Boothe v. Loy

83 Mo. App. 601, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 83 Mo. App. 601 (Boothe v. Loy) 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
Boothe v. Loy, 83 Mo. App. 601, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

In 1897 the Miners and Merchants Bank (a corporation) owned a seven-acre tract of land near Aurora, Missouri.

In August of that year it agreed to sell the land to the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company (a corporation) for $6,000; the latter paid $500 down and agreed to pay the balance, $5,500 in six months, or forfeit the payment of the $500 paid. At the expiration of six months the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company elected to take the land having partially developed the mine on the tract, but was unable to pay the balance of the purchase price. It was then agreed that the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company should execute its note to the bank for $5,500, should issue its bonds to the amount of $12,000 in denominations of $100 each, to become due in five years, with eight per cent per annum, interest coupons to be attached, which bonds should be secured by a deed of trust made to D. B. Loy as trustee on the seven-acre tract, and that the bonds should be deposited with and held by the bank as collateral security for the payment of the $5,500. In pursuance of this agreement the bank executed and delivered a deed conveying the land to the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company, and on November 1, 1897, the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company executed its trust deed to secure the $12,000 in bonds, all of which except the first five, were signed by the president and secretary of the Brinkerhoff Company on the same day at [605]*605the office of the bank, where the bonds in blank had been kept. The bonds were then left with the bank as collateral security. Prior to the making of the trust deed and the signing of the bonds, Brinkerhofi, the president of'the Brinkerhofi Zinc. Company, by letter correspondence, negotiated the sale of five of the bonds of the series,to wit,numberedlto 5,inclu-sive, to J. D. Boothe, the plaintiff, for $375, and on October 25 received from plaintiff, by express, money orders, payable to himself. Brinkerhofi as president, and the secretary of the company, on receipt of the remittance, immediately went to the bank where the unsigned bonds were kept, informed the cashier (defendant D. B. Boy) of the sale, signed up the five bonds, and deposited the remittance for their purchase in the bank to the credit of the Brinkerhofi Zinc Company, and afterwards checked it orit in payment of current expenses. The bank did not deliver the bonds to Brinkerhofi, nor transmit them to the plaintiff, but retained them as collateral security under the original agreement, and subsequently, but before this suit was brought, sold the $5,500 note of the Brinkerhofi Zinc Company and transferred all the bonds to the purchaser of the note as collateral security for its payment.

The first count in the petition is in equity. It alleges that the plaintiff was the owner of five of the bonds; that the defendants, with knowledge of his ownership, wrongfully sold them for a sum unknown to plaintiff, and converted the proceeds to their own use, and prays for an accounting. The second count is at law, alleges plaintiff’s ownership of the bonds, the purchase price paid, and the wrongful conversion by defendants, and asks damages in the amount for which the bonds were purchased by plaintiff to wit, $375.

The answer to either count is substantially the same, denying the conversion, and alleges affirmatively that all the bonds, including those claimed by plaintiff, were when first issued hypothecated to the defendant bank to secure the pay[606]*606ment of the $5,500 note of the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company.

After the close of all the evidence on the equity count, it was stipulated between the parties that the same evidence introduced on the equity count should be submitted to the court, sitting as a jury,- on the law count. Instructions were asked on the law count, some of which were given, and others refused. The court sitting as a jury found the issues and rendered judgment on the law count for the defendant. Plaintiff appealed.

There was no finding or judgment on the first or equity count and no disposition whatever was made of that count. The failure of the court to make a finding or render any judgment on the first count was called to the attention of the court by motion for new trial and in arrest of the judgment. This error is also apparent on the face of the record proper.

A plaintiff may unite in the same petition several counts, both at law and in equity (section 593, R. S. 1899). But the counts in equity and in law when united in the same petition, must be separately tried, and the judgment on the first counts tried, when equity and law counts are both stated, is interlocutory and can not be made final, until there is a finding or verdict on the other counts, when a final judgment is rendered on the whole case on all the counts. This is necessarily so, since there can be but one final judgment in any cause, however numerous the counts may be, or whether they are in equity or law, or both. It has been repeatedly held in this state, that where a final judgment is rendered on one or more counts of a petition, leaving one or more undisposed of, the judgment is erroneous. Crawe v. Peters, 63 Mo. 429; McHoney v. Ins. Co., 44 Mo. App. 426; Kabrich v. Ins. Co., 48 Mo. App. 393. Eor this error the judgment in this cause must be reversed, and as the cause must be remanded for a retrial on both counts, it is expedient to call attention to the following instruction given for the plaintiff, which we think is erroneous, to wit:

[607]*607“The court sitting as a jury declares the law to be, that if the court finds from the evidence that the Brinkerhofl: Zinc Company had agreed to purchase from the bank a tract of land, and had also agreed to execute 120 bonds of the face value of one hundred dollars each, secured by deed of trust on the said tract of land, and that the said bonds were to be held as collateral security for the note evidencing the balance due for the purchase price of the said land, and that the said bonds when sold by the said Brinkerhoff Zinc Company, the proceeds of the sales of the said bonds should be turned over to the bank and applied to the paymentof the purchase price of the land; and if the court further finds from the evidence that Boothe prior to the sending of the $375 to Brinkerhoff had knowledge of the agreement between the bank and the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company, that the bonds should be placed with the bank as collateral security, and when sold by the said company, the proceeds of the sales were to be turned over to the bank and applied to the payment of the purchase price of the land, and if the court further finds from the evidence that Brinkerhoff refused to turn over to the bank the $375 sent by plaintiff to the bank, then the plaintiff can not recover in this action.”

The error in the instruction is in this: It undertakes to cover all the evidence, and to draw a legal conclusion from the evidence as summarized, when in fact material evidence as to plaintiff’s right of recovery is omitted from the summarization. It is this. Brinkerhoff testified, that before he wrote the plaintiff to take the five bonds, he was called into the bank by Loy, the cashier, and told that the Brinkerhoff Zinc Company had overdrawn its account about $100, and asked him why he did not write to plaintiff (who had previously agreed to take some of the bonds), and have him take five of them at once; that if he would the Zinc Company could have the use of the money and would be enabled to go ahead with its mining operations. Loy and the assistant [608]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Mo. App. 601, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boothe-v-loy-moctapp-1900.