Cordia v. Richards

48 S.W.2d 878, 329 Mo. 1166, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 793
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 2, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 S.W.2d 878 (Cordia v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordia v. Richards, 48 S.W.2d 878, 329 Mo. 1166, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 793 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

GANTT, P. J.

Action to enjoin the foreclosure of two deeds of trust. One of.the deeds was given-by plaintiffs to secure.the payment of their note of March 17, 1919, for. $5,000, payable to the Peoples Bank of DeSoto six months after date. The other deed was given *1168 by them to secure the payment of their note of October 16, 1919, for $3,000, payable to said bank twelve months after date. The suit is by E. P. Cordia and Clara Cordia, husband and wife, against Stephen T. Richards, acting trustee in the deeds of trust, Prank Dietrich, deputy finance commissioner in charge of the Peoples Bank, and E. L. Cook, Cashier of the DeSoto Trust Company, with a liquidating interest in the Peoples Bank of DeSoto. The State Finance Department took charge of the Peoples Bank in January, 1921. The pleadings are not challenged. Plaintiffs alleged payment of the notes. Defendants denied payment. The court found that the notes had been paid; that the deeds of trust should be can-celled, and that defendants should be enjoined from foreclosing the deeds of trust and collecting the notes. Judgment accordingly, and defendants appealed.

Plaintiff, E. F. Cordia, owned timber lands and conducted an extensive tie and timber business. He did business with the Peoples Bank of DeSoto, Bank of Potosi and a St. Louis bank.

On the issue of payment of the $5,000 note, Cordia testified that it was given for a temporary loan until he could negotiate a loan from the Federal Land Bank, and for that reason the deed of trust given to the Peoples Bank was not recorded. He further testified that the Federal Land Bank loaned him $5,000 which was secured by a deed of trust on the land described in the deed of trust given to secure the $5,000 note held by the Peoples Bank; that on August 5, 1919, he mailed the Peoples Bank a draft for $4771.05, the net amount of the Federal Land Bank loan; that he did so as payment on the $5,000 note; that he did not remember of mailing a letter with the draft; that in a few days he went to the Peoples Bank and paid the balance due on the $5,000 note; that he did not know said note was in existence until it was delivered to the acting trustee for foreclosure; that R. B. Jones, Cashier, was present at the time he paid said balance. The records of the Bank of Potosi showed that on August 5, 1919, it issued a draft for $4771.05.

Isaac E. Letcher, abstractor, Alex Cordia, brother of E. F. Cordia, and L. R. Standforth, lawyer, testified that they knew that E. F. Cordia obtained a loan from the Federal Land Bank secured by a deed of trust on the land described in the deed of trust, securing payment of the $5,000 note to the Peoples Bank; that at the time of the Federal Land Bank loan there was no deed of trust of record on said land; that they had no knowledge of the disposition of the proceeds of the Federal Land Bank loan and could not testify that the $5,000 note had been paid.

L. R. Standforth testified that he did not know what was done with the money paid to Cordia on the Federal Land Bank loan; that loans were usually made to pay off a previous indebtedness; that he did *1169 not know wbat loan Cordia was getting the money to pay, but he knew it was to pay a loan.

Frank Lore testified that in the latter part of 1920 he was in the Peoples Bank and heard Cordia ask Jones, cashier, “for a note that was paid — for some kind of a note, but I don’t know what kind it was. He said he would give it to him later. I did not know what they were talking about.”

The testimony of Lore does not tend to show payment of the $5,000 note. Cordia may have asked for another note which had been paid by him. And withholding the deed of trust from the record did not aid Cordia in procuring the other loan. If said deed had been recorded, the Federal Land Bank would have used the money loaned on the land to pay the $5,000 note held by the Peoples Bank so that its deed of trust would be a first lien. This tends to show that it was not the intention of Cordia and cashier Jones to use the money loaned on the land by the Federal Land Bank to pay the $5,000 note held by the Peoples Bank. It also tends to show that Cordia and the cashier were in collusion, and that the deed was not recorded that Cordia might be able to procure another loan on the land, thereby deceiving the bank directors as to his financial condition and the condition of his indebtedness to the Peoples Bank.

The other testimony above set forth does tend to show that the Peoples Bank received the net proceeds of the Federal Land Bank loan, but it does not tend to show that same was credited on the $5,-000 note or that the Peoples Bank was directed to do so. The only evidence tending to show payment is the uncorroborated testimony of Cordia that he paid the balance due on said note and that he did not know the note was in existence until it was delivered to the acting trustee.

On the issue of payment of the $3,000 note Cordia testified that on June 25, 1920, a check was drawn on the Bank of Potosi for $3883.83 payable to the Peoples Bank; that the name of E. F. Cordia was signed to the check; that the Bank of Potosi knew the check was not signed by him and refused payment; that he called up the Peoples Bank and asked about the cheek and was told by someone that it was to pay the $3,000 note; that he then authorized the Bank of Potosi to pay the cheek; and also that he did not know this note was in existence until it was delivered to the acting trustee for foreclosure.

This testimony was evidence tending to show that the Bank of Potosi paid to the Peoples Bank a check for $3883.83. But the uncorroborated testimony of Cordia is the only evidence tending to show that said check was payment of the $3,000 note. This note was not due for four months, and Cordia does not explain why he paid the note before it was due or why he paid about $700 in excess of the principal and interest due on said note. Furthermore, the deed of *1170 trust securing payment of this note also was not recorded. As a result Cordia procured another loan on the land from tlie Bank of Potosi. This also tends to show that Cordia and the cashier of the Peoples Bank were in collusion.

Plaintiffs make a point on the failure of the liquidating officers to proceed to foreclose until long after the notes were due. The delay was of no consequence if plaintiffs owed the notes.

On the issue of non-payment of the notes, it should be stated that in December, 1920, W. W. Seibert of the State Finance Department examined the Peoples Bank. He found it in bad condition. At a conférenee about December 28, 1920, Seibert, Cordia and Jones, cashier, considered the condition of the bank and Cordia’s indebtedness to the bank. Jones there stated that if Cordia would secure his indebtedness he would take care of the other notes and overdrafts challenged by the examiner. Seibert had at the conference an itemized statement of Cordia’s indebtedness as shown by the records of the bank. Cordia agreed to secure the indebtedness as listed in the statement. On the next day a written agreement was signed by Cordia and the Peoples Bank in which he acknowledged an indebtedness of $76,545.24 to the bank, as shown by the statement and records of the bank. In the agreement he promised to and did secure said indebtedness.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cordia v. Matthes.
130 S.W.2d 597 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
Peikert v. Repple
114 S.W.2d 999 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 878, 329 Mo. 1166, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordia-v-richards-mo-1932.