Blasinay v. Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Co.

138 S.W.2d 721, 235 Mo. App. 526, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 67
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 138 S.W.2d 721 (Blasinay v. Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Co.) 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
Blasinay v. Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Co., 138 S.W.2d 721, 235 Mo. App. 526, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 67 (Mo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

*528 HUGHES, P. J.

This ease was heretofore determined by this court by an opinion handed down “on January 9, 1940. Thereafter, on motion of respondent a rehearing was granted, and the cause was further briefed and reargued. After careful consideration and research we find no reason to change our original opinion, and it is now submitted with additions thereto as follows:

This is an action in tort by which plaintiff seeks to recover damages alleged to have been, sustained by her by the fraud and misrepresentation of the Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company, through its agents, Albert Wenzlick and Jay Yohe. All three, the Albert Wenzliek Real Estate Company, Albert Wenzlick and Jay Yohe, were made defendants in this action.

In October, 1930, plaintiff purchased from the Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company a $5000 promissory note, secured by a deed of trust on property at 2023 Franklin Avenue in St. Louis. The $5000 note was dated May 29, 1930, with interest at the rate of six per cent per annum and was due three years after date. The evidence is clear that at the time she purchased the deed of trust, Mrs. Blasinay dealt with Albert Wenzlick, who was then president of the Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company, and Jay Yohe, who was then an office employee of the defendant company and in charge of its loan department. No other agent or employee of the Wenzlick Company had anything to do with the transaction.

. At the ■ time Mrs. Blasinay purchased this $5000 deed of trust, she paid for it by relinquishing another deed of trust in the principal sum of $4500 and the difference of $570, covering interest, and *529 adjustments was paid in cash. Together with the $5000 principal note, plaintiff received six semi-annual interest notes of $150 each.

The plaintiff testified that at the time she acquired this deed of trust from the Wenzlick Company, she went to their office and first spoke to Mr. Albert Wenzlick, who was then president', of the company. Albert Wenzlick turned her over to Mr. Yohe, the head of the loan department of the Wenzlick Company, who handled the details of closing the transaction.

It was while plaintiff was completing the details of the transaction with Mr. Yohe that one of the alleged representations upon which she bases her action is supposed to have been made, plaintiff testifying that Yohe told her that the property at 2023 Franklin was worth $10,000. Plaintiff’s evidence further indicates that upon inquiry Albert Wenzlick had stated that the loan was good and that the property securing the note was worth $10,000 or more.

The first five of the six semi-annual interest notes for $150 each were paid as they fell due and checks therefor were forwarded to Mrs. Blasinay by the Wenzlick Company. Some two months before the principal note and the last interest note became due, defendant Company wrote plaintiff, advising her that the loan would mature on May 29, 1933, and asking her to sign and return a copy of the letter if she was willing to renew the loan. This letter was so signed and returned by Mrs. Blasinay.

However, the efforts to have the loan renewed were unavailing, due to the inability of the owner of the property. When it was found that the loan could not be renewed, Mrs. Blasinay was so advised, and it was recommended that the property be foreclosed and bought in by Mrs. Blasinay so that she might have the income from the property.

When Mrs. Blasinay insisted that she would not take over the property because of her lack of knowledge of real estate, the Wenzlick Company offered to furnish a straw party to take title for her benefit, the property to be managed by the Wenzlick Company, who would remit the net rent to plaintiff after deducting taxes, repairs, etc. In order that Mrs. Blasinay might be. properly protected, the straw party was to execute new notes and a new deed of trust for delivery to the plaintiff.

This plan of handling the situation was discussed with Mrs. Blasinay at a meeting held at the Wenzlick office. When Mrs. Blasinay came to the office on this occasion, she was accompanied by her husband, Frank Blasinay; her sister, Mrs. Kutilek, and Mr. Armbruster, a friend and employer of Frank Blasinay. After an explanation and discussion of this arrangement in the presence of all of these parties, an agreement was signed by Mrs. Blasinay and her husband consenting to the plan as outlined.

*530 Thereafter, a foreclosure sale was held in accordance with the terms of the deed of trust and the Franklin Avenue property was bought in in the name of Charles Hart for the account of Anna Blasinay. Hart then executed a new principal note for $5000 due in three years, together with a deed of trust as security. Hart also executed a quit-claim deed to the property and these new papers-were turned over-to Mrs. Blasinay.

The income from the property was not sufficient to meet the payments on the new loan as they matured, and in March of 1937 a second foreclosure sale was held and the property bought in by Mrs. Blasinay.

Over the objection of the defendant, plaintiff was allowed to testify that following the foreclosure sale, she sold the property on Franklin Avenue for a gross price of $1690, of which she received a net of $600.

The case was submitted to the jury against all three defendants,0 the Corporation and the two individuals as agents, and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company, appellant here, for $3000 actual and $500 punitive damages. The verdict was in favor of the defendants Albert Wenzlick and Jay Yoke.

The defendant Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company appellant here, duly filed its motion for new trial which the court overruled.

Defendant Albert Wenzlick Real Estate Company thereafter filed its affidavit for appeal and an appeal was duly granted to this court..

Appellant’s contention is that it being a corporation and this action- being brought against it and its agents, the doctrine of respondeat superior necessarily applies, and the verdict being in favor of the agents exonerates, the corporation; Respondent’s only answer to this rule of law is that the liability of appellant was, “primary and not derivative, and hence a judgment against the agents who participated in the fraud was not a prerequisite to a judgment against the corporation.”

There can be no question under the law but that joint tort-feasors are liable both jointly and severally. While at common law a plaintiff was required to sue all joint tort-feasors in his one cause of action," that rule has long been abrogated by our procedure, and by statute (Sec. 703, R. S. 1929), it is provided that every person who shall have a cause of action against several persons may bring suit thereon jointly against all or as many of the persons liable as he may think proper. And their liability is joint and several without regard to which of the wrongdoers reaped the fruits of the fraudulent transaction. -And so it has been held, as in the case of Leimkuehler v. Wessendorf, 18 S. W. (2d) 452, 323 Mo. 64, which respondent cites, that where all of the defendants participated in the fraud, *531

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W.2d 721, 235 Mo. App. 526, 1940 Mo. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blasinay-v-albert-wenzlick-real-estate-co-moctapp-1940.