This is an action upon two bills of exchange, referred to in the evidence as trade acceptances. The two instruments are identical in form, and we set one of them out below, as follows:
"$250.00 Mexico, Mo., April 1, 1921. 10.06 ________ $260.06
"One hundred and eighty days from date hereof, pay to the order of THE PRODUCERS CONSOLIDATED OIL COMPANY, Two Hundred and Fifty DOLLARS (250) at the office of Savings Bank, of Mexico, Mo., for Petroleum Products sold to drawee. With interest hereon at the rate of 8 per cent from date.
To ______________________________________ THE PRODUCERS CONSOLIDATED OIL COMPANY, By M.E. PRIDE, Secy-Treas."
Written across the face of each instrument, at the left end thereof, is the following:
"Accepted April 1, 1921. This obligation arises out of the actual purchase of goods from the drawer.
*Page 471(Signed) RALPH DOBYNS, A.L. HENDRIX."
The suit is by the plaintiff bank against the two acceptors, Dobyns and Hendrix, plaintiff claiming to be a holder in due course. The defense is that the acceptance of the instruments by defendants was procured by false and fraudulent representations on the part of the drawer thereof; that the acceptance by defendants was wholly without consideration; that the instruments were negotiated in breach of faith and under such circumstances as to amount to a fraud.
It appears from the testimony in plaintiff's behalf that plaintiff acquired the instruments before maturity, receiving them as collateral security for a loan made to the drawer, The Producers Consolidated Oil Company. And it further appears from plaintiff's evidence that plaintiff bank took the instruments without notice of the defense now asserted by these defendants.
The testimony in defendants' behalf tends to show that they accepted these instruments upon the agreement of The Producers Consolidated Oil Company that it would erect an oil pumping and filling station in Mexico, Missouri, and that defendants would receive certain coupon books entitling them to receive gas and oil from such station at a reduced rate. It appears, without dispute, that such gasoline and oil station was never completed; that the company became bankrupt and defendants received nothing whatsoever in the transaction. It further appears that the instruments were accepted by the defendants upon the agreement of the drawer that they would be placed in the Mexico Savings Bank with the coupon books to be delivered to defendants, there to remain until defendants had used the amount of gas and oil called for by such coupons.
At the close of the entire case the trial court peremptorily directed a verdict for the defendants, which was accordingly returned by the jury. From a judgment entered on this verdict the plaintiff has appealed.
In thus directing a verdict the trial court evidently proceeded upon the theory that neither of the instruments *Page 472 sued upon was complete and regular upon its face when negotiated, since the name of the drawee did not appear therein, and that consequently the plaintiff did not and could not become a holder thereof in due course under the statute. And such is the contention of learned counsel for defendants, respondents here. This contention, we think, must be upheld. Section 838 of our Negotiable Instruments Law, i.e., sec. 838 of the Revised Statutes of 1919, provides as follows:
"A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument under the following conditions: (1) That it is complete and regular upon its face. . . ."
Other sections of our Negotiable Instruments Law are referred to by respondents in this connection, but we deem it unnecessary to advert thereto. No drawee is named upon the face of either of these instruments; the place intended for the name of the drawee being left blank. It is true that these defendants accepted the instruments by an acceptance written across the face of each thereof, and it is not disputed that they thereby became liable to the drawer, or to any subsequent holder, subject, however, to any defenses they might have as against the drawer; but we regard it as clear that since the instruments remained in this incomplete state and were thus negotiated, and indeed thus sued upon, neither this plaintiff nor any other person taking them when thus incomplete and irregular could become a holder in due course under section 838, supra.
In behalf of plaintiff, appellant here, it is argued that though the drawee's name does not appear in a bill of exchange it may be supplied by an acceptance, such acceptance supplying the defect and amounting to an admission by the acceptor that he is the person intended, and operating to estop him from defending on that ground, citing: Daniel on Negotiable Instruments (6 Ed.), secs. 486, 497; 7 Cyc. 570; 1 Randolph on Commercial Paper (2 Ed.), sec. 171; 8 Corpus Juris, p. 299; Wheeler v. Webster, 1 E.D. Smith 1 (N.Y.); Watrous v. *Page 473 Halbrook, 39 Tex. 572. The adjudicated cases thus relied upon did not arise under the Negotiable Instruments Law. But apart from this, the rule that the drawee's name may be left blank and filled in under the implied authority so to do, as in other cases of similar character, does not affect the vital question before us. If such blank is not in fact filled in, and the instrument is transferred in such incomplete state, then under the positive provisions of section 838, supra, the transferee does not become a holder in due course and acquires no better right or title thereto than the original holder.
In this connection we are referred by plaintiff's counsel to section 924, Revised Statutes, 1919, providing in part as follows:
"A bill may be accepted before it has been signed by the drawer, or while otherwise incomplete, or when it is overdue, or after it has been dishonored by a previous refusal to accept, or by nonpayment."
But this section does not aid plaintiff. It is true that a bill may be accepted when incomplete, but this does not mean that one to whom the bill is transferred while thus incomplete may become a holder in due course. It is likewise true that a bill may be accepted after maturity, but it will not be contended that one subsequently taking such over-due paper can become a holder in due course.
We consequently rule that this plaintiff is not a holder in due course.
It follows that these bills of exchange were, in plaintiff's hands, subject to all the defenses which might have been asserted by these defendants as against the drawer. The only remaining question is whether the trial court was warranted in peremptorily directing a verdict for defendants or should have submitted the case to the jury. We are of the opinion that there was no error in directing a verdict for defendants under the circumstances. The prima-facie presumption that the instruments were supported by a valid and lawful consideration, *Page 474 upon which alone plaintiff's case rested, was overcome by defendants' proof tending to show the contrary and hence disappeared from the case. And since plaintiff offered nothing to controvert the testimony thus adduced by defendants the latter were entitled to a directed verdict in their favor. In this connection see: Griffith v. Casualty Co., 235 S.W. 83; Guthrie v. Holmes, 272 Mo. 215, 198 S.W. 854; Downs v. Horton, 287 Mo. 414,230 S.W. 103.
It follows that the judgment below should be affirmed, and it is so ordered. Becker and Daues, JJ., concur.