Addison v. Cope

243 S.W. 212, 210 Mo. App. 569, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 234
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 212 (Addison v. Cope) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Addison v. Cope, 243 S.W. 212, 210 Mo. App. 569, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 234 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*572 BRADLEY, J.

Plaintiff filed Ms Bill in Equity to require defendant to surrender a certain note for cancellation upon being reimbursed, and to restrain disposition of said not pending trial; and to have defendant declared to hold said note as trustee. The court rendered a decree satisfactory to neither party and plaintiff appealed, and defendant attempted to appeal. Plaintiff has filed here a motion to dismiss defendant’s attempted appeal, but since the cause is here on plaintiff’s appeal it is not necessary to go into the merits of the motion to dismiss defendant’s appeal.

Plaintiff alleges that he has been a resident of Salem, Dent County, Missouri, for many years, and that defendant has for many years been a regular practicing attorney in Salem and Dent county. That during the year 1920 plaintiff had certain business and legal matters requiring the attention of an attorney-at-law, among which was an account of $2787.11 which Swift & Company held against plaintiff, and that plaintiff employed defendant to represent him in the matter of the Swift account, and all other legal matter with which plaintiff was concerned. That while said account was pending against plaintiff and while defendant was representing him in connection with the same, defendant, for the purpose of secretly obtaining financial gain over and above his fee, fraudulently represented to plaintiff that Swift & Company was about to file bankruptcy proceedings against plaintiff, and also was about to file criminal proceedings against him, and advised plaintiff that in order to avoid such proceedings it would be necessary for plaintiff to give Swift & Company his promissory note and secure same by a trust deed on real estate which plaintiff had. That reposing confidence in defendant as his counsel and relying upon his advice, plaintiff did on July 24, 1920, execute his promissory note to Swift & Company in the sum of $2787.11 due one year after date with interest from date at eight per cent, and executed a trust deed on certain described real estate to secure said note. That after the execution and delivery of said note and trust *573 deed, and while defendant was still counseling and representing plaintiff relative to said matter and other matters connected with plaintiff’s business and property affairs, defendant without the knowledge and consent of plaintiff and in pursuance of his original purpose to make financial gain out of the Swift matter other than the fee, secretly entered into negotiations with the agents of Swift & Company for the purchase of said note and trust deed, and represented to Swift & Company that plaintiff was insolvent and that said note was worthless, and that by such representations and defendant’s relations to plaintiff, defendant purchased said note and trust deed for $930, and Swift & Company duly assigned to defendant. Plaintiff alleges that by reason of defendant’s relation of attorney and adviser to him that defendant knew of his financial affairs and knew that the note was solvent, and plaintiff further alleges in effect that under the circumstances defendant ought to be held to hold the note in-trust for plaintiff. He further alleges that he has tendered the $930 together with eight per cent interest, and that he keeps good this tender.

The answer admits that defendant is a regular practicing attorney at Salem, Mo.; admits the plaintiff owed Swift & Company $2787.11 and that he gave the note and trust deed, and admits that defendant purchased the note and trust deed, and denies generally all other allegations. The court found that defendant purchased the note for $930, and at the time of the purchase defendant was plaintiff’s attorney in a divorce case and two cases wherein the Security State Bank had sued plaintiff on some notes, and another case where plaintiff had sued the Dent County Savings Bank; that said suits involved a very large portion of plaintiff’s property, and that because thereof defendant is liable to be held as a trustee in the purchase of the Swift & Company note, “but owing to the fact that defendant took the risk of making such purchase, the court finds that he should be reimbursed in the amount of money he paid for said note and deed of trust and a reasonable sum for his *574 trouble, services and risk in regard thereto. It is therefore adjudged by the court that the said defendant holds the said note amounting to the sum of $2934.36 the amount which will be due thereon August 31, 1921, as trustee for plaintiff and plaintiff is entitled under the law to redeem the same, and the court finds that the proper and equitable amount that should be paid by plaintiff to redeem the said note and deed of trust securing the same is $1467.18 on August 31, 1921. It is therefore considered and adjudged by the court that if plaintiff shall pay to defendant on or before August 31, 1921, the said sum of $1467.18 the defendant shall deliver the said note to plaintiff, and enter a proper cancellation of the deed of trust securing the same, and upon failure to make such payment or tender thereof the temporary injunction heretofore granted against defendant in this cause is to be dissolved.”

This is an equity case and is here for trial de novo, and it is our province and our duty to make such disposition as comports with equity and good conscience. [Schultz v. Bowers et al., 223 S. W. (Mo.) 725.] While we will accord great deference to the finding on the facts by the chancellor below, yet we are not bound thereby. At the time plaintiff gave the note to Swift & Company there was much pending litigation to which he was a party. A divorce case was pending in which his wife was seeking a divorce, alimony and judgment for alleged loans to him. In the divorce case a restraining order was issued prohibiting plaintiff here from disposing of any of his property. After the divorce suit was commenced the Dent county Savings Bank refused to surrender funds plaintiff had on deposit, and this resulted in litigation. [Addison v. Bank, 205 Mo. App. 622, 226 S. W. 322.] Other suits were filed in addition to the divorce suit and the bank snit mentioned, and defendant was counsel for the present plaintiff in all these suits. The divorce suit reached this court and was disposed of here on stipulations after the remarriage of plaintiff and his wife.

*575 Plaintiff had been selling fertilizer for Swift & Company on a commission basis, and had $2000' to what he called “fertilizer money” on deposit in the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Salem. When the domestic storm broke he drew this ont with the intention he says of paying or -delivering it to Swift & Company, bnt that he consulted defendant and defendant told him that if his wife were to get all his property to let her pay his debts. A judgment of debt was rendered against plaintiff in the divorce case for $6000 and judgment for alimony for $1500. Defendant signed plaintiff’s appeal bond and plaintiff secured him by a trust deed on his real property in the sum of $10,000. This trust deed covered the same property as the trust deed securing the Swift & Company note, and was prior to the Swift & Company trust deed. Letters written by Gr. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 S.W. 212, 210 Mo. App. 569, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/addison-v-cope-moctapp-1922.