This was a suit on the following note :
“$187.28. Springfield, Mo., Oct. 3,1881.
“ Sixty days after date I promise to pay to the order of Chas. H. Heer Dry Hoods Company One Hundred, Eighty-Seven and 28-100 dollars at my office in Seligman,. Mo., value received.
“(Signed) W. H. Neely.”
“(Endorsed.) Pay to the order of L. S. Moor.
“Chas. H. Heer Dry Hoods Co.
“By Chas. H. Heer, Jr., Secretary and Treasurer.
“L. S. Moor.”
The petition is as follows:
‘ ‘ Plaintiff states that on the the third day of October, 1881, the defendant W. H. Neely made and delivered to the said Chas. H. Heer Dry Hoods Company his promissory note in the sum of $187.28, which is herewith filed, payable at the office of said defendant Neely, in Seligman, Mo., in sixty days after date, and dated October 3, 1881, and that subsequently the said Chas. H. Heer Dry Hoods Company endorsed the said note and delivered the same to one L. S. Moor, and that the said L. S. Moor delivered and endorsed the same to the plaintiff, That when the said note became due, said plaintiff had the same duly presented for payment at the offce óí said Neely in Seligman, Mo., and the same not being paid, notice of non-payment and of such demand was duly given to said dry goods company and the said Moor. That said sum of $187.28, with interest at the rate of six percent. per annum from December 5, 1881, and also four per cent, on the said sum due on said note and charges, on account of protest in the sum of $2.50 are due the-plaintiff and for which said plaintiff asks judgment.”
The dry goods company alone answered, and is alone the appellant. Its answer was a general denial. There was judgment for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appealed to this court.
*507The evidence clearly tended to prove that the transfers of the note were genuine and all before maturity j. that when due it was presented by the witness Wilkerson to Neely the maker, for payment, “at Neely’s place of' business or thereabouts. I am not certain whether it was-in his store, or at the door of it, or somewhere in the vicinity.” Neely did not pay, but said the note was presented, but he was unable to pay. The witness- - Wilkerson’s testimony then clearly tended to show that he personally gave written notice to Neely and Moor, and sent also by mail copies of the notice to the dry goods company and to Townsend and the First National Bank.
i The defendant then read in evidence the notice received by it, as follows:
“ Seiugmaw, Mo., December 5, 1881.
“ To the First National Bank, Springfield, Mo.:
“Please take notice that one promissory note, drawn by W. G-. Neely in favor of C. H. Heer Dry Hoods Company, dated on the third day of October, 1881, and due-December 5, 1881, payable at his office in Seligman, endorsed by C. H. Heer, L. S.. Moor, W. H. A. Towns-send, and R. L. McElhany, for One hundred, Eighty-Seven and 28-100 Dollars, the said note having been-presented at the request of Adams Express Company, the holder, to W.H .-’Neely at his office in Seligman, Mo., and payment thereof demanded and refused, is protested for non-payment, and that the holder looks to you for' payment thereof and for damages, expenses,” etc.
Upon the application of plaintiff the court gave the following instructions which were objected to by the defendant company: “ That in the notice of dishonor of a promissory note, an unintentional variance in the de- . scription of the note will not vitiate the notice, if-under all the circumstances of the case the notice is not misleading and identifies the note with reasonable certainty.”
*508“ That an endorser of a promissory note is a proper and competent person to give notice to any prior endorser of a demand, and the dishonor of payment of a promissory note.”
The following declarations asked by the defendant company were refused:
“The court declares the law to be that to recover upon a negotiable promissory note against the endorser, the holder suing must prove a demand of payment at the place designated in the note for payment. That plaintiff has failed to show such demand in this case and can not recover.”
“That to recover against the endorser of negotiable paper, the holder must show a legal notice to such endorser. That in this case the only written notice in evidence to the defendant endorser informs him that the holder looks to the First National Bank for payment, damages, and costs, and that though such a document may convey knowledge, it will not impart notice, and on such notice plaintiff cannot recover.”
I. When a note payable at no designated place is presented personally to the maker, and payment refused, the place is not material. Especially if no objection as to place is made by the maker. 1 Danl. Neg. Ins., secs. 638, 643; King v. Crowell, 61 Mo. 244. But the liability of an endorser of a bill or note made payable at a particular place, is dependent upon a different rule., In such case the presentment must be at the place named in the note. 1 Danl. Neg. Ins., sec. 644. In the case at bar the evidence tended strongly to show that the presentation was at the specified plaee, and the court sitting as a jury so found; that finding we will not disturb.
II. The notice was, we think, sufficient. 2 Danl. Neg. Ins. sec., 985; Story on Prom. Notes, sec. 353. There is no misleading variance between the note and notice. 2 Danl. Neg. Ins., secs. 979, 980. And there is nothing in the fact that the notice was given, and the note presented *509for payment by a justice of the peace. There can be no doubt that a notice from the agent of the holder or endorser will be sufficient. 4 Cent. L. J. 267; Bk. Mo. v. Vaughan, 36 Mo. 91.
III. It is insisted by the appellant that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that it does not aver that the instrument sued on is a negotiable promissory note; or rather the petition does not state the necessary facts from which it appears to the court that it is a negotiable note. The note itself was filed with the petition, and was read in evidence and is payable to the order of the payee, and expresses on its face to be for value received; and under the statute, (sec. 547, R. S.) is a negotiable note. The petition nowhere alleges that the instrument sued on was made payable to the payee or order, nor does it state that it was for value received, nor does it even state that it was a negotiable promissory note; but only that Neely made his “promissory note,” payable, etc.
In Jaccard v. Anderson, 32 Mo. 183, the petition averred “that Washington King, 'by his negotiable note herewith filed, dated April 16, 1856, promised to pay to defendant or his order,” etc. The court say: “The operative words in a negotiable note under the law of this state are ‘ for value received, negotiable and payable without defalcation,’ and their employment in the instrument declared upon must appear in the petition in order to enable the court to see and pronounce the legal effect of such instrument.” In Bateson v. Clark et al., 37 Mo. 31, the petition was that “ defendant made his negotiable promissory note in writing * * * by which he promised to pay to the order of defendants, two thous- and dollars for value received,” which was held sufficient as stating the negotiable quality of the note then sued on. In the case at bar, there is no approach to an allegation of facts showing the note to be negotiable. This seems not to be sufficient. Parsons .on Notes and Bills, 474. *510'The doctrine announced in 32 Mo., supra, is reaffirmed in Lindsay v. Parsons, 34 Mo. 422; Simmons v. Belt et al., 35 Mo. 461, and in the light of these authorities the petition in this case is not sufficient.
IY. The instructions given for the plaintiff we think very correctly stated the law, and fairly presented the ■questions to the jury. The instructions refused, as prayed by the defendant, • were properly refused, because to .have given them would have taken the questions of fact from the jury. It was for the jury to say from the evi- ■ deuce whether demand had been made. The judgment • of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded .for the defect in the petition.