Bredell v. Fair Grounds Real Estate Co.

69 S.W. 635, 95 Mo. App. 676, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 88
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 635 (Bredell v. Fair Grounds 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
Bredell v. Fair Grounds Real Estate Co., 69 S.W. 635, 95 Mo. App. 676, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 88 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

On December 20, 1900, Celeste Pim, owner in fee, leased to M. A. Haldeman and others a lot of ground with improvements thereon in city block 182, on Olive street,'in the city of St. Louis, for a term of twenty-two years to commence January 1, 1891. The property is known as Nos. 720-722, and the building thereon situated as the Virginia Building.

By mesne assignments of the lease, the Pair. Grounds Real Estate Company became the assignee of the lease on April 29, 1898. On April 30, 1898, the [680]*680Pair Grounds Real Estate Company made, executed and delivered its deed of trust on the leased premises, conveying its interest in. the leasehold to trustees therein named to secure two principal notes, one for fifteen thousand dollars and the other for ten thousand dollars, and twelve interest-bearing notes, all made payable to J. D. Perry, beneficiary in said deed. The principal notes were to become due three years after date; the interest notes at intervening periods of six months. These notes were indorsed by Ferry without recourse and delivered to plaintiff Maria Bredell.

The different floors of the Virginia Building were sublet to the Columbia Phonograph Company, Gertrude Davis, and Charles J. Farrar.

On the twenty-fifth day of May, 1898, the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company assigned the rents due and to become due from the sublessees, to Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company and turned over to it the management and control of the leased premises with authority to collect rents and apply the surplus, after paying certain fixed charges, to the extinguishment of its claim.

On May 25, 1898, the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company executed its deed of trust on the leasehold to S. C. Buckingham as trustee, for the use and benefit of G. A. Dubbs and to secure to said Dubbs the payment of a promissory note of two thousand dollars and two interest notes of sixty dollars each.

On October 14, 1898, it executed a second deed of trust on the leased premises to the same trustee, to secure the payment of a note of twenty-five hundred dollars payable to George A. Dubbs.

M. A. Haldeman, on the twentieth day of May, 1899, recovered judgment in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis against the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company for $7,417.68.

On August 17, 1898, the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company executed a second assignment of the rents [681]*681to Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, and to one Scammell, to secure them the amounts due them from the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company; Both the assignments of May 25, 1898, and on August 17, 1898, were made “subject to the deed of trust now on the property.”

It appears from the evidence that between May 31,1898, and April 19, 1900, the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company collected rents aggregating $27,581.16. Of this amount it disbursed $21,521.29 on account of ground rent, interest and expenses. On February 19, 1899, it paid to itself $2,080 principal and interest due on the note mentioned in the first assignment. On April 27, 1900, it paid a note of $1,000 to Scammell, claimed to be secured by the second assignment, and on April 28, 1900, it paid a note of $1,200 due to itself, and the further sum of $1,788.87 on open account due from the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company to it, claimed to be secured by the second assignment, making a total of $27,519.28 of rents paid out by it. The ground rents for the months of March, April and May, 1900, amounting to $1,875 were delinquent and two interest notes were past due on April 1, 1900, aggregating $750.

After the assignment of May 25, 1898, by the consent of the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company, Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company took entire charge of the leased premises and continued in charge thereof and was so in charge when this suit was commenced.

The lease from the owner of the property, was owned by the Fair Grounds Real Estate Cpmpany. After the execution of the assignment of May 25, 1898, the control of this property and its entire business was turned over by the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company to Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company and its accounts were kept by the latter company in its private books.

[682]*682The suit is in equity to foreclose the deed of trust and to require the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company to account for the rents collected by it in excess of the fixed charges and expenses of managing the property. The alleged sum it should account for after paying all fixed charges and expenses is $6,289.94, which sum it was alleged it holds as trustee for the benefit of plaintiff Maria Bredell.

The appointment of a receiver was asked for. This prayer was granted by the court and W. F. Parker was appointed receiver, who took charge of the property under his appointment in June, 1900.

The answer of the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, in addition to a general denial, set up that it loaned to the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company $2,000, part of the purchase money for the leasehold; alleged the assignment of May 25,1898, to secure said loan; alleged the payment of this note February 9, 1899, out of the rents collected by it; set up the assignment of August 17, 1898, for the purpose of securing to It and Scammell certain loans aggregating $4,000, and that the rents collected by it were used in payment of this indebtedness.

The reply put in issue the new matter.

It was shown by the testimony of C. C. Nicholls, president of the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, that his company collected all the rents of the property for the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company from April 29, 1898, down to the institution of this suit; that on April 28, 1900, the sum of $3,988.87 stood to the credit of the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company, which sum was transferred to the general account of Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company from the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company; that after the assignment the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company kept no books; but that all of its accounts were carried on the books of the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, and that the entire business of [683]*683the Pair Grounds Real Estate Company during this, period was carried on by the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, and that it had no property or assets other than its leasehold in the Virginia Building-.

On April 29, 1901, the court, after hearing the evidence, entered its decree, finding that the Fair Grounds Real Estate Company was in default of the payment of two interest notes maturing twenty-four, months after date, aggregating $750, and that the taxes for 1898 and 1899 were in default and that the ground rent due to Celeste Pirn for March, April and May, 1900, had not been paid, and that there was due plaintiff from principal and interest on the notes secured by -the deed of trust, $27,335.50; that the Nicholls-Ritter Realty & Financial Company, by the acceptance of the assignment and under the terms thereof, became obliged and bound to apply all the money collected by it on the rent account of the leasehold property, after reasonable expenses of the maintenance of the property, to the payment of the installments of rent, taxes and interest, and that there was in the hands of said company the sum of $6,060.08, applicable to the payment of rent, interest and taxes, for which the defendant, the Fair Grounds Real.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 635, 95 Mo. App. 676, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bredell-v-fair-grounds-real-estate-co-moctapp-1902.