Trustees of LaGrange Male & Female College v. Parker

200 S.W. 663, 198 Mo. App. 372, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 16
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 663 (Trustees of LaGrange Male & Female College v. Parker) 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
Trustees of LaGrange Male & Female College v. Parker, 200 S.W. 663, 198 Mo. App. 372, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 16 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

Plaintiff, appellant here, exhibited to the probate court of Lewis county a note for allowance against the estate of one H. O. Parker, deceased, that estate then being in the course of administration and in charge of Judson Parker, Administrator. The note exhibited is as follows:

“ENDOWMENT NOTE.
$1,000 Ewing, Missouri, June 7, 1912.
For value received and as a subscription to the Endowment Fund of LaGrange College located at LaGrange, Mo., I promise to pay to the Trustees of said
LAGRANGE COLLEGE
the sum of Oñe Thousand........Dollars.
Said sum to be paid out of my estate twelve months after my death, with interest from date at the rate of one per cent, per annum.
Without relief from valuation or appraisement laws and to be used as part of the endowment fund of said institution, the interest only to be used for current expenses.
Attest: J. D. Scott. (Signed) H. C. Parker.”

The claim was originally presented in the name of “Trustees of LaGrange College of LaGrange, Missouri, a corporation.” From a judgment of the probate court disallowing the claim, the trustees of the college appealed to the circuit court. There they were allowed to amend the claim and the proceedings in the probate court, then in the circuit court, by substituting the name “Trustees of LaGrange Male and Female College,” substituting that name for “Trustees of LaGrange College,” where that name appeared.

The only pleading on the part of the defendant administrator is an affidavit by him denying the corporate capacity of the plaintiff and denying that the claimants are the trustees properly elected or appointed. The case was tried in the circuit court on the appeal without any pleading other than the above on the part of the defendant but evidently tried on the ground of nul tiel corporation and of want of any consideration for the note.

[376]*376At the trial in the circuit court,-the amendment having been made in the title above stated, plaintiffs introduced the note in evidence, it being admitted that it bore the signature of H. C. Parker. They also introduced the Session Acts of 1858, p. 52, providing for the incorporation of LaGrange College under the name of LaGrange Male and Female College of LaGrange, and an amendment to the Act of incorporation, approved January 16, 1860 (see Laws 1859-60, p. 131), the amend•ment consisting of dividing the Board of Trustees of the college into three classes. It was in evidence and undisputed that while the corporate name was LaGrange Male and Female College of Lewis County, or at LaGrange, that the institution was commonly known as LaGrange College.

Plaintiffs then undertook to prove consideration for the note. The evidence tended to show that one J. D. Scott, who had signed as a witness to the note, had been getting up subscriptions to the endowment fund of the college and that he' had delivered this note to the board of trustees of the college. When that delivery was made, does not appear. Under cross-examination of plaintiffs'’ witnesses the question of consideration was entered into and of this it may be said, without repeating it, that the treasurer of the corporation testified that he did not remember any consideration ever having passed for the note; that his records and his recollection did not show that Parker, the maker of the note, had ever paid anything on account of it. Asked if the note was evidence of a donation made by the deceased to the college, the most that the treasurer was willing to say was that 'the note had been brought to him by Mr. Scott, who was authorized to obtain money for the college and to receive donations for the college. But this witness, who had been treasurer during the whole time, asked if the college had ever paid Parker anything in consideration for the note, said, “Not in my remembrance.” Asked if he had any record of paying him anything, he answered, “Not that I know of,” and asked if he remembered that he, as treasurer, had ever paid any [377]*377money to Parker for the college, lie answered that lie did not think he did, and admitted that in his deposition, which had been taken in the case, he was asked if the note was a donation, to which he answered that it was, and that as he remembered, it was a donation to some fund.

With this testimony and what may he called negative testimony of a professor, possibly, now, certainly at one time president of the college, to the effect that he knew nothing at all about the transaction, plaintiffs rested, defendant introducing no testimony. •

The cause was tried before the court without a jury and at the instance of the plaintiffs the court gave three declarations of law. The first was to the effect that the note in question upon its face imports a consideration therefor and that the burden of proof was upon the defendant to show that the note is without any consideration and that unless it is proven by evidence introduced in the case that the note is without consideration, the finding of the court must he that there was a consideration for the note.

The court refused the second declaration asked by plaintiffs, which was to the effect that the evidence in the case failed to prove that the note in controversy is without consideration, and the finding of the court is therefore that the note is supported by a consideration.

There was a finding and judgment for defendant, from which plaintiffs have duly appealed.

We find no serious objection to any of the declarations given nor to the action of the court in refusing the second asked.

While the defendant introduced no evidence, it may be said that the evidence elicited from the plaintiffs’ own witnesses fails to show any consideration for the note.

In a case of this kind the substantial and most important controversy is whether, under the evidence, any consideration for the note sued upon is shown, and it may be said that plaintiffs’ own evidence, developed on cross-examination and in no way contradicted in the [378]*378direct testimony, made it clear that the maker of the note received no benefit for his promise which can be regarded as a sufficient consideration to support it. That, says our Supreme Court in School District of Kansas City v. Sheidley, 138 Mo. 672, l. c. 683, 40 S. W. 656, is the really important point to be settled; that is, whether under the evidence any consideration for the note sued upon was shown. The case therefore stands before us as a gift to take effect on the death of the maker of the note, payable after his decease out of his estate and is non-enforcible. No consideration is necessary to support a gift inter vivos [12 R. C. L., p. 932, sec. 10.]

“The delivery of an unsealed written declaration of a gift without a delivery of the property; like a parol declaration of a gift, stands upon the footing of a mere promise to give and is void at law. ... It is well settled as a broad general rule that a promissory note executed without consideration and intended merely as a gift inter vivos to the donee, cannot be made the basis of a recovery either at law or in equity by the donee against the donor, or against his estate after his death.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 663, 198 Mo. App. 372, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-lagrange-male-female-college-v-parker-moctapp-1918.