Citation Numbers: 38 Mo. App. 359, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 470
Judges: Thompson
Filed Date: 12/17/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced against the maker and two successive endorsers of a promissory note to recover a balance due thereon. The maker was the defendant David Hill. The petition, among other things, alleges that ‘ ‘ said David Hill failed to pay the balance due on said note, or any part thereof, on the day when the same became due, and that the same was not presented on the day of its maturity for the reason that the plaintiff did not know where the said Hill could be found, or where his place of business or residence was on said day ; that said note was placed in the hands of a notary public, and on said day diligent search and inquiry were made by said officer, but the said Hill could not be found, nor could his,, place of business or abode be discovered by said officer ; and that said note was then and there duly protested,” etc. The answer was a general denial and a plea of payment. No evidence was given in support of the plea of payment and it need not be considered. Before the trial the plaintiff dismissed as to the defendant Hill. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and a verdict and judgment were entered for the defendants, from which the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The following instruction, requested by the plaintiff, was refused by the court, and no other instruction was requested by either party, nor was any other given: “The court declares the law to be that, on the evidence, the plaintiff is entitled to recover.” It is plain that this instruction could not have been given, for the conceded reason, if for no other, that no judgment could properly have been rendered against the defendant Max Grabinsky, since the suit was not dismissed as to him.
The only other assignment of error is that the court erred in not finding for and giving j udgment for the plaintiff against the defendant Samuel Grabinsky. The question at issue was whether due diligence had been exercised by the holder of the note to discover the whereabouts of Hill, the maker, in order -to make demand of payment upon him, so as to charge the endorsers. The burden of proof, in respect of this issue, was on the plaintiff. This assignment of error, therefore, comes to this : Either that the court, sitting as a jury, did not give credit to the evidence adduced in behalf of the plaintiff, or else did not apply the proper conclusion of law to such evidence. If hypothetical instructions had been requested by the plaintiff, embodying the state of facts which her evidence tended to show, and these had been either given or refused, we should be able to tell upon which of these grounds the court proceeded; but, in the state of the record, we do not know whether the court to any extent discredited the testimony adduced on behalf of the plaintiff,
Proceeding under either of these rules, we find ourselves unable to say, upon an examination of this record, that the -finding of the trial court was either the result of “manifest mistake” or of “passion or prejudice.” An analysis of the evidence, furnished in the able argument which has been presented on behalf of the appellant, shows that, about a month before the maturity of the note, Mr. Rutledge, of the firm of
The note fell due on the third of April, 1889, in the Laclede Bank, and was handed by the bank to its regular notary for the purpose of making demand, and, if necessary, giving notice of protest. The name of “The Alkire Grocery Company,” had been written upon the note, after the signature of Mr. Hill, by the assistant cashier of the bank, and the assistant cashier informed the bank’s notary that the information of the bank was that the place of business of Mr. Hill was at the Alkire Grocery Company. The notary testifies that he went there and inquired for Mr. Hill,, on the first floor, and at the office of the cashier; that the cashier knew
The notary, to whom the note was thus turned over, testified that he looked in the directory, and that Mr. Hill’s name was not in it; that he then went to the place of business of Samuel Grabinsky, and found Mr. Grabinsky orit; that he enquired of the person in charge if he knew anything about Mr. Hill’s whereabouts, and was answered, no; that he went away, returned shortly afterwards on the same day, found Samuel Grabinsky, showed him the note, and asked him if he knew anything about Mr. Hill’s whereabouts, and that he said he did not.
On the other hand, the testimony of Hill, given for the defendants, was to the effect that he had lived in St. Louis for thirty-five years at 1014 North Seventh street. The evidence indisputably showed that the note, which is the subject of the suit, was secured by a deed of trust given by Hill upon the property of his residence; that a sale took place under the deed .of trust; that an action of ejectment was brought against him by the purchaser, the plaintiff in this suit, on March 7, 1888; that he was personally served, with summons in such action on March 9, 1888; that judgment by default was entered thereon on June 12, 1888; that execution issued from such judgment; and that Hill was ousted by the sheriff under • the execution on September 7, 1888. Shortly after Hill was ousted, he was arrested by the police, and incarcerated for three days and a half in the work house. For three days after he was ousted, his furniture remained on the sidewalk, and he slept there with it. He then moved to 204 Ashley street, which was about five blocks from his former residence. He remained there until about the twenty-seventh of March — a week before the search was made for him by the notaries — when he removed to a tenement house at 1012 North Broadway. He was in that tenement house sick on April 3, the day of the search for him. He frequently visited Mrs. McCarthy, who lived at 1016 North Seventh street, which was next door to his old residence. He frequently visited a saloon which was about a half a block north of his old residence, and continued to visit it 'after he had moved. He would go into this saloon two or three
It was admitted by counsel that Hill lived on the property in question (1014 North Seventh street) at the time the city directory of 1888 was published, and that he lived there up to the time of its publication, and was in the directory as living there. The testimony of the second notary as to looking in the directory on his cross-examination was: “Hooked in the last edition of the city directory. I do not know what it was. I do not know whether I looked in the directory of 1888, or not. I looked in the. city directory at my office — that is the last one issued. It was the last one delivered at our office.” It does not appear whether any later edition of the city directory, than that for the year 1888, had been published and delivered on the third of April, 1889, when the search was made.
We have no doubt that the question, whether due diligence has been used in finding the maker of a promissory note, so as to make demand upon him, is, on a conceded or established state of facts, where the inferences to be drawn from them mre unequivocal, a question of law. Crawford v. Berry, 6 Gill & J. [Md.] 63, 70; Brooks v. Elgin, 6 Gill, 254, 260; Dyas v. Hanson, 14 Mo. App. 363, 369. But we do not perceive how this principle can help out the plaintiff on this appeal, since it cannot be said, in such a state of the record as we have here, and in opposition to a verdict rendered by the trial court, sitting as a jury, that any particular state of facts has been established, upoñ which we can pronounce the conclusion of the law. If hypothetical instructions had been requested, embodying the theory of the plaintiffs as to the rule of law which is to govern, we might be able to see from the
The judgment of the circuit court will accordingly, be affirmed. It is so ordered.