Wade v. Boone

168 S.W. 360, 184 Mo. App. 88, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 533
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 20, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 360 (Wade v. Boone) 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
Wade v. Boone, 168 S.W. 360, 184 Mo. App. 88, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 533 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

This action was instituted by respondents in the circuit court of Stoddard county on June 13, 1910, and is for the balance claimed to be due upon a promissory note executed by the defendant, Charles Boone, and his son, Edwin Boone, now deceased. Plaintiffs recovered and the defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Upon the face of the note, defendant and his said son appear to be joint makers; though from the evidence it appears that defendant signed the instrument as surety for his son, who received all of the proceeds thereof. The note provided for the payment of “ten per cent attorneys fees, as liquidated damages.”

Upon the hack of the note appear certain credits for payments made thereon, and the following assignment thereof, viz.:

“Paris, 111., Aug. 28, 1907.

“For value received I assign the within note to Luther Wade and Joseph Wade without recourse on me.

Ruth C. O’Connor.,

By J. E. Parrish, Agent.”

The petition declares upon the noté, alleging that, on or about August 29, 1907, the payee therein named, for value received, sold, transferred and assigned the same to plaintiffs;- and that, after giving credit for the payments made thereon, there remained due and unpaid, at the date of the institution of the [93]*93suit, the sum of $2899.37, including interest. And it is averred “that the laws of the State of Illinois in force on the 22nd day of February, 1905', and since said date, provided for the enforcement of the payment of attorney’s fees in said note mentioned, and that said contract being valid in the State of Illinois is valid and enforcible in the State of Missouri.” And judgment is prayed for the said alleged balance of $2899.37, principal and interest remaining unpaid on the note, and for the further sum of-$289.93 “liquidated damages and attorney’s fees;” aggregating the total sum of $3189.30.

The defendant, by his answer, admits “that he signed the note sued on as surety for Chas. E. Boone” (Edwin Boone), but denies generally all of the other allegations of the- petition. For further answer, defendant avers that plaintiffs failed to have the note allowed against the estate of Edwin Boone, deceased, in the State of Illinois, within two years after the granting of letters of administration thereupon, and pleads a statute of the State of Illinois, providing that whenever the principal maker of such an instrument shall die, if the creditor shall not present the same to the proper court for allowance, within two years after the granting of letters testamentary or of administration, the sureties thereon shall be released from the payment thereof to the extent that the same might have been collected from such estate. And it is averred that by plaintiffs’ failure aforesaid, defendant is released from all liability on the instrument.

By way of reply, plaintiffs deny that they were required by the laws of Illinois to have the note allowed as a demand against the said estate, and plead a ten year Statute of Limitations of the State of Illinois in actions upon bonds, promissory notes, etc. And it is further averred that, if defendant did execute the note as surety for Edwin Boone, neither the laws of Illinois nor of Missouri released defendant [94]*94from Ms obligation thereon, .for the reason that he accepted and received, as surety, a deed of trust upon the land of said Edwin Boone, in Stoddard county, Missouri; and that “under the laws of the State of Illinois the defendant is liable as principal upon said note and cannot show that he signed the same as surety. ’ ’

It appears, in point of fact, that when defendant signed the note for the benefit of Ms son, Edwin Boone, who received the proceeds thereof, he took from his son a deed of trust upon the latter’s land in Stoddard county to secure himself against loss in the premises. This deed of trust was in evidence, and recited that-it was executed to secure the defendant and keep him harmless on account of having signed the note in question, upon which he had become “security.”

In executing the note the defendant and his son dealt with one Terrence Clark, who, it appears, was a brother of Ruth C. O’Connor, the payee in the note, and represented her in the transaction. At the time of the trial below Clark was dead — as was.in fact the payee also — and defendant was not permitted to testify as to the transaction in question, in order to show that it was, at the time, known and understood that he signed the note as surety.

It appears that plaintiff, Luther Wade, married a half-sister of the widow of Edwin Boone, deceased; and that his brother, and coplaintiff, Joseph Wade, married a sister of such widow. In February, 1907, Edwin Boone died, leaving certain property, real and personal, in the State of Illinois, and the real property above mentioned in Stoddard county, Missouri. Administration was had thereupon, and at the close thereof the personal property, remaining after the payment of claims and expenses, passed to the widow.

On August 28,1907, and while the estate of Edwin Boone was in process of administration, plaintiffs purchased the note in suit, which was then long over[95]*95due. It was then at the Edgar County National Bank of Paris, Illinois, at which place it was payable, and of which one J. E. Parrish was president. Parrish assigned the instrument to plaintiffs, by the foregoing assignment, purporting to act as the agent for Ruth C. O’Connor, the payee therein named.

Plaintiffs did not present the note for allowance against the estate of Edwin Boone, deceased, in the State of Illinois, but it seems that administration was had upon said real estate of Edwin Boone in Stoddard, county, Missouri, the note there allowed, and the deceased’s real estate in said county ordered sold by the probate court for the payment of such claim, but that such order was afterwards set aside. It is apparent that the reason for not having the note allowed against the estate in Illinois was to prevent the property going to the widow, plaintiffs’ sister-in-law, from being subjected to its payment.

At the beginning of the trial the plaintiffs offered in evidence the note sued upon. Defendant’s counsel objected to the introduction of the note, stating as ground for such objection, “that it appears upon its face that it does not appear to belong to the plaintiffs, there being no assignment of the note to plaintiffs, and that an agent, without proper, showing, has no authority to sign an assignment of the note.” .This objection was overruled, defendant excepting; and the note, and the assignment indorsed thereupon, were read in evidence without further proof.

At the close of plaintiffs’ case defendant’s counsel moved to strike out the note offered in evidence, “for the reason that it is alleged in plaintiffs ’ petition that said note was assigned to plaintiffs by Ruth C. O’Con-nor, and the proof shows that the note was assigned by J. E. Parrish, agent, and there is no proof tending to establish such agency on the part of J. E. Parrish; if it be true that he was the agent of Ruth C. O’Con-nor, there is no evidence that, as a result of such [96]*96agency, he -had the authority to assign said note to plaintiffs.” This motion was overruled, defendant excepting.

At the close of all the evidence in the case, the court peremptorily directed a verdict for plaintiffs. In obedience to such instruction a verdict was so returned, and judgment followed accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 360, 184 Mo. App. 88, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-boone-moctapp-1914.