Court Opinion

ID: 6616051
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:22:50.213973+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:32.051352
License: Public Domain

Smith, P. J.
— Plaintiff, as executor of the estate of Hannah Thornton, deceased, brought this suit in the circuit court of Buchanan county against the defendant on a promissory note for one thousand dollars on which there was a credit endorsed for one hundred dollars. The answer admitted the execution of said note and pleaded as a defense thereto that the same was executed and delivered without any consideration whatever in that the said testatrix at the time of the execution of said note was indebted to the defendant in the sum of one thousand dollars or more, and that she paid defendant in discharge thereof one thousand dollars and that in consideration of the payment of said indebtedness it was then agreed between defendant and her that the defendant would execute and deliver to her said note “to be held by her as and for a receipt” for said one thousand dollars.
The replication was a general denial.
At the conclusion of the evidence the court by an instruction directed the jury to find for the plaintiff. The defendant then filed his motion to set aside said finding and for a new trial, which being overruled, judgment was rendered and from which this appeal is prosecuted here.
The single question upon which our decision is invoked is as to the propriety of the action of the circuit court in instructing the jury to find for the plaintiff.
*510The execution of the note stands admitted by the answer. It imported a consideration and that it was due and payable as therein specified. R. S. 663; Skinner v. Skinner, 77 Mo. 155; Taylor v. Newman, 77 Mo. 263.
Hence the plaintiff ’ s prima facie case was admitted by the pleadings and unless it was rebutted and overcome by defendant’s evidence it was conclusive. American Ins. Co. v. Smith, 73 Mo. 368.
There was no plea of payment or that the note sued on had been voluntarily and intentionally destroyed by the testatrix, the sole and only defense interposed by the answer was that the note had been given without consideration. This was the only issue tendered, and the question is whether there was any evidence adduced by defendant in support of this issue upon which he was entitled to go to the jury.
No witness testified that there was an agreement, or to facts from which the law would imply an agreement between the testatrix and the defendant by which the note sued upon was executed and delivered “to be held as and for a receipt ” by her. The evidence does not even squint that way. There is a total failure of proof to support this vital issue tendered by the answer. We have examined the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses, including that of three self-confessed harlots who testified in defendant’s behalf, and have been unable to find any evidence to maintain the issue for defendant.
It is true there is some evidence that the defendant on one occasion let the testatrix have one hundred dollars which, when considered in connection with the other evidence that there was a credit of one hundred dollars endorsed on said note during the lifetime of the testatrix, is quite a significant fact.
There is also some evidence that the testatrix who was herself the keeper of a house of ill-fame was *511indebted to the defendant, who was a dramshop keeper, for liquors sold by him to her. This, with some other evidence of similar pertinency, was wholly insufficient to justify the court in submitting the issues to the jury.
We have no doubt that the' consideration of the note sued on was open to inquiry between the parties to this suit, and that the defense of a failure of consideration would be available-as a defense to the defendant if proper facts were pleaded and proved. In a case like this where one of the parties to the note, the payee, is dead, unless such defense is sustained by the clearest and most convincing proof it should not be countenanced.
If this case had been submitted to the jury and the verdict should have been for the defendant, it would have been the manifest duty of the court to have set it aside for the reason there was no evidence to justify the same. The binding force of a promissory note can not be set aside and destroyed upon the mere unsustained plea that the parties thereto only intended that the same should have the operative effect of a bare receipt.
The law in its wisdom forbids this. The defendant’s contention is that his testimony tended to show, which we think it did not, a want of consideration for said note. The answer admits that defendant received of the testatrix the sum of one thousand dollars when he executed the note. The fact of the receipt of this money in connection with the contemporaneous execution of the note, raises a legal presumption that the thousand dollars constituted the consideration of the note. To rebut this presumption the defendant contends that he may prove a contemporaneous agreement showing the transaction to be altogether different from that the law imports and which would in fact transfer the note into a mere memorandum of a different agreement.
This was not done, and can not be done, under the idea of showing a want of consideration.
The case of Dickson Harris, decided by the supreme court of Iowa and reported in 13 N. W. Rep. *512335, is decisive of this case, and so, likewise, are the cases of Asherton v. Dearmond, 33 Iowa, 353, and Barhydt v. Bonney, 55 Iowa, 717. In 2 Parsons on Notes and Bills, 501, it is said, “If the defendant endeavors to prove an oral bargain between himself and the plaintiff which differs in its terms from the written note, it will be remembered that it is a firmly settled principle that the parol evidence of an oral agreement, alleged to have been made at the time of the drawing, making or endorsing the note or bill, can not be permitted to vary, qualify, or contradict, add to, or subtract from, the absolute terms of the written contract. The exceptions to this rule are cases of fraud, illegality, or want of consideration.” On page 507 of the same work, it is further said, that “parol evidence of the contemporaneous agreement that a note in the usual form was intended to stand in place of a receipt, and that the sum for which it was given was intended as payment of a previous debt of defendant’s father, is not admissible,” and on page 525 of the same author, it is said, that “in the case of a note in the usual form and regularly delivered, parol evidence can not be admitted to prove any special purpose directly repugnant to the terms of the note.”
And a like doctrine has been announced by the supreme court of this state in several cases. Jones v. Shaw, 67 Mo. 667; Smith's Adm'r v. Thomas, 29 Mo. 307; Bunee v. Beck, 43 Mo. 266.
While it may therefore be well questioned whether the facts pleaded in the defendant’s answer, if true, constituted a valid defense to the payment of the note sued on, as there was no evidence adduced to support it, we think the circuit court, at least on that ground, was justified in giving the instruction complained of.
It results from these observations that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.
All concur.