Schooler v. Tilden
Decision Date | 30 April 1880 |
Citation | 71 Mo. 580 |
Parties | SCHOOLER v. TILDEN, Appellant. |
Court | Missouri Supreme Court |
Appeal from Jasper Circuit Court.--HON. JOSEPH CRAVENS, Judge.
AFFIRMED.
Harding & Buller for appellant, cited 1 Parsons Notes and Bills, 33, note k; Story Promissory Notes, §§ 33, 37, 38; Seay v. Bank, 3 Sneed (Tenn.) 558; Gibson v. Minet, 1 H. Bl. 569, 608.
E. J. Montague for respondent, cited 1 Daniel Negot. Instr., §§ 145, 146, 175; Story on Bills, § 175; Brummel v. Enders, 18 Gratt. 895; Cruchley v. Clarance, 2 Maule & Sel. 90.
This was an action to recover of defendant the amount paid by plaintiff to the First National Bank of Carthage on a note executed by the defendant and plaintiff jointly, on which plaintiff was security.
The first defense was that the note was void, because the name of the payee in it was left blank. There was no dispute that plaintiff paid it after maturity, and that the amount of principal and interest on it at the date of his payment was $311.66, the sum now sued for. It is scarcely necessary to say that this defense was without merit, morally or technically. Had it been necessary for the holder to sue on the note, the holder would have been obliged to fill up the blank; but the plaintiff, one of the makers, paid it without suit. The present suit is not on the note, but upon this payment of money for the benefit of defendant, and as his security. The money was borrowed from the bank by defendant, and the blank in the note for it was left, as is not unusual, for its convenience, in case of its transfer to another, that the name of the transferree might be inserted, without rendering the bank responsible as indorser. As observed by Judge Story, in his work on bills of exchange, “It is not indispensable that the name of the payee should be inserted in the bill at the time when it is made and delivered to the person for whose benefit it is intended, but a blank may be left for the name; and, although it is not then a perfect bill, yet the blank may be filled up afterward by any bona fide holder, in his own name as payee, and henceforward it will be deemed a bill payable to such holder, as payee ab initio.” Story on Bills, chap. 3, § 54.
The second defense was, that defendant had given plaintiff a bill of sale for some corn on his farm, worth at the outside $140, which plaintiff took as a consideration for paying off this note. This was denied, and the question on this point was simply one of fact, on which the evidence was...
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