The suit is founded upon a promissory note, executed by the appellant and Clarence H. Reagan. The petition alleges: ‘ ‘ The defendants, each as principal, by their promissory note, promised for value received, to pay plaintiff the sum of two hundred and seventy-five dollars ($275) one day after date thereof,” etc. The defendant, Reagan, made default, but appellant answered, denying the allegations of the petition, and alleging that he signed the note as surety; that at the time it was executed and as an inducement for him to sign the same, plaintiff agreed that all payments made by Reagan to plaintiff would be applied on the note in suit; that defendant executed said note relying on said agreement; that Reagan subsequently made payments amounting to $165, and that appellant had paid all the balance of said note, including interest. The reply was a general denial.
The case was tried before a jury, resulting in a unanimous verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount sued for. The defendant, Gammon, appealed.
The appellant attempted to prove that he signed the note as surety, but his testimony was rejected, and the action of the court in rejecting the same is assigned as error. The note reads: “One day after date, for value received, we each as principal promise to pay,” etc.. The appellant having agreed in his written obligation to be bound as principal, the court did not err in rejecting the testimony. [McMillan v. Parkell, 64 Mo. 286.]
The court did permit the appellant to offer testimony tending to prove that at the time he signed the note, the plaintiff agreed that certain payments which were to be made by the defendant, Reagan, should be applied on the note. The evidence disclosed that Mr. D. M. Rush represented the bank in the transaction; *533that the defendant, Reagan, is appellant’s son-in-law, and desired to purchase a business in which Mr. Rush was personally interested. The contract was made and notes of fifteen dollars each, payable monthly, were given as a part of the purchase price. Reagan subsequently paid the fifteen dollar notes as they became due until he had paid the sum of $165. As he paid each note, it was delivered to him, and he testified that while the agreement was that payments were to be applied on the note signed by appellant, yet he knew that none were being applied, and that the payments he made were being applied to take up his monthly installment notes. Mr. Rush denied making any agreement to apply these; fifteen dollar payments on the note signed by the appellant.
In behalf of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury that the only defense was payment, and that the burden of proof of payment was on the defendants, and unless the defendants had proven payment by preponderance of the evidence, the finding should be for the plaintiff.
In behalf of the appellant the court gave an instruction fairly submitting the question whether the bank agreed to credit all payments made by Reagan on the note in suit, and in our judgment the issues were fairly submitted.
. Over the objection and exception of the appellant, plaintiff’s attorneys were permitted to open and close the argument to the jury, and this action of the court is also assigned as error. In the recent case of Dorrell v. Sparks, 142 Mo. App. 460, 127 S. W. 103, this question was before this court, and we reversed and remanded the judgment because the court refused to permit the defendant’s counsel to open and close the argument. We further said, however, in that case: ‘ ‘ Counsel for the respondent claims that the right to award the opening and closing argument is within the discretion of the court, and not grounds for reversal *534of the judgment. This is the general rule with the-addition that the court will not reverse the judgment unless it is apparent that such refusal produced a wrong to the party.”
In the Dorrell case the verdict of the jury was not unanimous — the plaintiff only succeeded in getting sufficient members to return a verdict. We held that in as much as the case was a close one and the verdict secured by nine jurors only, it seemed to us that the burden of showing that defendant was not injured by the action of the court was upon the plaintiff.
In Reichard v. Manhattan Life Ins. Co., 31 Mo. 518, it is expressly held that as a general rule, the party holding the affirmative of the issues has the right to open and conclude the argument; but such practice being within the discretion of the court, the refusal to give the defendant the concluding argument will be no cause for reversal.
In Coombs Com. Co. v. Block, 130 Mo. 668, 32 S. W. 1139, it was assigned as error that the trial court allowed the plaintiff to open and close the case. In passing on the assignment, the court said: “That is a matter in which the trial judge enjoys a large discretion. This court will not reverse his ruling therein, unless some manifest abuse of that discretion is shown.”
In Elder v. Oliver, 30 Mo. App. 575, it is said: “The errors assigned are: I. Refusing the opening and closing of the argument to the defendant. This error is not well assigned. Contrary to the rule which 'obtains in most jurisdictions, -the rule in this state is, that ‘the right to open and close generally rests very much in the sound discretion Of the court trying the cause, and an error committed in that regard will not be sufficient to reverse a case, unless it is plainly made to appear that injury has resulted therefrom.’ There is nothing in this record tending to show that any injury resulted to the defendant from the ruling of *535the court in awarding the opening and closing to the-plaintiff. ’ ’
The verdict was unanimous, and when we consider the relation of the defendants to each other, and the fact that the defendant Reagan knew that he had an installment note coming due each month at the bank,, and that he also knew that his payments were being-made in accordance with the terms of those notes, and for the purpose of taking up the same, we do not feel justified in reversing the judgment on account of the error of the court in refusing the appellant’s counsel the right to open and close the argument.
The appellant complains of that part of plaintiff’s instruction in which the jurors were told that payment was the only defense. It is claimed that the instruction was misleading and misstated the issue. It is true the defense, strictly speaking, was not payment, but rather, that certain payments had been made which should have been applied on the note. In the defendants’ instruction, however, this question was fairly submitted and the jury plainly told that if such an agreement was made and the defendant Reagan made payments, then they were payments on the note and the appellant was entitled to have them so applied. When the instructions are read together,, the jury could not have been misled.
The other assignments of error have been considered, but we see no reason for disturbing the judgment, and it will be affirmed.
All concur.