Court Opinion

ID: 8263243
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:57:31.712589+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:15.029313
License: Public Domain

GOODE,. J.
Plaintiff and one Ragsdale laid a wager on the result of the election pending in the autumn of 1900 for Governor of Missouri; plaintiff betting, it is alleged in the statement, fifty dollars that Alexander M. Dockery would not receive thirty thousand majority over Joseph Flory for Governor, Rags-dale betting the same amount that said Dockery would receive that majority.
■ McKee was the stakeholder in whose hands the respective parties put the money wagered. After the election Vandolah first claimed all the money, as he admitted, but swore that afterwards, when a dispute arose between him and Ragsdale as to the exact terms *344of the wager, he demanded back the part he had put up; which McKee denied, and testified that no demand whatever was made on him by Vandolah for the return of the latter’s part of the money until he (McKee) had paid the entire sum in his hands to Ragsdale. On the twenty-seventh day of'November the following notice, claimed to be a demand within the meaning of section 3431, Revised Statutes 1899, was served on McKee:
“To Albert McKee, notice: I hereby notify you not to pay my part of the bet made on the election of the Governor of the State of Missouri, held by you as stakeholder, made on the nineteenth day of October, 1900, with one Ragsdale.
“Dated this twenty-seventh day of November, 1900.
(Signed) “James Vandolah.”
McKee paid all the money, to Ragsdale the next day after the service of said notice. Later Charles Hiller, as attorney for Vandolah, demanded the return of the latter’s fifty dollars, but McKee swore that said demand, which is the only one he admits was made for Vandolah’s stake, came after he had turned over the money to Ragsdale. He said, however, that he intentionally gave Hiller the impression that he still had the money in his possession when the latter said he would sue if Vandolah’s part was not returned and when, McKee knew Hiller was making the demand as the basis of an action. McKee’s conduct was equivocal and might, perhaps, have estopped him to deny he still had the money when Hiller demanded Vandolah’s stake. But no such contention was made, both sides adopting the theory that a demand on McKee must have beén made while he in fact had the money in his hands, and we think a demand was conclusively shown. It stands undenied and undisputed that McKee still had Vandolah ’s money when the foregoing written notification was served on him, forbidding him to pay it over to Ragsdale. Was said notice a sufficient demand to enable Vandolah to sue for and recover his stake?
*345'Whether used to designate a claim or a legal right, or in the sense of a request to another to perform a duty, the word “demand” is of extensive significance. In the latter sense a demand may he made or preferred by the use of any words which the person addressed understood, or ought to have understood, to be a request for performance. Keefer v. Curvier, 53 Wis. 404; Truax v. Parvis, 9 Houst. (Del.) 333. It is sometimes equivalent to, or at least may be sufficiently made by, a notification to the person addressed of the other party’s claim; and we think that is the meaning of the word in our statutes on gaming. In fact it was so adjudged by this court in the case of Weaver v. Harlan, 48 Mo. App. 319, wherein it was said:
“The only construction which we think can be placed on this section, if the spirit and policy of the statute are not lost sight of, is that a stakeholder will not be liable to an action, if he delivers 'over the money or other thing to the winner, after the determination of the bet and before he has notice from the loser not to do so. The matter contained in the proviso is not well expressed, but any other construction would be out of harmony with other portions of the section, and against the clearly expressed intention of the Legislature in other sections of the law. If a stakeholder after the determination of the bet, and in the absence of notice from the loser, delivers the stakes to the winner, it would be unjust to hold him liable. It is to such a ease and none other that the exception applies.”
The present case is indistinguishable on principle, from the one just cited and is controlled by it. A formal demand for the return of the money was not contained in the notice, but it was. sufficient to render McKee liable, as he paid the money in disregard of the notice. The judgment is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded.
Blmd, P. J., and Reyburn, J., concur. .