding the sale of a mill at Republic. After talking about the notes, of which the note sued on was one, the caller asked about certain parties and whether their notes would be good, and among the parties was Strohfeld. The witness said: ■

“I told them the notes would be good in my judgment if there was no strings to them.”

B;e stated farther that the party at the other end of the line did not ask what was meant by strings on the notes: that was the end of the conversation.

•The relator claims that the ruling of the Court of Appeals in holding the evidence improperly admitted is in conflict with two cases: Meeker v. Union Electric Company, 279 Mo. 574, and Star Publishing Company v. Warehouse Co., 123 Mo. App. 13. In the Meeker case the witness to the telephone conversation called a number and the answer was given from the number called as the party to whom the number belonged: The Court of Appeals in its opinion distinguishes that case as follows:

“A principal may be bound by a conversation when a party uses a telephone, calls his number in the usual manner and is answered by a person who says that he is the individual called or who answers the call on behalf of his principal at his principal’s place of business. Under such circumstances, the presumption logically follows that-the party answering is the party called and that he has authority to .act or bind his principal as to the matter under consideration. But no such presumption may be fairly said to follow when conditions are reversed. When the party called must depend entirely upon the word of the party calling, as to the identity, the conversation is purely and simply hearsay, the same as a conversation with some unknown person face to face would be. [American Trust Co. v. Moore, 248 S. W. 983; Fougue v. Burgess, 71 Mo. 389.]”

The court then found it unnecessary to determine whether the evidence if admissible was of a character to convict plaintiff of bad faith.

We can add little in explanation tíf the distinction' there made by the Court of Appeals. Where one is called by telephone with his number, and answers, admitting himself to be the person called, testimony of the caller relating the conversation ensuing is held admissible. The number called is owned by and under the control of the person to whose name the number is attached. It is certain that-the answer is from that number, a circumstance tending to show that the person answering is the person called or one who: has aU- *906 thority to answer for him. But where the telephone call is from an unknown number and the person called answers and asks who it is, any reply as to the number from which the call comes or as to the name of the caller would be pure hearsay. There would be no competent evidence. that the call came from the number it claimed to be. That is the. distinction which the Court of Appeals mates and it is not in conflict with any ruling of this court.

The relator, however, claims it is in conflict with the ruling of the Court of Appeals in the Star Publishing Company case, supra, and therefore in conflict with this court because that case was cited by .this court. A ruling of the Court of Appeals, in order to be in conflict with the ruling of this court, must have stated a proposition of law and determined it contrary to what this court has directly decided. We hold, therefore, there was no conflict in the proposition stated.

II. The second point is that, as held by the trial court, the defendant proved the title of Smith, who negotiated the note to the Meyer Milling Company, w,as defective and therefore a primafacie defense was made out against the Meyer Milling Company in that it was not a holder in due course, and a directed verdict for plaintiff conflicted with certain decisions of this court. The opinion passes upon this question. as incidental to the questions stated in the quotation from defendant’s brief.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 462, 325 Mo. 901, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-strohfeld-v-cox-mo-1930.