Citation Numbers: 178 Mo. App. 28, 161 S.W. 613, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 171
Judges: Farrington, Robertson, Sturgis
Filed Date: 12/11/1913
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
The defendants, Howard & Brown, issued to the other defendants. R. B. Emmons, cheeks on a bank in Joplin, Missouri, which said Emmons endorsed in blank and returned to Howard & Brown. The checks were thereafter stolen from Howard & Brown and about thirty days later the plaintiff endorsed them at a bank in Denver, Colorado, for the benefit of the thief who then collected the proceeds thereof and appropriated the same to his own use. At the time the plaintiff endorsed the checks they had the forged firm name of Howard & Brown thereon. This suit was instituted to recover the amount of the checks and protest fees.
The answer sets up as a defense the facts as to the theft of the checks, and the endorsement by plaintiff, and alleges that the endorsement hy Howard & Brown was a forgery, that the plaintiff was not a holder in due course because he “did not negotiate the same in the regular course of business and in good faith,”,and because at the time the plaintiff endorsed the checks they were more than thirty days old, “thus losing their negotiability, all of which the plaintiff could and did know from the date of said cheeks. ’ ’
A trial was had before the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for the defendants and the plaintiff has appealed.
No declarations of law were requested or given and no complaint is made in the brief filed here by the appellant questioning the admission or rejection of tes
Our Negotiable Instrument Law, section 10023, Revised Statutes 1909, reads: “"Wherei an instrument payable on demand is negotiated an unreasonable length of time after its issue, the holder is not deemed a holder in due course. ’ ’
The plaintiff in making out his case developed the delay in the presentation of the checks and the manner in which he became endorser and, therefore, raised as an issue of fact to be determined by the trial court the question of the unreasonable length of time in the presentation, and raised the issue as to whether or not he could be deemed a holder in due course upon this one point alone. What was a reasonable length of time under the circumstances in this case, to say the most in-behalf of the plaintiff, was solely a question of fact for the court as a trier of the facts.
If the burden of proof was not cast upon the plaintiff by section 10029 Revised Statutes 1909; by reason of the fact that it may be said that defendants became